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Special Feature: Chills Over Kills – A Look at the Current State of the Horror Boxoffice

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Unless you’ve been living under a rock lately, you’re probably aware that despite industry predictions, high-profile franchise entry Scream 4 (a bloody slasher) floundered at the box-office recently, while the lesser-hyped Insidious (a supernatural fright flick) became a sleeper word-of-mouth hit. It doesn’t appear to be an isolated incident, as over the last couple of years (roughly since the time Paranormal Activity exploded onto the scene) we seem to have experienced a shift in the viewing habits of horror audiences – in essence, a move away from bloody slasher/splatter films (Scream 4, Saw 3D, A Nightmare on Elm Street) and a gravitation toward lower-key offerings that put the emphasis on “chills over kills” (Insidious, Paranormal Activity, The Last Exorcism).

But does this observation hold up in light of the actual numbers? From Saw in 2004 to Insidious in 2011, B-D’s Chris Eggertsen sifts through the last seven years of horror box-office to get to the bottom of it all. Check out the full rundown inside.


There’s an over-utilized cliché about horror films – mostly propagated by snobby mainstream critics who lack a proper understanding of the genre – that “what you don’t see is the scariest thing of all.” While there’s certainly a kernel of the truth in that statement, it’s too often thrown out as a way to demean films that feature explicit violence without actually taking their artistic merits into consideration.

Yes, atmosphere is an essential component in spinning an effective horror film, but that’s not to say that because a director utilizes other tricks of the trade in addition – i.e. the literal blood and guts – that his/her product is somehow inferior. I agree that atmosphere – the “what you don’t see” – is the thing makes a movie frightening, but in the hands of a skilled filmmaker, that atmosphere will come through regardless of whether it’s used in service of a film featuring overt visual shocks, low-key shivers, or an effective mixture of both.

Nevertheless, shortsighted critics of slasher/splatter films must certainly be pleased at some of the latest developments at the box-office – specifically, the apparent petering out of the “torture porn” craze paired with several recent successful titles that cater in relatively blood-free, more supernaturally-oriented scares. I’d hate for these individuals to feel any more self-satisfaction than they already do, but this is nevertheless where the horror genre seems to be headed at the moment.

Ok, so let’s back up a few weeks. Insidious, a supernatural horror film from Saw director James Wan, is quietly released in about 2,400 theaters and grosses a surprisingly potent $13 million. The following weekend, it drops less than 30% and takes in another $9 million. To date, it has grossed over $50 million and become the very definition of a sleeper hit.

Two weeks later, Scream 4, a heavily-hyped bloody slasher sequel with a top-grossing trilogy behind it, debuts to a surprisingly low $19 million. The following weekend, it drops over 60% and takes in a little over $7 million. To date, it has grossed about $37 million and become the very definition of a box-office disappointment.

A couple days after Scream 4‘s soft opening, I receive an email from Mr. Disgusting commenting on the surprising turn of events. In it, he mentions that horror audiences more or less seem to be turning their backs on the old bloody franchise offerings (Saw, Scream, A Nightmare on Elm Street) while embracing exciting new works dealing with the supernatural (Paranormal Activity, Insidious, The Last Exorcism). He then asks me if I can prove or disprove this observation in an article.

Given my closet tendency to salivate over stats (I tend to enjoy sifting through data to find patterns) I happily obliged, and subsequently combed through the box-office charts from the last seven years or so to find out whether the math supported Mr. D’s theory. Curious to hear how it panned out? Well then, keep on reading…

In essence, there have been two major signposts in the horror genre over the last seven years: James Wan’s Saw (2004) and Oren Peli’s Paranormal Activity (2009). Both films were made with very small budgets, both proved extremely profitable relative to those budgets, and both spawned new trends in the horror genre – gory “torture porn”/new-wave splatter films (Saw) and smaller-budgeted supernatural horror films (Paranormal Activity). Both also seemed to toll the death knell for the dominant horror trends that preceded their releases (Saw for the “J-horror” sub-genre, Paranormal for the “torture porn” sub-genre).

