Hitchcock is taking us through different everyday lives, leaves us to imagine horrific events.. Then back to everyday lives. WE ARE THEN left with fear…
Mary Warren is a young servant girl whose ethics are challenged when she becomes afflicted with terror and intimidation.…
What is the significance of the scene between Elizabeth and John Proctor? What does it reveal about their relationship and about their characters?…
Jack played a big role in this film by having deja vu at the hotel, by being insane and the domestic violence. The shining is a very good film, kubrick’s great ideas on this movie led to a saturn award for best supporting actors. Jack having to do with the Overlook Hotel, this hotel was built over a native american burial and lots of natives died. A scene that was played throughout the film was blood coming out of the elevator and flooding the hotel this blood was from the natives that were buried under the hotel and the native trying to protect…
I should start off by saying the genre is obviously suspenseful, or maybe even gothic. The definition of Gothicism on Merriam-Webster is “conformity to or practice of Gothic style.” In Frankenstein, “The Monster” is a victimizer who has immense power and is seemingly unstoppable. The gothic genre tends to be extremely suspenseful, with dark plot twists that leave you hanging on the edge of your seat. Just when you think it’s all over, another horrific thing happens to offset the story. There are usually supernatural elements in every horror/gothic style story.…
The three main upbringing causes that lead to conflict are ignorance, intolerance and fear, which can be demonstrated in “The Crucible”, written by Arthur Miller. During the ‘witch hunt’ times in 1692, the town of Salem experienced suspicion and paranoia towards witchcraft within the town. The young girls in the play hid the whole truth with lies, because they were fearful of the consequences that would strike them if they were to be honest about their actions. The corrupt behavior of the girls caused many ‘innocent’ people to be accused and punished with hanging. This was not tolerated by the town folk. Most people were too ignorant to see past these lies that the girls brought up; hence these events show fear, intolerance and ignorance were the main causes of the conflicts that occurred in the…
Superficially, The Shining (1980) directed by Stanley Kubrick and written by horror novelist Stephan King, is about Jack Torrance; a writer suffering from writer’s block and his family who move into the Overlook Hotel after Jack takes an off season job as caretaker. As stories unfold about the hotels previous inhabitants, Wendy and Jack’s son, Danny’s frequent psychic premonitions become vivid, paralleling Jacks deteriorating psychotic state of mind, as their stay at the hotel grows longer. Under the surface however Kubrick uses mise en scene and editing in The Shining to display hypocrisy and inability of Americans to admit the mass Native American Indian genocide, and…
The Shining, written by Stephen King is an American horror novel that focuses on Jack Torrance’s life as a recovering alcoholic and his off-season job at the Overlook Hotel. Stephen King himself has struggled in the past with alcoholism and was inspired to write the novel upon his visit to the Stanley Hotel in 1974. After the novel was published in 1977, King clearly sets up his reputation specifically as an author of the horror-genre. The novel immediately received enthusiastic praise while readers became addicted to his perceptive and atrocious writing skill that opens up in all his horror novels. The Shining is written as a narrative and was developed into a film in 1980.…
realistic aspect of scary situations. Hitchcocks masterful directing leads the audience to be the frist to understand what is going on. The characters are left in the dark until the suspense reaches its climax. As the impending danger builds, the viewer is allowed to wtiness the situation before the character. This raises the level of suspense making it more realistic. Hitchcock takes normal situations and adds a terffiying twist. The twist is always something that has never happened, but is definetely possible. Hitchcocks The Birds is an excellent example of this. He takes normal situation with normal birds and turns them into killers. As the birds gather behind one unsuspecting victim, only the audience is allowed to see the impending danger. The woman is calm and collected as she waits on the bench. Hitchcock adds a little scare music and the woman suddenly realizes she is being watched. She whips around in horror and the birds are there ready to attack. This scfene is not a common occurance, but to an overactive imagination it could become a very real possibility.…
The rain fell down like tiny stones upon the weathered roof. It’s a gentle shower just now but the forecast said it is to get worse. The rain was making the atmosphere even darker and stuffier than usual. Save this. It is a normal Saturday night and as usual parents are out for some “time to themselves” I don’t have any brothers or sisters and I’m not aloud out because of the weather, so I’m left in myself for the night.…
According to The Script Lab, “Horror film is a genre that aims to create a sense…
The Haunting Hill House is a novel written by Shirley Jackson. In this novel, Jackson writes about Hill House which was believed to be a haunted place in which Dr. John Montague with his invited guests, Eleanor Vance, Theodora and Luke Sanderson stay at for a while with the purpose of helping Dr. Montague to write his book. Jackson writes the novel in away Hill House is the physical manifestation of the mind and during Eleanor’s stay in Hill House, the house becomes a reflection of her own mind. Furthermore, Hill House as a representation of Eleanor mind, reflects Eleanor’s true desire, which is to return the loving arms of her mother , a fairytale which leads Eleanor into a situation where she is unable to differentiate between what is real and what is unreal.…
The Shining (1980) is creative director Stanley Kubrick's intense, epic, gothic horror film and haunted house masterpiece - a beautiful, stylish work that distanced itself from the blood-letting and gore of most modern films in the horror genre. (The film waits until its climax to provide the typical catharctic bloody violence of most traditional horror films.)…
Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 film, The Shining, based on Stephen King’s 1977 novel, is listed among the greatest horror movies, viewed by some as one of the greatest films of all time, and is now being noted as an influence for Taylor Swift’s new music video for “Shake It Off” (Zalben). Though it deviates from King’s writing, Kubrick’s translation of the source material is steeped in mystery and conspiracy. On the surface, The Shining is a horror movie based on a family trapped in an eerie hotel where its isolation and influence take a toll on the father, Jack, who then tried to murder his wife and telepathic son. At least, that is how I watched it as a eight year old. Now, I understand The Shining not as a movie about the murders at the Overlook…
The basement symbolises the ‘id’ of Jack’s mind, where impulses and unseen secrets are kept. Accordingly, the ‘ego’ can be allocated to the ground floor, where the Torrance family inhibits, and where Jack’s thinking and actions are dictated predominantly by his set of morals and logical thinking. Finally, the ‘superego’ is represented by the top level of the hotel, where the climatic fight between Jack (‘id’) and Danny (‘ego’) occurs. The Overlook is also rife with memories in each of its rooms and crevices. It contains the dark history of the hotel, but once again, it also reflects the memories or fears of its residents.…