lundi 17 mars 2014

Horror Genres and Sub-Genres










Horror Genres and Sub-Genres
(see the original article on my website)


Wherever you look in the web, there is no clear horror genres classification. After working for a couple of years on my website, I decided to try to compile something that looks like a detailed classification of horror genres and sub-genres, in the hope to bring something interesting to the field, or at least food for discussion.
I articulated my classification around 4 main horror genres:  Killers; Monsters; Paranormal and Psychological horror, to which I added 2 sub-genres that are so popular that they can be considered as proper genres: Zombies, and Gore/Splatter. All this makes 6 main horror genres and lots of subgenres…
Below the chart I provide a few examples for each sub-genres.


http://www.horroronscreen.com/wp-content/uploads/Horror_Genres4.png

 

Slasher/Killer

Probably the most famous of the horror style. This genre describes films that feature one or many killer(s), natural or supernatural, usually psychopath(s), which for some reasons decimates people. The genre usually mixes thriller, crime and psychological horror genre.

Classic Slasher:


Crime & Giallo


Bumpkin & RedNeck


Home invasion & Survival



Monsters/Creatures

Existing from the early 1910’s with the first versions of Frankenstein or King Kong, the monster genre is “the” classic of horror. It is also the more diverse and widespread horror genre, so let’s look directly at its large sub-genres compilation.

Classic Monsters/Mythological Monsters:



Neo-Monsters


Small Creatures


Sci-fi monsters & Aliens


Giant Monster genre


Nature & Animal genre:


Werewolf


Vampire


Zombie & Virus 

Zombie’s films could be part of the monster genre, but the sub-genre has been so exploited that it probably deserves its own horror genre. Technically zombies are undead human that wakes up from their grave for whatever reason: nuclear, apocalypse, witchcraft, etc. But recently, new movies that features zombie-like virus and infection have started to come out. Whether these films are zombie’s film is quite a topic of discussion, so while people decide, I have decided to put them in a separate sub-genre.


Zombie


Virus



Paranormal

The paranormal and the fear of the unknown is also a great classic of the horror genre. Gathering everything from ghost to demons and even witches, it is usually the part of horror cinema that gets the scariest.


Ghost & Spirits

  • Poltergeist (1982)
  • The Frighteners (1996)
  • Ju-On (2002)
  • Mama (2013)

 Haunted House


Possession


Devil & Demon & Hell

 

Witches & Occult


Supernatural Power



Psychological Horror & Thriller

Psychological Horror & Thriller is the part of horror that is usually the most subtle since it does not rely on paranormal or multitude of kills to bring the scare. It usually features the work of humans, either that have become crazy or that are stranded in exceptional situations. Often linked with the thriller genre, these films build most of their horror around psychological tension.


Madness & Paranoia


Fanatism


Phobia & Isolation



Splatter & Exploitation & Gore

This genre is linked to pretty much all the genre mentioned above and vice-versa, most horror genre features some amount of gore in it. The special horror genre described here, however, is designed for films that especially emphasize on showing the horrible, the bloody and the gross.


Splatter

 

Torture


Extreme

 

Cannibal