Indeed, since the phenomenal success of Paranormal in autumn 2009, there seems to have been a shift in the movie-going habits of horror audiences. The once-mighty Saw franchise, which succeeded in kick-starting the “torture-porn” craze, had already begun looking a little stale after the release of the fourth installment in 2007, which grossed around $63 million domestically – a significant drop from Saw III‘s $80 million just one year prior. The following year, Saw V grossed even less, with $57 million in domestic receipts.

It was right around that point that the genre seemed to fall into a kind of limbo similar to the period in the early `90s that came between the fading of the `80s slasher boom and the surprise success of Scream. Though gory slasher/splatter films continued to perform well – bloody remakes of Halloween, Friday the 13th and My Bloody Valentine all scored with audiences – none hit with quite the same force as the Saw franchise, which had come to define horror (for better or worse) in the mid-2000s. Nevertheless, gore-intensive R-rated remakes and franchise entries continued to show strength, and the studios continued to churn them out.

When Paranormal Activity was released in September 2009, it seemed to signal the pent-up desire from horror audiences for something new. The micro-budgeted found-footage film ultimately grossed over $100 million at the domestic box-office, making it one of the most profitable titles of all time. By contrast, Saw VI grossed a relatively meager $28 million domestically – less than half of what Saw V had managed – and was handily beaten in its opening weekend by Paranormal, already in its second week of wide release.

A few months later, in April 2010, the Nightmare on Elm Street remake – which despite its supernatural overtones falls much more in line with bloody offerings like Saw than Paranormal – also proved to be a box-office disappointment. While its $63 million take by no means qualifies it as a flop, it still fell short of what most box-office prognosticators had been predicting and seemed another indicator of audiences’ fatigue concerning bloody horror flicks – ushered in by the success of Saw – that put the emphasis on, as I like to call it, “kills over chills”.

Adding further fuel to this idea was the mediocre Stateside box-office performance of Saw 3D in October 2010, which despite its inflated 3D ticket prices made barely half of what Paranormal Activity 2 – released just the week before – managed by the end of its run. Meanwhile, supernaturally-tinged horror flicks such as mock-doc The Last Exorcism ($41 million domestic off a $1.8 million budget) and Devil ($34 million domestic off a $10 million budget) – not to mention “semi-horror” blockbusters such as Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island ($128 million) and Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan ($107 million) – were managing to connect with audiences (though the latter two admittedly have only one foot in the genre).

Looking at the box-office charts in greater detail, I first started with October 29, 2004 – the date Saw was released in theaters – and took account of the commercial performances of the horror films that followed in its wake. To be clear, I’ll only be looking at “pure” works of horror – i.e., films produced with the express purpose of eliciting fear and/or disgust in audiences by utilizing standard genre tropes. Coming up with the “pure horror” definition was something of a challenge, but I ultimately arrived at what I feel is a fair cut-off point:

Both Saw and Paranormal Activity definitely count under the “pure horror” definition, for pretty obvious reasons. On the flipside of that, successful franchises like Resident Evil and Underworld do not count, as those movies – while they do utilize elements of horror – function mainly as action films. The same goes for offerings like I Am Legend (apocalyptic sci-fi/horror/action hybrid), The Mummy (tent-pole summer adventure film), Cloverfield (giant monster/disaster film), and Legion (supernatural action film) – all movies with horror elements that nevertheless fall outside the “pure horror” label.

Movies like the aforementioned Black Swan and Shutter Island also don’t qualify, for while both can certainly be termed “horror”, they could just as easily be classified as “psychological thrillers” – the latter designation of which you’d have a much harder time applying to, say, Hostel or Insidious (both of which count as pure horror films).

Using the above definition to weed out non-“pure” genre entries, then, here are the top ten grossing horror films in the domestic market released between October 29, 2004 (Saw‘s release date) and September 24, 2009 (the day directly prior to Paranormal Activity‘s release).

(Note: The titles are color-coded depending on which of the two above-stated categories they most easily fall into – “torture porn”/splatter/bloody slasher (RED) or spooky supernatural fare (BLUE).

