I know that Wes Craven feels watching horror films does have a psychological effect, in a good way. It is very cathartic. He might be right about that.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Any horror element is as much psychological as special effects.
Wes Craven is obviously a horror film icon so I was definitely very interested in bringing something back to life that Wes had created.
I'm really easily affected by horror films. I have pretty strong reactions to them.
There are some people who shouldn't watch horror films, and I'm all right with that.
Horror fans are very passionate people, and they are very much into the 'Saw' thing. So they watch sometimes as carefully as the writers and producers do, in terms of the way the story plays out.
An actor shouldn't undergo psychoanalysis, because there are a lot of things you're better off not knowing.
Psychological horror is more interesting to me than the explicitly physical.
Horror films are very effective to me; they have an impact on me. I think that real life things scare me a lot more.
It's easy to see why 'American Horror' is freaking people out. The ultraviolent hallucinations never pause long enough to make sense. In terms of coherence, it makes your average David Lynch movie look like 'Burn Notice.'
People who work in horror know they are contributing to a genre that has always been loved and will always be loved - privately. It's the forbidden evil working behind the curtain. My job scoring a horror movie is like being the barker at a carnival. A good barker can get anyone to walk into the roped-off tent.
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