Over the years horror based films have become more and more popular with the audiences. From the early years of the 20th century with Nosferatu (1922) to later on with Night of the Living Dead (1968). Both are notable horror movies that are filled with similarities and differences of how they use the conventions.
Both these films and other horror movies have become so popular because we, the audience, seemingly can’t get enough of watching the fear of our own death. The fear comes from the ‘what if’. What if this actually happened? What if zombies and a possessed little girl are real and come after me?
Nosferatu is an early 1920’s horror film. With the directors approach to the film, there is no ‘blood and gore’ unlike Night of the Living Dead. It is more of a psychological horror. Nosferatu creates fear through music/sound and creating suspense. As it is a silent movie, what is spoken is written on the screen. When this happens it still plays into the conventions of the horror genre as what is written is in a gothic font style. The words that are used creates a sense of the shiver; for example, ‘And now, gentlemen, here is another type of vampire a polyp with claws...’. With the music playing along with this sentence, an eerie atmosphere lurks around with the sound of violins and blowing wind.
Nosferatu builds tension and suspense in the film with music and sound throughout the film, even when nothing bad is happening there is still the sense of something is going to happening. For example, when Hutter’s wife is just standing around, looking at the flowers, a xylophone is playing in the background like the sound of light raindrops, but there is also the sound of wind blowing which suggests that there is an unwanting presence about.
The film Nosferatu, even though is horror, still has its ‘happy’ moments. With the music that is used, you can say that there are pleasant moments but still have the edge of uncertainty. However this cannot be said for Night of the Living Dead. Throughout the film you always get the feeling of the unknowing about to happen, the fear of knowing something bad is hanging about. Within the first five minutes of the film, we already get the feeling of something horrific. First of the first setting is at a grave yard which brings up suspicions of something haunting is around. Plus before Johnny gets out of the car, there is a radio broadcast that sounds important and when Johnny turns it off there is a sharp piano sound which may indicate that he done a wrong move which may later lead them into trouble.
Night of the Living Dead, like Nosferatu, also creates suspense and fear from the use of music and sound. We mostly hear a violin playing either fast or slow. Either way we as audience have our hearts pumping for when someone dies or zombies are attacking.
The audience sophistication has grown over the years since Nosferatu and keeping the audience on edge is a well known convention of horror. In other words the audience already have an idea of what will happen so it’s important that they don’t expect the unexpected. For example at the end of the film we would all think that at least the main guy would survive. Even though he survives the zombies he is shot down.
We get a different sense of horror from Night of the Living Dead compared to Nosferatu. In Night of the Living Dead we see more blood and gore, zombies eating the remains of the human’s body and organs, and the actual killing of the mother by the daughter. In Nosferatu we just see the bites of Hutter’s neck (not the biting process). When the vampire, Count Orlac, over shadows Hutter, the scene ends and we don’t see any of the action. It’s all created in our own minds.
Both films have similar narratives. Hutter’s wife and Barbra are both damsels in distress. They both need a hero to save them. However it is actually Hutter’s wife who destroys Count Orlac and when the zombies are attacking the house, Barbra gets out of her unstable mind and helps Helen get rid of the zombies on her.
The films also include different conventions of the horror genre. At the end of Nosferatu, the villain dies and the good characters lives, after saving the victim. But in Night of the Living Dead, Ben (the hero) fails to save any of the characters. He gets mistaken for a zombie and is shot in the head.
The audiences growing desire for fear has grown more and more. With Nosferatu, the vampire can die, it has weaknesses. But in Night of the Living Dead, how do you kill something that is already dead? They can go out in sunlight and their one goal is to eat human beings by all means necessary. The monsters and villains in horror movies become more and more difficult to defeat as time goes on.
Typical settings /mise en scene is a must have for horror films. Having a grave yard, haunted castle or abandoned house is what is necessarily defined as typical settings as it is an isolated place where most monsters and villains are more likely to be. Nosferatu has the gothic castle in the middle of nowhere and the deserted woods. Count Orlac is dressed in black from head to toe. Night of the living dead has the abandoned house and the graveyard. Also the zombies have the sunken in dark eyes and the sense of being ‘brain dead’, they also walk slowly. They are dangerous and the victim knows that, they can run and they can hide but the zombie just keeps on coming no matter what. Both enemies in the films are pale faced giving the effect of them coming back from the dead.
Over the years audience sophistication has definitely grown, we now expect what we wouldn’t have guessed many years ago in terms of horror films. Directors for horror movies give the unexpected to what people expect. When Nosferatu first came out in theatres people didn’t expect this type of horror. They hadn’t really seen anything so out of the ordinary or physiologically horrific before and Nosferatu was a start of expectations for this type of genre. Now many people would not see this as a scary film it as not as shocking as the age of horror movies.
We want to be more and more shocked by horror movies, that it why we demand to see them. We love the surprises of the conventions of horror and the fear of dying. Whether it’s Night of the Living Dead (1968), Final Destination (2000) or Paranormal Activity (2007) we will never get tired of wanting to find out different and more horrific ways of ending to the start of ‘what if’