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Monthly Archives: April 2013

FEMINISTS OF HORROR: Final Girls and Their Mad Men

26 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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A Nightmare on Elm Street, Alien, Aliens, All the Boys Love Mandy Lane, Black Christmas, crime, Doctor Loomis, drugs, Ellen Ripley, feminism, feminist, Final Girl, Freddy Krueger, Ghostface, Halloween, Hannibal Lecter, Horror, intelligence, Jason Voorhees, killer, knives, Laurie Strode, Leatherface, Lila, Mad, Mad Man, Madness, Michael Myers, misogynist, Nancy, Norman Bates, psychiatric illness, Psycho, Psychological, resourceful, Sam Loomis, Scream, Sex, Sidney, Sigourney Weaver, Silence of the Lambs, slasher, stabbing, strength, strong women, thriller, twists, victims, virgin, weapons

laurie-strode_786x1174Slasher movies are a favourite with horror fans.  Even if you’re not an outright horror fan, it’s likely you will have seen at least one of these in your life!  The slasher has elements of thriller and crime, so can be appealing to audiences who also enjoy these genres too.  In turn, some thrillers and other horrors, which are not really slashers as such, may have elements of the slasher in them.

What you may or may not realise is that there is a set of rules that come along with slasher and slasher-type horror films.  During my post graduate in film and television, I had fun studying the “Final Girl” in horror.  The Final Girl is a strong, independent female protagonist, the peer of the victims, but seen to be virtuous.  She does not indulge in the sex and drugs that prove to be the downfall of the others.  She also tends to avoid any kind of bullying.  She’s just an all-round nice girl, sometimes slightly “put upon” by others who take advantage of her good nature.  She is known as the Final Girl because, well, she’s the last one standing at the end of it all.  The Final Girl either escapes or overcomes the threat, showing her power, strength and intelligence for whatever scrape she’s managed to land herself in.

Final Girls share many characteristics: they are often sexually unavailable or virgins who avoid any illegal or illicit activity and often, though not always, have a non-gender specific name such as Laurie (Halloween) or Sidney (Scream).  The Final Girl can even be found in non-slasher horrors such as Alien, with the masculinised female character of Ellen Ripley (known only as Ripley); although, it has to be said that Alien does have many other characteristics of a slasher too.

The Final Girl is “watchful, intelligent and resourceful”.  She is, pretty much, the perfect horror movie heroine.  She is a character the audience can admire and she is a survivor.  Many critics of the slasher might say that it is a misogynistic genre, as it often has naked and vulnerable women being overpowered by men.  However, the Final Girl proves this not to be the case at all, quite the opposite.  The Final Girl is a very smart and dignified character, who usually always outwits the killer in the end.

However, the character of the Final Girl has evolved over time.  In Halloween Laurie’s ability was to simply remain alive until Doctor Loomis got there to save her.  By the time A Nightmare on Elm Street came along the Final Girl was starting to take steps to protect herself, and defeat the threat.  In the latter, Nancy is ready to take on Freddy!

Not only do Final Girls take on the killer, they also often protect young children too, showing their maternal side into the bargain.  Just as there are monstrous maternal figures to be found in horror, the Final Girl is the complete opposite.  Laurie (Jamie Lee Curtis) in Halloween has two young children in her care that she is babysitting for, whilst Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) in Aliens protects Newt with the famous line: “Get away from her, you bitch!”

As time has gone by, various differences have crept into the genre to allow it to evolve, and also to create unexpected twists at the end.  The first slashers had the Final Girl discover and help to capture the killer (Psycho), escape the killer until another day (Black Christmas), and finally, killing the killer, after the killer had killed all her peers, so that the Final Girl is also the Final Killer; this has further evolved so that some Final Girls turn out to have been the killer all along, although this is a little bit more unusual. 

In slasher horror, usually the weapon used by the killer is a blade of some kind, hence the term ‘slasher’.  It could also be argued that in, for example, Halloween, Laurie attacks Michael Myers with weapons that are phallic: a knitting needle; a coat hanger, which she fashions into a spiked object, and a knife – all intended for stabbing.  In the final sequence, Laurie takes over the dominant role using very masculine weaponry.

