The other day I was watching Narnia on TV. Because I received a phone call, I put the TV on mute and did something which is not a good practice. Instead of focusing on the conversation I started watching the movie.
It was the scene where Lucy Pevensie discovers the wardrobe! The gateway to the Kingdom of Narnia.
With the voice on mute, I felt that that scene could have easily fit into a horror movie. It had everything that would make it to that genre.
The Valiant Queen discovering Narnia through the wardrobe and Carolyn Perron in Conjuring encountering a ghost inside the wardrobe are pretty much the same. If you have the inclination, resources and time, do compare those scenes. Either watch them on mute or with the same background music.
Of course, the context is set even before we watch a movie. And, the cast and cinematography plays an important role in shaping our experience. While the smile in the little girls face gives us reassurance, the context in horror movies make us think otherwise for the similar expressions. You expect something horrifying in Conjuring when the mother, who is blindfolded, searches the wardrobe.
When an unknown entity turns positive, it becomes fantasy. But on the other hand if that turns evil, it becomes horror. The common denominator is the unknown!
For someone who hadn't really give much thought to background music, watching Narnia in mute, conjured respect in me for this element of movies.
Do you know what casting can do to movies? Read here.
It was the scene where Lucy Pevensie discovers the wardrobe! The gateway to the Kingdom of Narnia.
With the voice on mute, I felt that that scene could have easily fit into a horror movie. It had everything that would make it to that genre.
The Valiant Queen discovering Narnia through the wardrobe and Carolyn Perron in Conjuring encountering a ghost inside the wardrobe are pretty much the same. If you have the inclination, resources and time, do compare those scenes. Either watch them on mute or with the same background music.
Of course, the context is set even before we watch a movie. And, the cast and cinematography plays an important role in shaping our experience. While the smile in the little girls face gives us reassurance, the context in horror movies make us think otherwise for the similar expressions. You expect something horrifying in Conjuring when the mother, who is blindfolded, searches the wardrobe.
When an unknown entity turns positive, it becomes fantasy. But on the other hand if that turns evil, it becomes horror. The common denominator is the unknown!
For someone who hadn't really give much thought to background music, watching Narnia in mute, conjured respect in me for this element of movies.
Do you know what casting can do to movies? Read here.