defines a new type of terror

Madie 2022-04-21 09:01:31

I am in 2002. Then it was almost the horror movie I watched in 2008. When I was a child, I grew up with my older brother in my hometown, so I almost watched horror movies that were about 20 centimeters thick when I was a child. It's a pity that it is now banned from the Internet, so you can't see it.

So I am the kind of person who is not afraid of ghosts and the like since I was a child, and even likes watching horror movies, bloody movies and the like. But the series I watched in 2008 shocked me, and even gave me a new view on the word horror. It's not just killing and gore, and ghosts, that give us terror. In the unexpected and reasonable death brought about by this series of unspeakable coincidences, I felt a chill emanating from the seams of the bones.

This terror is called the unknown, also called destiny.

Because maybe 80% of the people in this world are ordinary people after all. We don't somehow get involved in so many murders, or have enough money to go to some inexplicably scary place. We live in ordinary life, but it is this warm and ordinary daily life that we think hides so many murderous intentions.

I feel that this film also uses the theory of the Uncanny Valley.

In general, brothers and sisters who have not yet entered the pit, welcome to the death camp.

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Extended Reading

Final Destination quotes

  • Carter: We blow half a day in Paris, all because Browning had a bad fucking dream?

  • Alex Browning: [describing his premonition] I saw it. Like, I don't know I just saw it. I saw it on the runway, I saw it take off. I saw out my window. I saw the ground. And-and the cabin starts to shake, right? And the left side blows up and the whole plane just explodes! And it was so real, just how everything happens, you know?

    Tod Waggner: You've been on a lot of planes that blew up?

    Val Lewton: You must have fallen asleep.