Probably the first Final Girl appeared in Psycho (1960), in the form of Marion’s sister Lila.  Lila appears with Marion’s boyfriend Sam Loomis (in Halloween a character bearing that name would also step in to save the day, as has previously been mentioned…!).  Along with other conventions that were built up over time, Psycho also saw the appearance of the human monster in the shape of the serial killer.  The serial killer is necessarily dangerous and frightening, an almost supernatural killing machine, usually with a severe psychiatric illness and a grudge to bear, often caused by a traumatised childhood.  The Final Girl is confronted with her every nightmare in the flesh: Norman Bates, Michael Myers, Jason Voorhees (well, actually, his mother…but his legend lives on regardless!), Leatherface, Freddy Krueger, Ghostface, Hannibal Lecter.  Sometimes they have a supernatural side, like Michael Myers.  Most often they are the scariest thing of all, real-life people!  But, always, always, always, they are not just bad, they are completely and utterly insane.  The Final Girl has her work cut out for her, but through it all she prevails.

Every horror fan has got their favourite Final Girl/Psychotic Maniac movies, whether slasher or not.  Here are some recommendations.  I don’t suppose they are really in any particular order.  Silence of the Lambs and Psycho, though not slashers, have my favourite psychotic serial killer characters, whilst Alien has my favourite Final Girl – a good, strong performance from Sigourney Weaver.  Black Christmas is actually, to my mind, probably one of the best and earliest of the genre.  I really have no idea why I love Halloween so much.  I just do.  I think it’s the atmosphere, but I just can’t quite put my finger on it.  Nevertheless, I have lost count of the number of times I’ve watched it – at least once a year at, yes you’ve guessed, Hallowe’en!  And I just loved the twist in All the Boys Love Mandy Lane.

I’ve actually written my own slasher horror movie script!  If any budding film directors or production companies wish to get in touch, I’d be delighted to hear from you!

I’d also love to know about readers’ favourite slashers, psychological horrors, Final Girls and serial killing maniacs.  Do feel free to post comments!

Until next week.  Don’t go anywhere…I’ll be right back!  Your friend, A.D.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Muir, J K (2007) A History of the Dead Teenager Decade in Horror Films of the 1980s McFarland & Co: USA (Chapter 2).

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QUEER STORIES: Hidden Homosexuality in Early Horror

20 Saturday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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Anubis, beast, bi-sexual, buggery, Carmilla, Dark Fantasy, Desire, disguise, Dorian Gray, Dracula's Daughter, Egyptian mythology, Finding Delphi, gay, gothic, Greek, homoerotic, homoeroticism, homosexual, homosexuality, Horror, Hyde, jackal, James Corden, Jekyll, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, lesbian, Lesbian Vampire Killers, monster, Oscar Wilde, Paul McGann, queer, Robert Louis Stevenson, secrecy, secrets, Sex, sexual, Sexuality, sodomy, Stephen Fry, the love that dare not speak its name, Underworld, Vampire, Victorian, Werewolf of London, Wilde

Dorian GrayAs I mentioned in a previous article, horror is the perfect place to find a secret subtext.  In some parts of human history, it became unfortunately necessary for the subject of homosexuality to remain hidden in the world of literature and film.  The UK 1533 Buggery Act made sodomy punishable by death.  In 1861, this was changed to life imprisonment rather than hanging.  However, in 1885 the laws were extended to include all sexual activities between males (Queen Victoria did not believe there was such a thing as lesbians!).  It was in this very dark era that “the love that dare not speak its name” had to find other ways to communicate itself.  Gay and bi-sexual writers were able to give expression to the subject of homoerotic desires using the medium of Gothic literature.  In fact, many of the early Gothic romance writers were linked to homosexual scandal.  “Secret and unlawful desires” became euphemisms for homosexuality.  Three such tales, where one may find allusions to homosexuality, are Carmilla (1872) by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) by Robert Louis Stevenson and The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) by Oscar Wilde.  A few years later in 1935, with the advent of film, the gay theme can be found in a couple of horror films such as Werewolf of London (1935) and Dracula’s Daughter (1936).

 Carmilla is the story of a young woman’s susceptibility to the attentions of a female vampire called Carmilla.  The young woman, Laura, whilst living in a castle in Styria, has a vision of a beautiful woman when she is six years old.  She claims later in the story to have been bitten on the chest by the visitor, although no wounds are visible.  Perhaps this signifies an initial pang of attraction.  Twelve years later, Laura finally meets Carmilla face to face, when Carmilla’s carriage is involved in an accident.  The two women recognise each other from the dream.

