Monday, 2 November 2015

Horror Movie Posters: Analyses

Introduction
It is important to understand a medium before creating a piece within it, and this is no less true in relation to advertising posters for horror movies. Within this post, the posters for Friday the 13th, The Conjuring and Saw VI will be analysed and the research used in the creation of the ancillary product.


Friday the 13th
Friday the 13th is one of the most influential horror movies in recent memory, especially within the slasher genre. As such, it is essential to understand how the advertising affected the success of this product, especially in regards to the poster.

The main image of the poster has the setting of a misty wood (Crystal Lake in the film), a common setting for horror films due to the claustric atmosphere and isolation it creates as well as the feelings of being trapped it elicits. This claustric feeling is emphasised by the positioning of the only character; the character in the middle of the image blocks the eerie, ethereal blue light shining through the tops of the trees, representing the barrier the protagonist (and the audience, as the main character in slashers is supposed to represent the ideal audience member) has to overcome to get to safety. The light-dark juxtaposition is directly parallel to the good-evil binary opposition found in the narrative, which Levi-Strauss argues is a manifestation of the underlying thought process of humanity and is therefore a concept universally identified with by all audiences (an extreme case of identification, theorised by Blumler, Katz and Gurevitch in their Uses and Gratifications Theory to be a reason for audiences to seek out media). Interestingly, the aggressive body language of the character, the dehumanising hockey mask that bastardises the human face (uncanny valley) and the immediate threat of the weapon paints the main character on the poster as the antagonist and thus representative of evil. This means, by looking at the binary opposition, that the audience looking on is supposed to represent good (which fits in with most people's self-concept, thus boosting the identification the average audience has). Having the antagonist as the main character on the poster is common to horror but not to nearly any other genre, and represents the need for the audience to experience conflict in their boring lives as escapism (hence why so many horror and slasher films take place in places like suburbia and revolves around shallow characters going about in their boring lives before conflict strikes in the form of the antagonist). This need for conflict is further shown by the low angle of the image, showing the antagonist as more powerful and thus a more difficult and interesting barrier to success. The smoke in the background and the trees act as a physical barrier, creating a sense that the whole world is against the forces of good, stepping up the conflict further. The use of Jason Vorhees as the character on the poster is an interesting one, especially as Jason turns out to not be the killer in Friday the 13th and is therefore not the prime antagonist (or villain, as Propp used to label the character type); usually the most threatening and conflict-inducing villain is used for advertising. Jason is an exception in this regard due to his iconic look that is incredibly effective at making him look just inhuman enough to create unease and dangerous enough to create fear during action. This is why he is put in the centre of the poster in clear view – the unique selling point he creates is essential for branding.

The tag line at the top of the page creates a sense of horror through the use of juxtaposition and subversion. A common phrase when coming to a holiday location is “Welcome to [place name]”, and as such it produces a sense of safety through the association with vacation. By putting this friendly phrase on top of a horrific image, the tag line subverts the expectations of the audience through the juxtaposition and makes the audience uneasy. This unease adds to the conflict and as such makes the target audience wish to see the product more.

The title, on the other hand, is located in the bottom-third of the poster. This placement (tag line, image, title and billing block, in descending order) is a convention of film posters and as such makes it easier for the audience to 'read' the advertisement. The blood-red of the title generates danger and brings to mind gore, again accelerating the conflict, whilst also standing out against the twilight, serene hues used in the rest of the image (white, black and gentle blue, symbolising safety and calm, whilst the red subverts this). The title needs to stand out to both strengthen the branding of the product (great for selling cross-media products and merchandise) whilst also getting the title – the only thing the audience can really use to find the product – to stick in the minds of the audience. The woodgrain effect on the text makes it look like it has been dyed onto a piece of wood, bringing to mind the wooden signs in American forests. This manufactures in the audience's minds a sense of unease and claustrophobia whilst also fitting with the setting of the piece. The calendar motif in the title is also interesting, combining both language and font to create a sense of importance and event to seeing the film. The phrase 'Friday the 13th ' is a date that is seen in the Zeitgeist as a day of misfortune; this fits in perfectly with the horror theming and genre. The font looks as if it has been written on a calendar and the serif style makes it look important. This calendar theming creates an association in the audience's mind with a date, an ingenious marketing technique that makes the audience feel as if they have to see the première of the film (thus bringing in a large amount of box office revenue on opening night, which creates 'buzz' and sells more tickets later on as well).

The subtitle (“From the producers of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”) links to the film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, bringing in fans of said product by suggesting to the audience that this film will be similar in some way. It also appeals to the 'fanbase' of the producers, a consistent group of consumers that will regularly buy products with links to their chosen obsession. Below this, the billing block sits and offers a summary of the main cast and crew, again bringing in fans of these people whilst also making the poster look professional.

In summary, this poster is a great example in the horror poster genre. The use of incredible imagery mixed with tactical use of language, colour and symbolism creates a great atmosphere that gratifies that target audience more than most horror posters. Motifs, use of image and well-thought-out language will all be considered in future ancillary tasks, and this poster will be a primary inspiration for them.


