Horrific Thoughts — Blue Ink Alchemy
Horror is about human psychology. It's about understanding those primal fears that have tormented mankind since its early history. Horror is about the irrational and the breakdown of our modern faith in logic and the fundamental order of the world. Horror is about all those things that drive us towards our darker impulses and justify our most bestial actions. Horror is about hopelessness, and facing things so unimaginably greater than ourselves that, for all of our self-importance and assurance of our place in the world, we're nothing before them.To me, this is very nearly an outline of the major points a good horror story needs to touch upon to be a true member of that genre. If you rely on jump-out scares or grotesqueness, you're missing the point. Shock is not the same as horror. Shock fades after a few moments. Horror fucks with your head. Here's an example. Villains do things for deeply personal reasons. Those reasons do not necessarily need to be explained to the audience. If you want to make your villain terrifying, regardless of what genre you're in, keeping their motivations inscrutable even as we get to view their personality can introduce an element of horror into the story. Lay their motivations bare, however, or attempt to obfuscate their drives behind quirky logic or language and you'll undermine the sentiment of dread you wish to convey. I'm lookin' at you, Mass Effect. Give me more examples of true horror as opposed to failures. When have you been shocked, compared to when you've been deeply disturbed? These are the sort of things I'll be contemplating over the next week as I frame this story. I have an idea, and ways to make it interesting, but making sure it fits into the horror genre as a whole instead of just playing with the occasional scare will be the real challenge.
Blue Ink Alchemy
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