Carmilla and Laura start to become close friends, although Carmilla has very sudden mood swings, and makes unsettling advances towards Laura.  Of course, Carmilla exhibits vampiric tendencies, such as sleeping during the day, being awake at night and becoming enraged at hearing religious songs.  Furthermore, Laura sees a portrait of an ancestor from the 17th century: Mircalla, Countess Karnstein, who looks identical to Carmilla.  Laura begins to have nightmares of being bitten on the chest by a fiendish cat, which transforms into a female figure.  It would seem Laura’s feelings are being disturbed by an aggressive sexual predator.

 Laura becomes very ill following these nightly visitations.  Her father is told by a friend that his own, recently deceased, daughter had similar symptoms and goes on to describe the situation which involved a young woman named Millarca, who became friends with his daughter.  He came to the conclusion that his daughter was being visited by a vampire, and upon a surprise attack the ‘cat-like creature’ took the form of Millarca and fled.

 It all unravels that Carmilla, Mircalla and Millarca are one in the same person.  All are anagrams of the same name.  Of course, it is clear that lesbian attraction is the force between Carmilla and Laura:

Sometimes after an hour of apathy, my strange and beautiful companion would take my hand and hold it with a fond pressure, renewed again and again; blushing softly, gazing in my face with languid and burning eyes, and breathing so fast that her dress rose and fell with the tumultuous respiration. It was like the ardour of a lover; it embarrassed me; it was hateful and yet overpowering; and with gloating eyes she drew me to her, and her hot lips travelled along my cheek in kisses; and she would whisper, almost in sobs, “You are mine, you shall be mine, and you and I are one for ever”. (Carmilla, Chapter 4). (1) 

Carmilla confined her attentions to female victims, was more comfortable at night-time, was very beautiful, able to walk through walls, could shape-shift into a cat and slept in a coffin.  She was, most definitely, a lesbian vampire!  A few films have been made in her honour.  Some attempt to keep to the original story, but you may remember Carmilla making an appearance as the antagonist in Lesbian Vampire Killers (2009), starring James Corden and Paul McGann.

I had never thought of The Strange Tale of Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, as being homoerotic.  Up until now, as one of my all-time favourite stories, I had viewed it as a tale of the classic ‘beast’ or monster within.  What that monster was, I had put down to some sort of message about insanity and split personalities.  However, it is thought that one reading can be interpreted as that of a queer tale, so let’s look at the evidence for homoeroticism within the story.  It is said to be a story of disguise – and not only in the form of Jekyll and Hyde: ‘a Gothic tale is disguised as a moral fable; the moral fable is disguised as a monster story’ (1).  It might be safe to assume, therefore, that there is much more going on beneath the surface than the initial reading of it might suggest – I’d expect nothing less from such a stylish writer as RLS.

Thanks to a potion invented by Dr Jekyll, he is able to lead a double life in the form of his alter ego, Mr Hyde (obviously the name ‘Hyde’ is the same in sound to the word ‘hide’, which is exactly what both Jekyll and Hyde are doing, depending on who is visible. Hiding.  As for Jekyll, well…the only word I can think of is ‘jackal’ and it wouldn’t surprise me if this was indeed the intended meaning.  In Egyptian mythology, the jackal-headed Anubis, is the god of the Underworld, protector and judge of the dead.  Ultimately, I suppose, Jekyll is a doctor who leads himself to death, but is he also judging himself as well?

The story is commonly thought to be a tale on the horrors of the unleashed sexual appetite, and here is my initial mistake.  Having only seen the film, I assumed that the sexual debauchery Hyde demonstrated were towards women. In fact, in the original text there are no female characters, apart from a cook and a housemaid – both peripheral to the story.  However, Stevenson himself rejected the notion that Hyde was about sexuality of any kind, maintaining that the only reason people would read it that way is because they can think of nothing else!  A trap we should be careful of when reading Gothic fantasy…  Nevertheless, some people do believe that Hyde is a closet homosexual and RLS does include some suspicious markers of homoeroticism within the story:

The suspected blackmail of Jekyll by his “young man”, his “favourite”; the “very pretty manner of politeness of Sir Danvers Carew” when approached in the street – terms that may have denoted forbidden liaisons to a Victorian readership. The hidden door by which he enters Jekyll’s house is the “back way”, even “the back passage”. It happens that the year of composition, 1885, was the year in which an amendment to an act of parliament made homosexual acts between men a criminal offence.(3)

On closer examination it looks like there is much more to discover within the pages of the story, and I think it might be worth returning to this subject in full once I’ve had the chance to read the original text thoroughly.  It would seem there are several possible interpretations, and I wonder if this in itself was deliberate.  Quite often a writer has more than one message he/she wishes to convey.