 The Conjuring
Another incredibly successful horror movie (and one that was recently released) is The Conjuring, grossing over $318 million from a $20 million budget. The marketing of The Conjuring was incredibly different to that of Friday the 13th and thus needs to be analysed by itself (via the poster).
Todorov argued that all communication, whether language, prose or art, is a reflection of core 'psychological processes' and that there are thus grammatical and syntactical similarities between all mediums that allow audiences to understand the communication. Following from this, posters have to set up two Todorovian narratives for the audience; a) the film's narrative, showing enough of the story of the product to intrigue the audience and creating an incomplete narrative that sells tickets through curiosity, and b) the poster's or the gratification narrative, which frames the audience member in the role of the protagonist and sets up which uses and gratifications (Uses and Gratifications Theory – Blumler, Katz and Gurevitch) the audience will experience.
The main image communicates most of the film narrative. The image is that of an old, lower-upper-class house in the middle of an estate, with mist quasi-obscuring the content of the image and a gothic, warped tree with a noose hanging from it in the middle. On the ground beneath the noose is the shadow of a young girl. Being an establishing shot of the main location of the film, this sets the equilibrium of the film narrative and gives spatial context to the piece (and the narrative propositions of the house and the characters are linked with a spatial relation, as explored in Todorov's The Poetics of Prose). The hanging noose on the tree and the shadow of the young girl hint at a disruption, creating excitement in the audience and appealing to the horror-loving psychographic group (the disequilibrium being the most emotional and conflict-inducing part of the narrative), and this conflict is implied to be occult through the title ('The Conjuring') and through the shadow of the young girl not having a casting object (no pun intended). This also acts as the realisation of the disruption via the viewing of this by the audience and the audience's preconception that this image is from the point of view of the protagonist. Furthermore, a temporal relation is set up between the narrative noun of the house and the noun of the protagonist(s) (which the audience presumes the image is from the point of view of, due to the general protagonist-centric nature of media), with the house looking as if it was built in the 1800s and the grain filter on the image itself suggesting that they are in the 1970s and thus the disruption occurred in the earlier time period. The attempt to repair is suggested using the spatial relation between the noose-sporting tree and the house, making it seem to the audience that the way to repair the disruption is by exploring the house and setting up the idea through the mystery of the obscuring mist that the incompleted parts of the narrative will be resolved in the film itself during the attempt to repair. The new equilibrium is not shown, as this serves as the point that most audiences wish to get to and thus showing this would reduce revenue.
The gratification narrative is communicated throughout the different features of the poster, and places the audience in the role of the Hero (a dramatis personae defined by Propp). As the horror audience has a need for escapism (Uses and Gratifications Theory) through a sense of conflict that they don't experience in their own lives, the motivation of the Hero can be assumed to be overcoming a sense of conflict or opposition (a safety-conflict binary opposition that Claude Levi-Strauss argued reflected a human tendency to interpret information as part of one side or another). In this case, the equilibrium is before the audience 'reads' the poster and the context usually found in the equilibrium (although not one of Propp's stated narratemes, the context is usually noted as an additional narrateme by media referring to Propp's Morphology of Folk Tales) is simply that the audience has a need for a conflict. Again, the disruption and realisation of disruption occur simultaneously here (most likely due to the difficulty of showing temporal relations in a static medium). The disruption is set as the sense of conflict which the Hero will face through the use of mist obscuring the content of the image (creating mystery, which is a binary opposition to the audience's natural curiosity, thus producing conflict), the isolated setting surrounded by trees (the lack of access to the Helper character and the feeling of physically not being able to escape exacerbating the power imbalance between the character and the source of conflict), the symbol of death (the noose and the warped tree incite the life-death opposition that is universally identifiable) and the symbol of the occult juxtaposing the symbol of nature (the shadow with no casting object suggests that the laws of nature, symbolised by the trees and the grass all around, are being opposed by some non-natural proposition). Furthermore, the title enforces this disruption; the serif font suggests a gothic tone to the piece (as serif fonts are often used within the gothic genre), thus creating dread in the audience through association, whilst the black colour of the text combined with the words “The Conjuring” suggest the presence of the occult (explained above). The use of the phrase 'TRUE CASE' within the tagline creates a sense of realism, which; a) elates the sense of horror and personal threat by suggesting that this could happen in real life, and b) makes the threat more realistic so that the audience feel as if they have to resolve the disruption to bring the conflict of the narrative to an end. The casting block at the bottom of the page (the last place on the poster the audience is likely to look, thus allowing a sense of time to pass between the realisation of disruption and the next narrative step within a static medium) introduces the audience to the idea that the conflict will occur in a film, and as such allows them to realise the needed attempt at repair (A.K.A seeing the film and thus facing the conflict and resolving the film narrative introduced). The date in bold below this also allows the audience to map out a plan for the attempt at repair (the counteraction narrateme, as defined by Propp). The next step to resolve this narrative is for the audience member to go forward with the departure narrateme and watch the film, facing the conflict and thus creating the new equilibrium.
In conclusion, it is important for a film poster to set up both a film narrative and a gratification narrative if maximum advertising efficiency is to be attained, and as such both of these will be present in the poster that will be produced for the final product.


