Really, this topic could easily be a
book. And I don’t think I’m qualified to write that book. Despite this, there
are plenty of observations I’ve made along the way – and things that make me tend
to enjoy Asian Horror more than American – so there’s clearly something there
worth discussing.
And, I hope it goes without saying that I’m
speaking in broad strokes here – of course there are exceptions to the ideas I’m
about to discuss. I’m sure there are plenty of Asian authors/film directors/video
game designers who create their medium in a more “American” way, so to speak, and vice
versa.
Aside from these exceptions, though, I tend
to prefer horror media that comes out of Asia (especially Japan) more than that which comes from
our own shores. Why is this?
The easiest way to answer this question
is to begin with my earlier post The Four (Main) Types of Horror. The last of the four sub-genres that I discussed there - and the one I identified as being my favorite - is Psychological Horror.
That said, the most direct way I can explain why I enjoy Asian Horror more than American is to say this:
Asian Horror tends to be more psychological than American.
It's really as simple as that.
If you think about the horror/thriller media that is produced in the U.S., you often see tales of gratuitous serial killers; violent monsters; evil, megalithic corporations; etc. We have Stephen King, the Hannibal Lecter series, and the Saw movies.
To sum it all up - admittedly in a very general way - we tend to produce highly violent clashes of external, opposing forces, which are most often solved by the use of power. In a word, our horror is often
BIG
Of course all of this has its place. Sometimes, this sort of media is exactly what I'm looking for. Though the Resident Evil movies don't contain a fraction of the quality of their video game counterparts (their Asian-made video game counterparts, I should add), dang it if I don't have a blast watching them anyway. (Guilty pleasures, for sure.)
Asian horror, though, tends to focus much less on these bombastic power plays and more on the psyches of its key players. Gone are the enormous explosions, set pieces, and over-the-top violence, all replaced by the tiniest details that add up to an overwhelming sense of dread. In a word, Asian horror is often very
small
- in all the right ways, though.
Rather than Asian horror focusing on an archetypal hero (or group of heroes), we are usually given an everyday person who must wrestle with his or her own demons just as much as - in fact, usually more than - whatever dark force is at the center of the plot. Of course seeing Bruce Willis kick @$$ is fun, but there's something much more psychologically, intrinsically gratifying in seeing someone overcome their fears and their past and their inner darkness.
We might even say that American horror tends to be like a huge painting, full of color and gunfire and monsters, which we can absorb all at once. Even before finishing it, we can already see that the hero(es) will overcome The Evil - which is always Someone/Something Else.
Contrasted to this, Asian horror tends to be more of a puzzle, the gray-shaded pieces of which we're only handed one at a time, each of which ratchets up the tension more and more all the way up through the end, when we ultimately realize that this was never a painting, nor a Something Else - it was always a mirror.
Exactly! Also, Asian movie horrors rely on story a lot more than relying on hot people in bloody tank tops.
ReplyDeleteHaha, very true. They don't seem to bother casting the hottest people for their movie roles, which is refreshing. Their films tend to be much more about the overall mood of the piece, which is exactly what I'm looking for in horror movies.
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