Most people know of Oscar Wilde and the circumstances which led to his imprisonment, after being convicted of homosexuality.  He spent two years in prison for the sake of the “love that dare not speak its name”, famously quoted in Wilde with Stephen Fry playing the lead role.  Fry gave a very beautiful and moving speech on being brought to trial for daring to love a man.  He explains that in ancient Greek times it was perfectly natural, and the purest of relationships, for a teacher and his student to share a bond.

It has been suggested that the name Dorian, the protagonist in The Picture of Dorian Gray, is a reference to the ancient Greeks, who had a very different and more accepting view of homoeroticism.  Both Lord Henry and Basil compete for Dorian’s attention, praising him for his good looks and youthfulness.  Basil even states: “as long as I live, the personality of Dorian Gray will dominate me.”  Nevertheless, Dorian does claim to have only ever loved one woman in his lifetime: Sibyl Vane.  It could be that Dorian, like Wilde himself, was actually bisexually inclined.  The fact that he is as attracted to her when she is dressed up as a man, as he is when she is dressed as a woman might point to that.  Wilde was very happy and in love with his own wife for the first few years of their married life.  Although I do wonder if the use of the word Sibyl is another nod to the Greeks and their prophetess, the Sibyl, the priestess seer who pronounced her oracles in ancient holy places like Delphi.  (In Finding Delphi the Sibyl plays an important part in the story).  Either way, it would seem the attraction Dorian feels for Sibyl is as a result of her ability to be all things, and as an actress she is well-placed to “mask life”.

Although it remains obscure, Basil asks why Dorian’s “friendship is so fatal to young men” and mentions the “shame and sorrow” of one of the young men’s fathers.  Basil also tells Henry how he worships Dorian, begging him not to “take away the one person that makes my life absolutely lovely to me.”  In the 1890 edition, Basil is more focused on the love he feels; whereas in the 1891 edition the following year, this has been changed to reflect the influence Dorian has on his art: “the one person who gives my art whatever charm it may possess: my life as an artist depends on him.” (4, 5, 6, 7).

Like Dr Jekyll, Dorian has another side to himself, his hidden sexual menace, which lives in the portrait of himself he keeps locked away.  About the secrecy of his portrait, Dorian says: “I have grown to love secrecy.  It seems to be the one thing that can make modern life mysterious or marvellous.”  In both stories, the protagonists enjoy the pleasures of leading a double life, whilst in Carmilla, the vampire is known as having three different names and with the ability to disguise herself in the form of a cat.  Although these are necessarily inexplicit about the subject of homosexuality, in the Victorian era when these stories were written, it is of much use to the interested reader to read them bearing in mind the zeitgeist of 19th century Britain.  To those who don’t see (or wish to see) the homosexual content in these stories, I’m sure you’ll find another interpretation and there is certainly much more to discover.

In the meantime, it is only by studying those dark times that we begin to see the horror of equating any kind of love with evil and ugliness.  No character who hides away their repressed natural emotions ever meets a happy end.

Until next week, be true to yourself and love with pride.  Your Fag Hag friend, A.D.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

(1)   Le Fanu, J S (1872) Carmilla in “In a Glass Darkly” (Kindle edition).

(2)   Halberstam, J (2000) Gothic Surface, Gothic Depth: The subject of Secrecy in Stevenson and Wilde in Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and The Technology of Monsters Duke Uni Press: USA.

