Lucky me. Paul Bryers
drew on his considerable experience as a film maker and writer on November 17th
at the IdeaSpace in Whitechapel Road. (It's really a huge modern library near the Whitechapel tube station) His presentation was called ‘The Art of Horror’.
A range of examples, from Bram Stoker to Stephen King were combined
with personal anecdotes. A sense of
mischief is essential for a writer of horror, he said, referring not just to
Roald Dahl’s short stories but his own childhood game of frightening himself by
projecting a shadow with a torch onto his bedroom wall and then walk backwards
so it loomed larger and larger.
Location plays a prime role in horror stories, typically the
archetypal haunted house, but a landscape can be as eloquent as a building. EdgarAllan Poe lived for a while in nearby Stoke Newington, and projected images of
the place were overlaid with quotations that summed up Poe’s feelings when he
lived there:
“I became insane, with long intervals of horrible
sanity.” He also had ‘tendency to see
demons’
According Stephen King: ‘We
make up imaginary horrors to help us cope with real ones’. King’s film The Shining, set in a remote hotel in the wilderness
of Maine, encouraged Bryers to spend three months there on an Indian reservation
whilst preparing to write his own book, a firm believer in the theory that ‘A lot of the things you write about come from
places you visit’.
‘The essential of
horror is coincidence’, he said mentioning the bizarre road accident that
nearly killed King, when he emerged from a wood onto an almost deserted road
into the path of a drunken truck driver. ‘Every moment we deal in chaos’
Paradoxically, Bram Stoker found the ingredients for his
classic Count Dracula from his Summer holidays in Whitby, where he was inspired by the
ruined abbey, and house that suggested the home of solicitor John Harkness, and even two
women at his digs who became fictional female victims. He found the idea for his villain from a book
about a Russian tyrant called Vlad the Impaler.
An exploration of Charles Perrault ‘s (1628-1705) classic fairy
tale, Red Riding Hood showed the potent influence of a shape-shifting wolf on
writers like Angela Carter, Thomas Harris and Daphne Du Maurier. The essential ingredients for the writer of horror stories could be summed up as: haunted locations; myths and fairy tales; evil characters; innocent/vulnerable victims; irony; predestination and coincidence; paradox; one’s own life experiences; a sense of mischief.
I’ll definitely be attending this weekend-long festival in 2014 and would recommend the talk if you see it offered elsewhere. It’s the best I’ve seen all year, and especially good for aspiring writers (like me).
2 comments:
I'm far too wimpy to read or write horror.
Patsy, thanks for your comment.I haven't written horror so far, although I love to watch horror film. (But not on my own and sometimes with my eyes closed throughout) This talk inspired me to read more horror and to try to write some.
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