The first horror movies
Silent film offered the early pioneers a wonderful
medium in which to examine terror. Early horror films are surreal, dark pieces,
owing their visual appearance to the expressionist painters and their narrative
style to the stories played out by the Grand Guignol Theatre
Company. Darkness and shadows, such
important features of modern horror, were impossible to show on the film stock
available at the time, so the sequences, for example in Nosferatu, where
we see a vampire leaping amongst gravestones in what appears to be broad
daylight, seem doubly surreal to us now. Nonetheless, these early entries to
the genre established many of the codes and conventions still identifiable
today. They draw upon the folklore and legends of Europe, and render monsters
into physical form. Sadly, the fragility of early film stock means that many of
these early attempts at horror have been lost to us, but these three classics
are currently available on DVD.
The Golem (1915/1920)
There were several versions of this, dubbed 'the
first monster movie'. Paul Wegener directed and starred in the screen version
of the Jewish legend, set in medieval Prague. A Golem (a solidly built clay
man) is fashioned to save the ghetto, but when his job is done he refuses to
cease existing, and runs amok through expressionist sets, eventually to be
confronted and defeated by a little girl. The legend influenced Mary Shelley
during her creation of a monster a century earlier, and a decade or so later,
the cinematic golem influenced Whale's and Karloff's depiction of a false
creation lumbering menacingly through the streets.
Often cited as the 'granddaddy of all horror
films', this is an eerie exploration of the mind of a madman, pitting an evil
doctor against a hero falsely incarcerated in a lunatic asylum. Through a
clever framing device the audience is never quite clear on who is mad and who
is sane, and viewing the film's skewed take on reality is a disturbing
experience, heightened by the jagged asymmetry of the mise en scene. Although
modern viewers might find the pace slow, with long takes and little cutting
between scenes, "The Cabinet..." is stylish, imaginative, and
never less than haunting.
This is largely because the diegetic world is
wholly artificial, a complete re-imagining of a Northern German town. The
audience views the tale throught the twisted vision of the narrator, where
roads, hills, houses and even trees take on a menacing new shape. This is not
reality, and the stylised performances reflect that, with the players moving as
symbols through the surreal landscape, their stark make up adding to the
dreamlike sensation. This contrasted dramatically with the documentary style of
film making prevalent in Europe at the time, and proved that film could be a
poetic, stylised medium as well as a reflective one. Much has been written on
the politics of The Cabinet..., representing as it does puppet humans
controlled by a sadistic madman. It certainly struck a chord with German
audiences of the time, suffering as they were from the economic consequences of
war reparations, helpless in the face of spiralling inflation.
Nosferatu is the very first vampire movie,
baldly plagiarising the Dracula story to present Count Orlok, the grotesquely
made-up 'Max Schreck', curling his long fingernails round the limbs of a series
of hapless victims. Described as the vampire movie that actually believes in
vampires, Nosferatu gives us a far more frightening bloodsucker than any
of its successors; Shreck is simply inhuman. Murnau demonstrated an early
mastery over light and shadow which was to distinguish his subsequent work in
Hollywood, such as Sunrise (1927), as well as sheer inventiveness with
the photographic image, in the microscope sequences and the stop motion special
effects. He also clashed with Bram Stoker's widow over the rights to the
Dracula story, which had proved very popular as a stageplay. He changed the
names of the central characters, but did not alter the story, and the
subsequent legal wrangling meant that prints of the movie were destroyed,
Murnau lost control of the film, and it is only recently that a version
approximating to the original has become available to the viewing public.
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