(3)   Campbell, J The Beast Within in The Guardian (13th December 2008)

(4)   The Picture of Dorian Gray Book Notes: http://www.bookrags.com/notes/dg/

(5)   Literature (TPODG): http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/index_p.html

(6)   TPODG: http://www.novelguide.com/ThePictureofDorianGray/index.html

(7)   TPODG: http://www.gradesaver.com/the-picture-of-dorian-gray/study-guide/short-summary/

Mary Magdalene – High Priestess and Sacred Prostitute

13 Saturday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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The Goddess of Sacred Sex

2_2_MaryMagdalene_PassionoftheChristMy awareness of the Goddess came to me somewhere in my early 30’s and deciding to seek her out academically many years later has been an awakening, as are all major truths in our lives. To my surprise I discovered that much of the world for millennia lived in a world where their God was female and she was the Goddess – benevolent, fertile and above all sexual. Very sexual! Today we have a profound difficulty in associating the profession of the prostitute with anything vaguely associated with sacredness, but in ancient times these women were held in the highest esteem in the temples of the Great Mother Goddess. The sacred prostitute or temple priestess became the representation of the goddess in physical form and with their bodies entered into sacred sexual rituals with the men who came to worship.

My studies have shown me that long before Christianity (which…

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MARGARET THATCHER MEETS MEDEA: Witches and Monstrous Mothers throughout the Ages.

12 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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Blood, Carrie, Christianity, Colchis, curses, demonisation, Dracula, Euripides, feminism, Greek, Hekate, Horror, Jason, Lucy, Magi, magic, Malleus Maleficarum, Margaret Thatcher, Medea, menstruation, monsters, monstrous mothers, periods, powerful women, prophesy, Psycho, Religion, sacrifice, Sex, sexism, sexual predators, Stephen King, supernatural, The Devil, Vampire, vampirism, witch, witchcraft, women

lucyMargaret Thatcher is nothing, if not memorable.  She is both loved and reviled, depending on which side of the fence you stand on.  It is not my intention to pay a tribute, though it does seem like a fitting topic this week, following the death of Thatcher, to discuss legendary women who fall into the category of ‘monstrous mothers’.  Their deeds are outwith the accepted boundaries of what it means to be a woman.  They, therefore, become known as a witch or monster.

Medea, wife of Jason, in the classical tale of the same name, is one such witch.  Written in 431 BCE by the Greek playwright Euripides, Medea tells the story of a foreign witch betrayed by the man she loves.  She gives up everything, her wealth and status, for Jason; everything, that is, except her magic.  In fact, Medea is a priestess of Hekate from Colchis.  This was the special domain of sorcery known as Kolkha.  In the 6th century BCE Colchis came under the Persian Empire†.  In Greece, foreign religions were treated suspiciously and given the name ‘magic’; terms which arose from the name of the Persian priests, The Magi.  Medea is treated badly throughout the story, both by the suspicious women of her new town and from her once beloved Jason.  The townswomen do not like that Medea dresses differently from them; and Jason betrays her when he decides to marry Princess Glauce.  Glauce is deemed to be more of an appealing match.  After all, Medea is only a ‘barbarian woman’ in the eyes of the Greeks.  By this point in the story, Medea has raised Jason’s two sons, and gets her own appalling revenge on him by murdering his wife and her father on the wedding day.  She goes on to murder the two sons that she and Jason have together.  Medea is shown, however, to be an oppressed victim, appealing for the sympathy of the audience. In this tale, she escapes in a blaze of glory, astride dragons, having wreaked her revenge on the philandering Jason.  

The Sun himself, the source of all life and warmth, vindicating the cause of passion, disorder, violent cruelty, against the cold, orderly, self-protective process of civilised man, is a reminder that the universe is not on the side of civilisation; and that a life combining order with happiness is something men must win for themselves in continual struggle with an unsympathetic environment. (1)

This week, I’ve read the line: “Ding dong the witch is dead…” so often I can’t now seem to get it out my head.  Interestingly, it was not until The Wizard of Oz, that we had the introduction of the witch as a terrifying character on the silver screen. 

The witch has always inspired dread and fear, going back to ancient times, as can be seen in the case of Medea.  The earliest known witches were feared only because they were thought to have magical and terrifying powers, not because of any association with The Devil.  This was a later-added Christian fear (both The Devil and the association of The Devil with witches).