Top 10 Domestic Grossing Horror Films 10/29/04-9/24/09

Saw II $87m (2005)
Saw III $80m (2006)

The Ring Two $76m (2005)
1408 $72m (2007)

The Final Destination $66m (2009)
The Amityville Horror $65m (2005)
Friday the 13th $65m (2009)
Saw IV $63m (2007)
Halloween $58m (2007)
Saw V $57m (2008)

As the chart clearly indicates, the horror box-office during this five-year period was dominated by bloody “kills over chills”-oriented horror fare, with seven of the top ten films falling into that category. By contrast, the sole supernatural offerings on the list that count as bona fide hits are 1408 and The Amityville Horror, while The Ring Two, while it became a profitable title after factoring in its worldwide box-office take, fell far below expectations and made less than 60% of the first film’s total domestic gross.

By contrast, here is how the box-office chart for horror films shapes up over the period spanning September 25, 2009 (Paranormal Activity‘s opening weekend) to the present day:

Top 10 Domestic Grossing Horror Films 9/25/09-present

Paranormal Activity $108m (2009)
Paranormal Activity 2 $85m (2010)

A Nightmare on Elm Street $63m (2010)
The Wolfman $62m (2010)

Insidious $50m [so far] (2011)
Saw 3D $46m (2010)
The Last Exorcism $41m (2010)
The Crazies $39m (2010)
Scream 4 $37m [so far] (2011)

Devil $34m

Now this one’s a little trickier, for a couple of reasons. First off, while five of the ten films on the chart still fall into the slasher/splatter category (thereby seeming to represent a more or less equal share of the box-office), it’s imperative that you look past the single number representing each film’s domestic box-office gross and take other factors into account.

The highest-grossing slasher/splatter film on the list is A Nightmare on Elm Street with $63 million, which is considerably less than the domestic box-office take of both Paranormal Activity entries and a disappointment relative to how it was expected to perform. While it managed to gross a strong though relatively disappointing $33 million its opening weekend (nearly $8 million less than Friday the 13th, despite that film having opened in around 200 fewer theaters), it dropped precipitously in the coming weeks, and ultimately struggled to top $60 million. It ended up making slightly less than both the lower-budgeted Friday the 13th remake ($65 million final) and reboots of franchises with considerably lesser name value, including The Texas Chainsaw Massacre ($80 million final) and The Amityville Horror ($65 million final).

In addition, with its $35 million price tag – indicative of Platinum Dunes’ confidence in the iconic title’s ability to draw big box-office numbers – Elm Street was a considerably bigger gamble than previous recent horror reboots (Texas Chainsaw Massacre had a $9.5 million budget; Friday the 13th and The Amityville Horror both cost $19 million; Halloween and The Hills Have Eyes both cost $15 million, etc.), and its profit margin was therefore quite a bit narrower.

As for other “kills over chills” entries on the above list, The Wolfman – which arguably fits into the Saw/Hostel category given its rather high body-count and succession of gory deaths, though in fairness it doesn’t comfortably fit into either category – was an out-and-out commercial failure ($150 million budget, $62 million domestic, $139 million worldwide), while both Saw 3D and Scream 4, two highly visible slasher/splatter franchise sequels, were also considered disappointments relative to industry expectations (though it should be noted that Saw 3D still made a very impressive $136 million worldwide against a still-modest $20 million budget, despite its rather weak $46 million domestic take). The Crazies, meanwhile, proved only a modest commercial success that pales in comparison to the supernatural offerings on the list, particularly when you take into account its relatively low profit margin ($39 million domestic gross off a $20 million budget, for a total of $54 million worldwide).

By contrast, every single “chills over kills” horror film on the list is generally regarded as either an outright blockbuster (Paranormal Activity 1 and 2), a hit relative to its budget and marketing visibility (Insidious, The Last Exorcism) or a minor success (Devil, which grossed over three times its $10 million budget domestically).

