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Dead Funny: The Humor of American Horror
Barnes and Noble
Dead Funny: The Humor of American Horror
Current price: $35.95
Barnes and Noble
Dead Funny: The Humor of American Horror
Current price: $35.95
Size: Paperback
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Horror films strive to make audiences scream, but they also garner plenty of laughs. In fact, there is a long tradition of horror directors who are fluent in humor, from James Whale to John Landis to Jordan Peele. So how might horror and humor overlap more than we would expect?
Dead Funny
locates humor as a key element in the American horror film, one that is not merely used for extraneous “comic relief” moments but often serves to underscore major themes, intensify suspense, and disorient viewers. Each chapter focuses on a different comic style or device, from the use of funny monsters and scary clowns in movies like
A Nightmare on Elm Street
to the physical humor and slapstick in movies ranging from
The Evil Dead
to
Final Destination
. Along the way, humor scholar David Gillota explores how horror films employ parody, satire, and camp to comment on gender, sexuality, and racial politics. Covering everything from the grotesque body in
Freaks
to the comedy of awkwardness in
Midsommar
, this book shows how integral humor has been to the development of the American horror film over the past century.
Dead Funny
locates humor as a key element in the American horror film, one that is not merely used for extraneous “comic relief” moments but often serves to underscore major themes, intensify suspense, and disorient viewers. Each chapter focuses on a different comic style or device, from the use of funny monsters and scary clowns in movies like
A Nightmare on Elm Street
to the physical humor and slapstick in movies ranging from
The Evil Dead
to
Final Destination
. Along the way, humor scholar David Gillota explores how horror films employ parody, satire, and camp to comment on gender, sexuality, and racial politics. Covering everything from the grotesque body in
Freaks
to the comedy of awkwardness in
Midsommar
, this book shows how integral humor has been to the development of the American horror film over the past century.