In some cultures, young girls who experienced prophetic dreams during menstruation were thought to be witches.  There was often this association with blood and the supernatural.  Menstruation was linked to the ‘witches curse’, something Stephen King explored in his much celebrated story Carrie.  Historically, the curse of a woman who was menstruating or pregnant was believed to be much more powerful.  It was known as a ‘Mother’s Curse’, and meant certain death.  In the 14th century, the secret feminine knowledge of midwifery became associated with witchcraft and in 1484 The Malleus Maleficarum stated that witches were castrators.  Clearly men, therefore, had much to fear from these devil women!  Witches, during those years, were often accused of such things.  The main reason given for a woman’s ‘otherness’ is her natural carnal nature.  Here is a shining example of the demonisation of women and sex, rolled into one convenient package.  Burn the horny cock-thieving bitches!

In horror, the witch still has an essentially sexual nature, with supernatural powers and a wish to harm, wreaking destruction on the community.  Being closer to nature than man, she can control such things as storms and hurricanes.  In Carrie, the anti-heroine is a young menstruating woman, although not a mother.  The monstrous mother role is given to her mother, who desires to control her daughter through a warped sense of religious morals.  At no point in the story does she ever really show a maternal bond with Carrie.  In both Psycho and Carrie the monstrous child is a product of the psychotic, domineering and monstrous mother.  There is, incidentally, another important similarity between Carrie and Psycho.  Both Marion in Psycho and Carrie, are punished severely after enjoying sensual pleasures in the shower, and both these scenes end in blood-shed. 

Having been given no prior warning about periods from her mother, Carrie is then subjected to a lecture on the sins of women when she returns home.  Raving about sexist religious beliefs, Mrs White goes on to blame all human evil on women.  Woman is the universal scapegoat, and Carrie is, therefore, the sacrificial victim at the Prom, where she is baptised in the blood of a pig as a joke by her bullying classmates.  Carrie is ‘crowned queen and anointed with pig’s blood’ before going on to wage her terrible and monstrous revenge.  Like Medea, we are encouraged to view her display of monstrosity with sympathy because, like Medea, Carrie has been treated appallingly by her female peers and (not her husband) her mother.

Both women desire a fresh start at the end of their vengeful outburst: Medea in Athens, and Carrie, pictured as a trembling child washing off the indicators of her womanhood, kills her mother and returns to the ‘womb’ of the dark closet.

It’s pretty safe to conclude that the monstrous female is a patriarchal invention.  Women tend not to be frightened of themselves, usually.  In horror, the monstrous nature of women is undoubtedly linked with her place as man’s sexual other (2).

The dark side of maternity is also explored in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.  The Count, described by Almond as a ‘monstrous baby’, suckles on women, turning them into bad mothers: ‘non-maternal sexual predators’ such as the vampirised Lucy, is later destroyed by honourable men.  Furthermore, the three female vampires encountered by Jonathon Harker are representative of rampant female sexuality, much reviled by Victorian society.  In such a society, they symbolise the corruption of motherhood.  With witch-like qualities Shakespeare would have been proud to see, the terrifying power these three possess is female sexuality.  Furthermore, Lucy goes from unconscious flirtatiousness to becoming blatantly seductive and, therefore, dangerous.  Shortly after her death there are newspaper reports of children going missing who later, returning with bitten necks, report having met a beautiful woman who turns out to be Lucy.  When confronted vampirising a child at night, Lucy callously discards the child and attempts to seduce her husband, Arthur.  This is a scene which shows female sexuality is incompatible with maternity, a strong Victorian notion.  It also reverses the roles of the mother and child.  Instead of the child feeding from the mother-figure, the mother feeds upon the child (3).

Powerful and/or sexual women are often seen as a threat to a patriarchal-dominated society, whether or not they and their behaviour deserves to be viewed as ‘monstrous’.  Like her or loathe her, Margaret Thatcher was a successful politician from the late 1950s, gaining the ultimately most powerful position possible in 1979 when she became Prime Minister of the UK.  Thereafter, she became a Monstrous Mother, suppressing the power of her ‘children’, sending them to be killed in unnecessary wars, increasing their poverty and manipulating them with well-timed elections.  Eventually, 200,000 of Maggie’s children demonstrated against her policies.  There’s definitely a gothic horror story in that!  I doubt, however, that Maggie would get as much sympathy as Medea or Carrie… 

I’m not sure either if she had an ‘essentially sexual nature’, though no doubt she was the wank fantasy of some BDSM pervs…

Well, anyway, I’m even more grateful to have such a loving mother when you see what’s out there!  Mine even gave me a kidney – she’s a keeper!

Until next week: More power to MILFs!  Your friend, A.D.

