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Showing posts with label William Castle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Castle. Show all posts

Friday, September 07, 2012

Stephen King's The Stapler

Aside from the brilliant The Cabin in the Woods and a couple of other exceptions, recent filmed horror has been long on cheap scares and gratuitous violence and short on substance and new ideas. Imagine a satirical film shot in black and white except for the blood, which would show up as a garish Technicolor red. Every act of violence would suddenly stand out in stark relief, especially if the murders were doled out with some restraint - probably a lot to ask from modern filmmakers. Aye, there's the rub: this gimmick could all too easily be used to ramp up the exploitation factor of an already blood-saturated marketplace. I can just imagine directors going hog wild, massacring scores of victims in Blood-o-Rama just for the sake of cheap new thrills. Quite a spectacle.

Naturally I'm not opposed to cheap thrills and gratuitous violence at the movies as long as there's some point to it all. Spielberg famously used a variation of this technique to powerful effect in Schindler's List, but of course his use of spot colour was tasteful and tragic rather than lurid and exploitative. I have a feeling that Blood-o-Rama, should some producer ever use it, will be used more in the vein of William Castle's favourite gimmicks, Percepto and Emergo and the like.

If I may damn my own concept with faint praise, I'd at least sooner see a film in Blood-o-Rama than I would in 3D. May that particular fad die another quick death!