ニューヨーク近代美術館のインスタグラム(themuseumofmodernart) - 10月31日 23時54分


“I hope that more non-white people, especially women, get mainstream attention...so people stop thinking that it’s just white boys in black T-shirts making horror films.” — Ashlee Blackwell

In the six decades since Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho” reinvented horror as a mainstream box office attraction, the genre has morphed and mutated to become arguably the most complex and radically provocative in cinema.

Horror movies reflect the major concerns of our times. Rooted in reality and fueled by the fantastic, these works question the supremacy of humankind, and visualize a dizzying array of consequences for our folly.

When women step behind the camera, moving beyond the slasher film and the “final girl” to explore motherhood, sexuality, trauma, and gender discrimination, a new and exciting language in horror cinema is created.

In charge of telling their own stories, women filmmakers can address the longstanding tropes that have been established in horror by male directors.

🎥 This #Halloween watch “How to See: Women Reframing Horror” on #MoMAMagazine, a video about the changing role of women in horror movies, both in front of and behind the camera.


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2022/10/31

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