tommy wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 10:37 am
ChudFusk wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 1:02 am
numberthirty wrote: Wed Sep 14, 2022 3:52 pm
One guy's take...
When it comes to horror films?
It is pretty rare for your "Face..." to get taken off of the board, and you can realistically just leave it at that.
Never really happened for Freddy/Jason/Whoever. In that second "The Strangers..." film? It was one of the few times in my memory that a franchise could have put it's antagonist to bed in a compelling fashion, and just left it at that.
It's kind of a shame that they will not actually be leaving it at that. The "MKI..." Strangers went out in pretty memorable fashion.
I know these are words and sentences but I just can't figure out what they mean. What am I missing?
I also have no idea what it means...
Ok...
Took a couple of passes at spins on the "Spoiler..." tags. Nothing took. So, I'm going to seriously spoil
Strangers: Prey At Night and a couple of "Classic Coke..." horror films. For folks that don't want to risk it, close your eyes and speed scroll on past this one.
Generally speaking? Horror movies never get to really put up a "The End...", and give their central antagonist an ending even when a pretty compelling exit and end point are right there on the screen.
When Tommy Jarvis murders Jason at the end of the fourth film? That would have been the time to wrap up the overall story, and give Jason his "The End..."
When Jeff Denlon murders John Kramer at the close of the third "Saw..." film? That would have been the time to wrap up the overall story, and give John Kramer his "The End..."
By the time both of those films happened? Nothing like that was even going to be considered. It was about turning a profit, and not the right time to craft an actual concrete ending.
The Strangers: Prey At Night?
It came out around ten years after the initial film, and was sort of a surprise when it did.
In the film, Pin-Up Girl/Dollface/Man In The Mask each wind up in knock down/drag out fights that they finally wind up being killed in.
It's just a rarity that those sorts of characters get a chance to really just be put to bed in a worthwhile fashion with a "The End..." spot where it can happen.
That film was one of the few times that I can remember where I thought that it might actually happen as far as the overall "Big Picture..." of horror films goes.
Just a bit sad that they are going to chuck all of that for a reboot not even ten years out.