The Zombies Are Still In There
December 3, 2012鈥擶hen it comes to creepy kids, mythical creatures, and zombie attacks, Georgetown has no better expert than Assistant Professor . In her upcoming book about American horror movies, Benson-Allott shows that the genre and video technology have evolved together.
A core faculty member in the , which she helped launch after coming to Georgetown three years ago, Benson-Allott is a longtime fan of scary cinema. She first became interested in horror films as a teenager, when she discovered Leprechaun (1993) and watched it to unwind from cramming for the SAT.
鈥淚 think that was when I realized, 鈥榃ow, horror movies express all kinds of social anxieties for us,鈥欌 Benson-Allott recalled. 鈥淚t was later on that I came to think that horror movies express not just metaphors for the viewer but also metaphors about the state of the industry. That is what my book is about.鈥
Benson-Allott was inspired to write Killer Tapes and Shattered Screens: Video Spectatorship from VHS to File Sharing when she first saw The Ring in 2002.
鈥淚 was screaming in the theater like everybody else, and I went home and thought, 鈥榃hat a strange thing鈥攖o be afraid of a video tape,鈥欌 Benson-Allott said. 鈥淎nd then maybe a month or two later, I rented Dawn of the Dead on VHS and I watched it at home alone, scared myself to pieces, rewound the tape, took it out and thought, 鈥極h my god, the zombies are still in there. I need to get this tape out of my house or they鈥檙e going to kill me.鈥
鈥淭hat was when I started realizing that we have really weird relationships to our cassettes and our disks and our hard drives,鈥 she said.
According to Benson-Allott, The Ring represents a philosophical shift on the part of big American movie studios. At the time of its release, studios had just begun to endorse DVD technology over VHS and were hoping that the film鈥攁bout a child who kills people after they watch a cursed cassette tape鈥攚ould scare consumers into giving up cassettes.
This transition from VHS to DVD figured heavily into Benson-Allott鈥檚 research for her book. After watching hundreds of horror movies, she concluded that whenever there is change in video technology, there is also change in how directors depict horror and in how audiences respond.
She believes the phenomenon is best observed in the works of director George Romero, who tends to build suspense according to what mediums are popular.
鈥泪苍 Night of the Living Dead, which came out in 1968 and everyone would鈥檝e seen at a movie theater or drive-in, the zombies attack in these really deep-focus long shots, where you see them coming from the other end of the field, and you have to wait and wait as this body gets closer and closer,鈥 said Benson-Allott. 鈥泪苍 1985, he makes Day of the Dead for a VHS crowd. In that movie the zombies are out of focus, so you have this very blurry background when all of a sudden the focus shifts and a zombie pops up.
鈥淸But] cathode ray televisions and VHS cassettes don鈥檛 have the kind of resolution to do those really long shots that he did in Night of the Living Dead,鈥 she continued. 鈥淪o, he changed his art for the platform that people were going to see it on.鈥
With Killer Tapes and Shattered Screens all but finished, Benson-Allott is already working on her next project, Closer Than They Appear: Automotive Effects in American Film. This book will combine two of her passions: the history of special effects and stunt work, currently her 鈥渇avorite thing to research,鈥 and 1970s American cinema, which is her favorite subject to teach.
鈥淚鈥檓 interested in the car movie cycles of the 1970s and the 21st century, and the way those different crashes and chases and collisions produced different visual and political metaphors,鈥 Benson-Allott said. 鈥淭he 鈥70s was this weird economic period when studios were willing to try just about anything to find new viewers, so you got this kind of creative flourishing that I don鈥檛 know if we鈥檝e seen since.鈥
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