Of course, one need only look at the top two entries on each of the above lists to get a sense of the shift in the viewing behavior of horror audiences: in the 2004-2009 period Saw II and Saw III (gory “torture porn”) took the top slots, while in the 2009-2011 period the top two films were Paranormal Activity and Paranormal Activity 2 (low-key supernatural offerings).

One thing that should be noted is that the time period covered in the second list (2009-2011) is obviously shorter than the time period covered in the first (2004-2009), so it remains to be seen whether the trend is set to continue over the next few years. Nevertheless, given the numbers as they stand now, we do seem to be headed for a renaissance of sorts for supernatural horror.

A final note on this would be that despite one type of horror films’ dominance over any given period, it doesn’t mean that horror films falling outside that model are somehow doomed to failure during the same timeframe. Even during the “torture porn” years, supernatural hits like 1408, The Amityville Horror, White Noise, and Boogeyman managed to rise above the blood-drenched landscape and post impressive box-office numbers. During the same span of years, gory disappointments like House of Wax, Hostel: Part II, Captivity, and Turistas failed to join their bloody peers at the top of the box-office heap.

In other words, and despite what Hollywood might think, horror fans don’t just want bloody slasher movies at one point, and just supernatural offerings at another, or whatever other negligible trend the studios choose to latch onto. The simple fact is, most horror fans I’m familiar with prefer a buffet of options that includes both the savage and the sinister. Our seeming fickleness – i.e. our tendency every few years to change our viewing habits in rather dramatic ways – simply grows out of our fatigue when Tinseltown, grabbing desperate hold of any audience patterns they can ascertain, proceeds to bombard us with a host of copycats and sequels that largely dilute what we found so special about the film or films we made successful in the first place.

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Editorials

‘The Fog’ 19 Years Later: There’s a Reason You Don’t Remember This John Carpenter Remake

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The Fog remake
Pictured: 'The Fog' (2005)

John Carpenter’s illustrious catalog of horror and non-horror classics has already seen three remakes (Halloween, Assault on Precinct 13, and this column’s focus), with at least one more kinda-sorta confirmed on the way (Escape from New York). If you consider 2011’s The Thing enough of a remake, notch another on the bedpost. It makes sense; Carpenter turned his no-bullshit attitude into a masterful filmmaking style, and those listed titles harbor nostalgic admiration. We’re probably closer than we think to seeing Bryan Fuller’s Christine remake for Blumhouse or a contemporary They Live, while Dwayne Johnson’s Big Trouble in Little China sequel project fades away. Imagine Julia Ducournau’s Christine should Fuller exit, or what about if James Gunn booked a brief horror vacation away from the DCEU for his take on They Live?

Carpenter’s brand of down-and-dirty storytelling mixed with societal commentaries make his works perfect for generational updates, but they can’t all be winners.

Take 2005’s woefully tragic The Fog, for example.

Rupert Wainwright’s disastrously shallow remake lacks the finesse of even a crusty barnacle attached to the underbelly of Carpenter’s original. During a period of horror cinema inundated by remakes, The Fog asserts itself as one of the worst. The 2000s had a very “show, don’t tell” approach to horror filmmaking and leaned on grisly violence popularized by Saw, all exploited in their lowest forms throughout The Fog. Bless both Carpenter and the late Debra Hill for serving as producers, but Wainwright and writer Cooper Layne do their salty source shanty zero justice.


The Approach

‘The Fog’ (1980)

Carpenter’s The Fog is successful because of the auteur’s influence. Between his stronger emphasis on churchly greed, eerie musical score, and abilities as a simplistic yet impactful visionary, viewers get plenty of “bang for their buck” in 90 minutes. Wainwright doesn’t possess those qualities and relies on archaic horror templates without any investment. In an era where computer graphics were still advancing, and some producers only valued horror as gory inserts within a lax narrative, Wainwright’s direction equates to background noise. There’s nothing spectacular or signature about the filmmaker’s approach, as recyclable as the plethora of 2000s horror films plagued by the same churned-out doldrums.

