This book is a fun and approachable way to understand the science behind the monsters of our favorite horror films, the ones we came back to again and again, whether we were renting from Blockbuster, or watching our own scratchy VHS copies. We’ve devoted our lives to the study of film, literature, communication, and true crime, and so we relished this chance to delve deeper into the world of science and to then connect it to the world of horror. We had the opportunity to conduct research and visit with experts at the top of their fields; from scientists at the Mayo Clinic to creatives such as Simon Barrett, the screenwriter behind
SECTION ONE
SLASHERS
CHAPTER ONE
HALLOWEEN
Year of Release: 1978
Director: John Carpenter
Writer: John Carpenter, Debra Hill
Starring: Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence
Budget: $300,000
Box Office: $60 million
Like most children growing up in the 1980s, we saw many horror movies on VHS for the first time. The nostalgia of visiting a video store, perusing the covers, and choosing the weekend’s haul holds countless fond memories for us. (In fact, it’s the experience that inspired us to create our
That movie sat with me more than most horror films. It seemed like the most simplistic plot: a guy just wants to kill a lady for no apparent reason. But there is no greater horror than that. The thought that someone is out there, watching us, and they have decided we are going to die. Jamie Lee Curtis also really delivered a personality to the screen that later slasher knockoffs would never be able to correctly mimic because they missed the subtleties of Laurie Strode that made us terrified that she would die. Jamie Lee Curtis and John Carpenter are horror film royalty.
Jamie Lee Curtis was just nineteen years old and an unknown when cast in
Was
John Carpenter, the writer and director of the cult classic, recounts being inspired to write the film while visiting a mental hospital for a class in college.1 “We visited the most serious, mentally ill patients. And there was this kid, he must have been twelve or thirteen and he literally had this look.” The look is described by the lines Carpenter wrote for Donald Pleasence, who played psychiatrist Dr. Sam Loomis: “This blank, pale emotionless face. Blackest eyes. The devil’s eyes. I spent eight years trying to reach him and then another seven trying to keep him locked up, because I realized what was living behind that boy’s eyes was purely and simply evil.”
Some people look at the character of Michael Myers and see someone who embodies everyone; a part of themselves that could someday snap. Are we born evil? Are we all capable of murder? That brings us to the plausibility of the plot. Are children capable of murder? According to an article in