Becoming Host

Simon G. Turner, Stuart J. Murray
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Abstract

This chapter addresses the uncanny effects of computer screen horror films during the pandemic by focusing on the British horror movie Host (2020), an independent 56-minute film directed by Rob Savage during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. The horror genre typically enables a kind of identificatory catharsis while also providing its viewership with the comfort of knowingly indulging in fiction. And yet, Host unsettles this very comfort and conceit. This essay argues that Host’s originality—and its uncanny horror—owes less to its content than to its visual form. The film’s unrelenting and unbroken point of view via the Zoom interface frames the entire film through a medium become all too familiar during the pandemic. This familiarity almost guilelessly interpellates the viewer as a hapless participant in the murderous mayhem that unfolds both onscreen and, by extension, in a pandemic present marked by existential threat and mass death. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Irene Gammel and Jason Wang;individual chapters, the contributors.
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成为主持人
本章以罗布·萨维奇在新冠肺炎第一波大流行期间执导的56分钟独立电影《宿主》(2020年)为重点,讲述了电脑屏幕恐怖电影在大流行期间的神奇效果。恐怖类型电影通常能让观众产生一种情感宣泄,同时也能让观众享受到沉浸在小说中的舒适感。然而,Host打破了这种舒适和自负。本文认为,《Host》的原创性——以及它那不可思议的恐怖——与其说归功于它的内容,不如说是归功于它的视觉形式。这部电影通过变焦界面的无情和不间断的视角,通过一种在大流行期间变得太熟悉的媒介框架了整部电影。这种熟悉感几乎毫无掩饰地将观众追问为银幕上以及以生存威胁和大规模死亡为标志的流行病中展开的杀戮混乱的不幸参与者。©2022选择和编辑事项,Irene Gammel和Jason Wang;个别章节,贡献者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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