Smallville heartthrob Tom Welling follows in the footsteps of fellow WB/CW stars like Supernatural’s Jensen Ackles and Jared Padalecki to shepherd his own horror remake, playing Tom Atkins’ role of fisherman Nick Castle. He’s a descendant of Norman Castle, one of the founding fathers of Antonio Island, which is located off the Oregon coast. It’s been over 100 years since the island’s bustling Antonio Bay community was established, and to celebrate an upcoming anniversary, a statue is commissioned that displays its founders as a dedication to their contributions. Mayor Tom Malone (Kenneth Welsh) wants everything to be perfect, but little does he know Antonio Bay is about to have an undead problem to confront when a mysterious fog rolls in thick as sauna steam.

The bones of The Fog are all there, but both needlessly overcomplicated and disparagingly unkempt. Carpenter introduces his film with an eerie ghost story told around a campfire that becomes a grave truth for Antonio Bay — Layne’s remake screenplay does backflips to try and explain the unexplainable. Nick’s charter fishing vessel unleashes the curse when second-mate Spooner (DeRay Davis) rips open a burlap bag concealing curse items with the boat’s anchor because the film doesn’t trust audience comprehension past any viewer’s eyesight. One of the biggest scourges upon 2000s horror cinema was creators believing their audiences were as dumb as algae-covered rocks, causing them to spell the obvious out in even more blatant and less captivating methods.


Does It Work?

The Fog remake carpenter

‘The Fog’ (2005)

The adjustments Wainwright oversees in 2005’s remix are a bungle of what out-of-touch producers presumed horror fans wanted to see at the time. Carpenter’s quaint coastal atmosphere is eradicated by Spooner’s Girls Gone Wild behavior or the need to belabor flashbacks that lay out every grim detail about Captain Blake (Rade Šerbedžija) and his lepers. Antonio Island’s tainted history is still prevalent as a driving force behind the weather-based haunting, but where Carpenter leaves us to imagine the atrocities founding fathers committed, Wainwright and Layne lean on time jumps that detract from overall moods for cheap betrayal thrills. The remake retains less reflection, whereas Carpenter’s original better depicts a town reckoning with its horrifying heritage — an example of hollow vengeance versus frightening introspection.

Maggie Grace co-stars in Jamie Lee Curtis’ hitchhiker role, except she’s no longer affable nomad Elizabeth Solley; she’s Kathy Williams’ (Sara Botsford) daughter, Elizabeth Williams. Her ties to Antonio Bay are supposed to represent how we can’t escape our fates, fair enough. What’s unfortunate is Layne’s need to shoehorn relationship drama because she’s (apparently) the love of Nick’s life despite his handful of hookups with KAB radio DJ Stevie Wayne (Selma Blair) while Elizabeth fled her hometown for six months — a love triangle situation that adds no special sauce and is practically forgotten. Carpenter is fantastic when letting his characters exist without bogging their arcs with fifty reasons why they’re exactly where they are in any given scene. Wainwright is no mimic, nor does his film’s desire to tangle characters together as friends, lovers, or family members add further intrigue. If anything, it adversely tanks character development because there’s no resident we intimately care about.

Which brings us to the “fog” of it all. Carpenter’s maggot-ridden swashbucklers from the deep are memorable and creepy, while Wainwright pulls his haunted visuals from a grab-bag. Sometimes, they’re atrocious see-through animations made of mist — other times, indiscriminately human entities. One victim contracts leprosy as his punishment, another fried to ash upon touch, and yet another is dragged underwater by invisible hands — there’s zero continuity to Wainwright’s justifiably antagonistic forces. They become a Mad Libs gaggle of props fitting whatever scare-of-the-hour The Fog decides is necessary at that moment, none of which ever collaborate in unison. That includes Captain Blake’s parting climax, in which he abandons his group’s attack on Antonio Bay because he claims Elizabeth as his ghost wife after it’s clear she’s the spitting image of Blake’s 1870s lover [insert seventy thousand question marks].


