This essay finds in the found-footage horror cycle an alternative way of understanding the relationship between horror films and reality, which is usually discussed in terms of allegory. I propose the investigation of framing, understood both figuratively (framing the film as documentary) and stylistically (the framing in handheld cameras and in static long takes), as a device that playfully de-stabilizes the separation between the film and the surrounding world. The essay’s main case study is the Paranormal Activity franchise, but examples are drawn from a variety of films
This paper addresses the topic of ‘Screening Animals and the Inhuman’ through a discussion of the co...
This dissertation traces a “gothic-realist” genealogy in cinema that will help scholars to reconside...
Paranormal investigation has been a narrative preoccupation within horror films for quite some time,...
The filming of strange phenomena in “Paranormal Activity” is often followed by the characters’ analy...
In my article, I examine a segment of the 2013 horror anthology, V/H/S/ 2. Entitled „Safe Haven” and...
The cinematic image of a young woman staring into the camera – crying, hyperventilating, and talking...
Afterthought for "Found-Footage Horror and the Frame's Undoing", published in Cinema Journal 55.2. T...
Introduction (part): In recent years cinema has undergone drastic changes in how people make, consum...
The type of horror film known as “found footage” was prominent in the 2000s and early 2010s. The ter...
Why would people experiencing a global pandemic seek out a pandemic disaster movie? Why would horror...
Our century has seen the proliferation of reality shows devoted to ghost hunts, documentaries on hau...
In recent years, found-footage horror films have reappeared with increasing popularity, leading to i...
This article argues that the mockumentary horror film uses its stylistic hybridity to address the on...
Being isolated is a common fear. The fear can take many forms, from the fear of being the last one a...
As the horror subgenre du jour, found footage horror’s amateur filmmaking look has made it available...
This paper addresses the topic of ‘Screening Animals and the Inhuman’ through a discussion of the co...
This dissertation traces a “gothic-realist” genealogy in cinema that will help scholars to reconside...
Paranormal investigation has been a narrative preoccupation within horror films for quite some time,...
The filming of strange phenomena in “Paranormal Activity” is often followed by the characters’ analy...
In my article, I examine a segment of the 2013 horror anthology, V/H/S/ 2. Entitled „Safe Haven” and...
The cinematic image of a young woman staring into the camera – crying, hyperventilating, and talking...
Afterthought for "Found-Footage Horror and the Frame's Undoing", published in Cinema Journal 55.2. T...
Introduction (part): In recent years cinema has undergone drastic changes in how people make, consum...
The type of horror film known as “found footage” was prominent in the 2000s and early 2010s. The ter...
Why would people experiencing a global pandemic seek out a pandemic disaster movie? Why would horror...
Our century has seen the proliferation of reality shows devoted to ghost hunts, documentaries on hau...
In recent years, found-footage horror films have reappeared with increasing popularity, leading to i...
This article argues that the mockumentary horror film uses its stylistic hybridity to address the on...
Being isolated is a common fear. The fear can take many forms, from the fear of being the last one a...
As the horror subgenre du jour, found footage horror’s amateur filmmaking look has made it available...
This paper addresses the topic of ‘Screening Animals and the Inhuman’ through a discussion of the co...
This dissertation traces a “gothic-realist” genealogy in cinema that will help scholars to reconside...
Paranormal investigation has been a narrative preoccupation within horror films for quite some time,...