Acknowledgments
1. Origins: 1896–1929
2. Classics: 1930–1948
3. Rebirth: 1949–1970
4. New Blood: 1970–1990
5. The Future: 1990–Present
Top Horror Web Sites
50 Classic Horror Films
Bibliography
Index
Author:
Wheeler Winston Dixon Subject:Film, American
Studies Paper ISBN: 978-0-8135-4796-1 Cloth ISBN: 978-0-8135-4795-4 Pages:
264 pages, 52 photographs Publication Date: September 2010
Praise:
"Dixon is recognized as an eminent film scholar and the current title is an impressive addition to his oeuvre. This book certainly has solid scholarship, but it is also a book that once picked up is hard to put down. Essential."
—Choice, May 2011
"Rich with excellent
illustrations and clever anecdotes, this book will appeal to fans of
horror as well as film students and scholars interested in a readable
overview of the history of the genre."
—Rebecca Bell-Metereau,
author of Hollywood Androgyny
“This is an excellent survey of horror
movies. The author, a veteran film historian, takes the reader back to
the beginning, when, in the first three decades of the twentieth
century, such directors as Georges Melies, F. W. Murnau, and Paul
Wegener were defining not only the look of a genre but also cinema
itself. The period between 1930 and the late 1940s saw the rise of the
classic Universal Studios characters—Frankenstein’s monster, Dracula,
the Wolf Man, the Mummy—and the actors who played them: Karloff,
Lugosi, Chaney Jr. By the end of the 1940s, horror was dying, 'killed
by a plethora of poorly made sequels.' But never fear: the period
between the late ‘40s and 1970 saw a massive resurgence, due in part to
gimmicks (such as 3-D); low-budget quickies from the likes of Roger
Corman, the wizard of the B movie; and the stylish resurrection of the
classic Universal monsters by Britain’s Hammer Film Productions. This
survey, which takes the reader right up to the present, is full of
fascinating information and is delivered in an accessible manner.
Required reading for horror fans.”
—David Pitt, Booklist "Dixon surveys the development of the
horror genre from the earliest Frankenstein and Dracula films through
the decades of classics by Hammer studios, William Castle, Roger
Corman, and Val Lewton. Dixon covers movies seldom found in other
histories and more modern, international titles such as Wolf Creek, Black Water, and Grudge. The endurance of horror,
trends like remakes and sequels, and such popular franchises as Child's Play and Halloween are also discussed. In
the final chapter, Dixon analyzes the decline of modern horror owing to
desensitized audiences, graphic gore, violence, and lack of solid plot
lines or character development. Lists of the best horror websites as
well as the 50 movies covered round out this volume. This concise
overview is an informative and entertaining read. Recommended."
—Library Journal
"In less than 250 pages, Wheeler Winston Dixon manages to cover the trends and sub-genres of film horror from 1896 to 2009. Bonuses include a list of top horror sites, a list of fifty classic films, and a pretty wonderful bibliography. Well written and well researched and offering an enjoyable overview of more than one hundred years of cinema, A History of Horror is a quick, delightful read."
—Seattle Post Intelligencer
Ever since horror
leapt from popular fiction to the silver screen in the late 1890s,
viewers have experienced fear and pleasure in exquisite combination.
Wheeler Winston Dixon’s A History of
Horror is the only book to offer a comprehensive survey of this
ever-popular film genre.
Arranged by decades, with outliers and franchise films overlapping some
years, this one-stop sourcebook unearths the historical origins of
characters such as Dracula, Frankenstein, and the Wolfman and their
various incarnations in film from the silent era to comedic sequels. A History of Horror explores how
the horror film fits into the Hollywood studio system and how its
enormous success in American and European culture expanded globally
over time.
Dixon examines key periods in the horror film—in which the basic
precepts of the genre were established, then burnished into
conveniently
reliable and malleable forms, and then, after collapsing into parody,
rose again and again to create new levels of intensity and menace. A History of Horror, supported by
rare stills from classic films, brings over fifty timeless horror films
into frightfully clear focus, zooms in on today’s top horror Web sites,
and champions the stars, directors, and subgenres that make the horror
film so exciting and popular with contemporary audiences.
About the Author:
WHEELER WINSTON DIXON is the James Ryan Endowed Professor of
Film Studies, professor of English at the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln. He is the coeditor-in-chief of the Quarterly Review of Film and Video.
His many books include the recent Film
Noir
and
the
Cinema
of Paranoia (Rutgers University Press).