Thursday, 18 October 2012
how women are portrayed in horror films?
Women in Horror films are being portrayed as weak, vulnerable and fragile but mainly as hyper-sexual damsels in distress, who are usually killed within the first five minutes as a punishment for their indiscretions in the films such as 'Friday the 13th' and 'Halloween'. They are also portrayed as antagonists, which can be seen as reflecting the men's pathological fear of women and their powers etc.
In slasher films, women are perceived as nothing more than just sex objects. We know this because within films like Friday the 13th and Halloween, they show half clothed, hypers-sexual women. This takes away the audience's ability to sympathize to them because they are seen as less valuable in society. In the classic slasher films, they usually show a direct and effective link between sex and death with murder serving as a symbolic punishment for any immoral intercourse, this suggests and symbolizes a kind of unconscious moral lesson to the viewer.
In Alfred Hitchcock's 'Physco' we see the murder of Janet Leigh's character quite graphically and sexualized. We see her as a sexually independent woman being stabbed with a phallic knife, a symbolic punishment for these women. The sexually repressed male killer fears these types of women and this is shown within her death when the male killers thrusts the knife into her thus taking away her sexual power through the rape of her body.
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where are the words you didn't understand?
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