The Result

The Fog remake tom welling

‘The Fog’ (2005)

The Fog remake is everything I despise about thoughtless horror outputs rolled into a briny clump of seaweed and misbegotten reinventions. It’s hardly scary, unable to let audiences invest in atmospheric spookiness, and so wildly incompetent. Each scene gets progressively worse, starting with the reveal of evil personal belongings stamped with identifiable “Hallmarks” that become pieces of a puzzle that never gets finished. Carpenter makes you feel the offshore breeze rolling in with his fog, sending chills up your spine as these scurvy-soaked scoundrels start stabbing and hooking Antonio Bay residents. Wainwright doesn’t ever grasp what his iteration of Blake’s demons should look like or how they should cause havoc, so he starts throwing basic horror visuals at the screen out of desperation.

Revolution Studios’ The Fog downgrade sinks thanks to primarily messy effects, hampered by the early millennium’s digital capabilities. That’s not exclusive to awful ghost illustrations that look like someone just decreased the “Transparency” slider in Photoshop. The fog, the TITULAR FOG, doesn’t even hold up to Demon Wind standards (in which the wind is essentially fog, roll with it). Wainwright and his team brainstorm ideas that sound rad on paper — an older woman gets barbecued, a ghost outline appears in fog like Imhotep’s sandstorm face, a younger woman is attacked by seaweed — but execution almost exclusively whiffs. The remake’s drunkard generalization of Father Malone (which is such a slap in the face to Hal Holbrook’s fantastic original performance) should meet an epic death when Captain Blake levitates glass shards as a containment circle, but three pieces fly through Malone’s body, and it’s over. That’s the level of SFX disappointment that festers throughout 2005’s The Fog, all buildup with no reward.

The film’s finale feels like a prank; the rest of the conflict’s resolution is lost at sea. Carpenter’s much heavier scolds against organized religion’s dirty dealings help give his film an identity down to the glimmering golden cross, while Wainwright goes as generic as they come and abandons ship when the well runs dry. Nothing justifies the kind of conceptual excitement that comes along with worthwhile remakes, whether that’s copycat role replications (I love Selma Blair, but her Stevie doesn’t match Adrienne Barbeau’s presence) or storytelling reductions that choose numbing violence over folkloric sensations of dread. We love a horror movie that’s critical of early America’s disgusting colonization tactics, but The Fog doesn’t know how to turn those frustrations into a compelling genre production. Whatever’s kept from the original holds no candle to Carpenter’s version, and whatever’s added — like Nick and Elizabeth’s awkward shower sex scene set to softcore porno music — brings nothing of value.


The Lesson

‘The Fog’ (2005)

Just because your remake starts with a banger like Fall Out Boy’s “Sugar, We’re Going Down Swinging” doesn’t mean the film itself is a banger. There’s no world where I’d recommend Wainwright’s The Fog over Carpenter’s titanically superior original, and I say that as a leading Aughts horror remake champion. It’s another Nu-Horror approach that strips away commentary crucial to the plot’s intrigue since all Layne musters is a non-creepy and waterlogged story that feels like an unwieldy CW episode — not meant as a compliment. Not even the chiseled beauty of an early 2000s Tom Welling in a wool turtleneck can save this travesty from becoming another forgotten wreck.

So what did we learn?

● Not all CW figureheads have a hit horror remake in their blood.

● Less is so often more when it comes to horror movies, as long as you’re selling scares and confidently telling a story within your means.

● Some movies from the 2000s horror era will always suffer thanks to dodgy digital effects because while it was the shiny new toy everyone wanted to play with, golly, the technology was rough to start.

● Horror fans can be easy to please, but they’re also first to call out your bullshit — get out of here with these ghosts and their inability to pick a lane.

Wainwright’s film never knows what kind of horror movie it wants to be, and that’s the kill shot. Is it a slasher flick? Zombie movie? A large-scale haunted house blueprint? There’s never any indication that Wainwright or his screenwriter conceptualize a path forward, so they barrel on, praying there’s enough horror familiarity to appease the masses. There isn’t, it’s a boneheaded slog, and that’s that. Horror fans deserve better than to be fed the equivalent of table scraps for 100 minutes. To each their own and all, but now that I’ve finally seen 2005’s The Fog, the only times I’ll think about this movie again will be if someone interacts with my Letterboxd post.

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