 

(1)               Euripides, Medea & Other Plays Penguin (1963 edition) p9.

(2)               Creed, B   (1993) Woman as Witch in “The Monstrous Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis” Routledge pp73-83.

(3)               Almond, B R (2006) Monstrous Infants and Vampyric Mothers in Bram Stoker’s Dracula in “The International Journal of Psychoanalysis” 2007:88:219-35.

† The Making of the Georgian Nation: 2nd Ed, Ronald Grigor Suny, p 13

FEAR, RELIGION & EXORCISM: Demonic Possession and the Battle of Good vs. Evil in Horror

05 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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Assyria, Babylon, bad, Damien Karras, Demon Possesion, Demons, djinn, entity, Evil, Exorcism, Exorcist, Fear, Gabriel Byrne, genie, genii, Good, gothic, guardian spirits, Horror, Merrin, mythology, negative, pagan, Pazuzu, positive, psychology, Regan, Religion, Satan, superstition, The Devil, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, The Gemini Killer, The Vatican, William Peter Blatty

EXORIST, I.V.(Contains Spoilers!)

I read two things this week that made me decide to write about the role of religion in horror.  Firstly, my idol Gabriel Byrne said that he thought the Catholic Church was evil.  Secondly, parks have a calming effect on the mind, apparently!  What have these got to do with one another?

Well, although I’m pagan I have to both agree and disagree with Gabriel.  Religion, like every entity, has a good and a bad side.  Both positive and negative psychology exists in most religions.  Many people have horrific or depressing experiences within the confines of a place of worship or due to the beliefs held, but just as many have hugely fulfilling life-long relationships with their God(s); despite my lack of Christian belief, I never fail to feel spiritually at peace in beautiful big Italian churches.  They are designed that way deliberately, to give you a sense of peace.  In much the same way as Nature is.

Over the years, many stories have been penned on the fight between good and evil.  Like all horrors, they are intended to frighten the reader, or viewer.  What better way to terrorise than through deep-rooted religious beliefs and superstitions?  Therein, lie many supernatural beings, ready and willing to take your soul.  The gothic horror novel can be scrutinised for the plentiful evidence of the much larger fears of society, and the horror genre in general is awash with (often) Christian symbolism.  Sometimes, if it’s being especially clever, a story will throw in the debate of religion vs. science, with psychology being the obvious choice for the reasons behind baffling and frightening behaviour.

Truth be told, religious horror absolutely scares the beejeezus out of me, but I absolutely love it.  Religion was never forced down my throat as a kid, so I can only imagine how devout Christians feel!  I know many Catholics who just won’t watch or read, for example, The Exorcist, even though I tell them the Church is painted in a very good light and defeats Satan in the end.  I first remember reading The Exorcist as a teenager, probably around the age of fifteen or so.  It was a book given to me by my grandfather, who knew I liked Hammer Horror and Christopher Lee.  My love of The Count was positively encouraged by my father, and I have many fond memories of our Dracula film nights!  I don’t think my grandfather had any idea of what The Exorcist was about, or what lurked between the pages of that book.  I’m sure he’d never have passed it on otherwise.  I found it shocking, disturbing and highly entertaining, though it might have caused me some bouts of insomnia for a few weeks!

The Exorcist is the tale of a little girl, who becomes possessed by the Devil, and the fight of the priests to save her soul.  The author, William Peter Blatty, supposedly derived inspiration from the exorcism of a young boy by a Jesuit priest in 1949.

However, Blatty chose not to go with Christian mythology when deciding on which evil spirit to use.  The demon he chooses for his story is Pazuzu, a wind demon from Babylonian and Assyrian mythology.  Demons, in ancient Iraq – where the story begins – are also called Djinn or, as we know them, ‘genie’.  The genii in Assyro-Babylonian mythology were inferior to gods but played a major role in the daily lives of this ancient civilisation.  There were both good and bad genii.  The good ones were guardian spirits, but there were also evil genii from the lower world who overwhelmed people with disease, made them become criminals, split up families and decimated livestock. There was no way of appeasing them, and it was thought they did not heed either prayer or supplication.  Seven of them were thought to be particularly dangerous: ‘…they dwell in holes in the ground, they live among the ruin of the earth’.  They appear to mortals as terrifying creatures and can only be driven away by incantations performed…by an exorcist! (1)

