All adventures, especially into new territory, are scary.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
What I see as the particularly exciting prospect for writing horror fiction as we go forward is setting stories in more internal landscapes than external ones, mapping out the mind as the home for scary things instead of the house at the end of the lane or lakeside campground or abandoned amusement park.
For me, what usually makes a horror sequence scary is the journey not the destination.
The horror aspect, the scary parts, are easy for me. I mean, I can get into that pretty easy, because I get scared. You have to invest yourself in these characters.
I think a lot of the Disney cartoons are scary when you watch them at a young age.
I'm a huge fan of science fiction and fantasy - not so much horror because I get a bit scared.
Just because I make movies in the scary world doesn't mean I want to visit scary worlds.
I'm all about scary movies! The 'Halloweentown' ones are my absolute favorites.
I'm not a huge fan of scary movies, but I love doing them because your character arc gets condensed, and everything is elevated, and so you kind of have this amazing opportunity to go in many different places.
There's scary stuff in 'Raiders of the Lost Ark.' There's some really nasty skeletons and dead bodies.
Adventures are to the adventurous.