 Saw VI
The film Saw VI, the sixth in the Saw franchise, was a commercial failure when compared to the sale figures of the other films. As marketing is essential in the success of a film, the poster should be analysed to find the areas which failed to convince the audience to buy the product.
The first point of failure is the main image. In the centre of the poster is a human head (ambiguous in sex, age, race and identity) facing up, surrounded by aggressive-looking machinery that makes a ‘V’ shape above the head. The image is in greyscale with a grain filter over the top and with a murky mold or grime effect in the background. This fails for a couple of reasons. Firstly, the posters of the Saw franchise have established a convention of using items within the picture to show the number of the installment (e.g. the second Saw movie had two removed fingers next to each other in a way that looked like the roman numeral ‘II’, or two), whereas this has what looks like the roman numeral for five (‘V’) in the picture but is actually the sixth installment; it is likely that audiences familiar with the Saw franchise merely thought it was a poster for the fifth film that they had already seen and ignored it. The androgynous face attempts to be a universal representation of a dead body that creates a juxtaposing image of death to the audience’s want for life (Levi-Strauss), with the facing upwards and being vertical meant to mimic a cadaver. This fails because there are not enough indicators that the person is dead – there are no closed eyes, pained expressions or gore of any kind – and the medium literacy of the mass audience is too low to read this easily. Because this death symbolism doesn’t work, the relationship between the narrative propositions in the image (the machinery and the person) isn’t readable; the machinery, which is supposed to be one of the death traps from the series, isn’t associated with death of any kind in the viewer’s reading, thus making it just a pointless piece of technology. As such, the poster looks less like a poster for a ‘torture porn’ horror movie and more like the poster for a grim cyberpunk science-fiction movie. In addition, the use of space as a means of creating juxtaposition is sub-par. With most of the Saw movie posters, the clean, white space of the poster contrasts with the grimy gore of the image, creating a sense of doom in the audience through the clean white - symbolising medical authority (what is meant to happen) - and the bioporn elements (removed teeth or fingers, etc.) - symbolising a perversion of the medical authority (almost as if that torture is supposed to happen, which creates conflict with the audience’s own beliefs. This works from a gratification narrative standpoint and also reflects the villain in the piece); this poster, however, is all grimy with a grain filter over the top, making the trap seem inescapable and thus taking away the horror (if something is certain, it has no conflict but is rather just an event. The reason for people to seek out horror is to find escapism in the conflict, and with no conflict there is no draw to the horror).
The tagline is located in the inside the ‘V’ of the machinery. It states, ‘He helped me’ in the font Times New Roman. The typeface is very small and is coloured black. The typewriter-esque font was used in the original posters to create a direct but impersonal link between the audience and the villain (conflict-causing Dramatis Personae defined by Vladimir Propp), which was combined with taglines such as ‘This Halloween, he’s pulling out all the stops’ (Saw II) or ‘I want to play a game’ (Saw). This worked because of the supplementary advertising that teased the idea of the ‘Jigsaw Killer’ that both killed with a personal incentive (hence the direct link and the use of ‘I’ and ‘he’) and was removed from the actual murders through the use of death contraptions. In addition, the small black typeface used was up against a clean, white background, so immediately stood out. In this tagline, the presence of ‘He helped me’ suggests that the ‘Jigsaw Killer’ is no longer the main protagonist and that mantle has been passed down to another character that will carry on their work. This doesn’t work for two reasons. The first reason is that the original villain represented an ideal that opposed that of the audience member, and as such becomes a ‘force of nature’ villain; the problem with killing off a force of nature villain is that it also represents a death of their ideal, so the replacement character will automatically feel like a watered-down version of the original (thus less conflict). Secondly, the original advertising of the franchise relied on the brand identity of the ‘Jigsaw Killer’, so replacing him takes away the consumer recognition and makes them less likely to see the final product. The tagline also doesn’t stand out against the greyness of the background, which makes it harder to read.
The title (‘SAW VI’) is located in the centre of the bottom-third. It utilises the burnt-film-style logo of the franchise, but instead of using the same font for the installment number (which Saw to Saw IV did), it uses Times New Roman. This loses cohesion between the installment text and the logo text, making the poster look unprofessional and thus meaning that a mainstream audience is less likely to see the product. Furthermore, the logo is greyscale, which means it doesn’t stand out against the greyscale main image and as such is harder to read. The billing block is located at the bottom (a legal requirement due to various unions within the film industry), with the date in bold at the bottom. This is still hard to see, as the typeface is white and the background is greyscale, meaning the audience is likely to miss the date and not go see the product from this.
In conclusion, this poster shows how important using conventions as a means of effectively communicating to the audience is. The lacklustre design, although quite aesthetically pleasing, doesn’t make the audience want to see the final product (the ultimate aim of a poster); communication is seemingly more important than aesthetic.