Father Merrin, in The Exorcist, finds a small statue of Pazuzu and a St Joseph’s medal whilst on an archaeological dig in Iraq.  Immediately the story is introduced as the fight for good against evil.  As this is happening, in Georgetown (USA), a little girl and her mother start to experience disturbing events.  As the story progresses the little girl, Regan, appears to be possessed by a demonic entity.  Her mother immediately has various psychological tests carried out, as this is the obvious reason for her daughter’s behaviour.  Eventually, at her wits end and seeking out another cure, she enlists the help of Damien Karras, a Jesuit priest trained in psychiatry; someone with a foot in both camps.  Damien, however, is easy emotional prey for the demon.  He has a crisis of faith and is guilt-ridden about the death of his mother.  The Vatican enlist Merrin, an experienced exorcist, to drive the demon out of Regan and save her from the Hellishness she has succumbed to. The outcome is the death of Merrin and the ultimate sacrifice of Karras, who persuades the demon to take him instead of Regan.  He then jumps out of the girl’s window, in an attempt to kill Pazuzu….

…and we think that’s it, until Legion (Exorcist III), also written by Blatty, but this time directed by him too.  It is also a pretty good film.  Particularly terrifying in this story, is the notion that evil has the ability to enter holy places, which most people like to believe are calm and spiritual havens of protection.  Suddenly, nowhere is safe from evil and chaos, neither churches nor hospitals; devout clergy are as vulnerable as anyone from attack by powerful evil spirits.

Police are baffled when the trade-marks of the now dead Gemini Killer, which were kept secret, start appearing on victims’ bodies.   It turns out to be a demon (presumably Pazuzu) possessing different people, making them commit horrific murders.  It also turns out Damien didn’t die, but is still possessed by the spirit of a serial killer alongside Pazuzu.  Damien is trapped in Hell, but still saves the day in the end.

I think this film is an absolute gem. The tension built up in some scenes is very well done.  The “Nurse Scene” scared the crap out of me when I first watched it, and again when I watched it this very afternoon – even knowing what was coming.  It is creepiness at its very best.  The film won a much deserved Saturn award from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA for Best Writing.  The acting of Brad Dourif, for which he at least received a nomination, is utterly fantastic.  It definitely should be on your list of books to read, and films to see.†

Another exorcism story, which keeps me awake and terrified, is The Exorcism of Emily Rose.  Again, it is good vs evil, science vs religion.  What I love about this story is that it leaves you to make up your own mind about the events that occur.

These events are based on the true, and very tragic, story of Anneliese Michel, an unfortunate German girl who died following an exorcism.  It is thought, by some, to have been a case of misidentification of mental illness, negligence, abuse and religious hysteria (2).  In the film, it is brought to the attention of a jury, and there is a fairly good case on both sides.  The outcome is similar to the real outcome.  In the film the exorcist is found guilty, but deemed to have suffered enough.

What I loved about this story is that it really draws upon the viewer’s beliefs at every point.  It borders, like the best scary stories, on the edge of possibility; because the events, or ones very similar, actually took place.

What do I believe?  I believe that demons and mental illness are the same thing dressed in different clothing, and I believe that in order to defeat anything you need to start with the beliefs of the affected person and adopt a holistic approach to treatment.  The real horror is that science and spirituality seem to be forever at war, rather than forming an amicable ‘opposites attract’ partnership, defeating the cause on all sides – physically, mentally and spiritually.

Yes, I believe… I believe in death. I believe in disease. I believe in injustice and inhumanity and torture and anger and hate.  I believe in murder. I believe in pain. I believe in cruelty and infidelity. I believe in slime and stink and every crawling, putrid thing… every possible ugliness and corruption, you son of a bitch! I believe…….in you (Lt. Kinderman, Exorcist III: Legion)

And I believe, even if you don’t believe, it is best not to be too arrogant about it.

Until next week readers.  Your friend, A.D.

  1. New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology (1986 edition) Guild Publishing: London p65.
  2. – Duffey, John M. (2011). Lessons Learned: The Anneliese Michel Exorcism. ISBN 978-1-60899-664-3

–     http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anneliese_Michel

† And what of The Exorcist II…? Well, we don’t really like to talk about it…

Power Shorts Daily: The Night Mare

04 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by Alyson Dunlop Shanes in Uncategorized

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A funny little tale…

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