I asked Rerb's advise as to where to put these when I get inspired to write one, since BDR doesn't (as yet) have a dedicated horror thread. he suggested Random Shit, so here it is. The first of what I hope will be many more horror discussion threads. Enjoy.
The question is this: I was reading the intro to the "Best New Horror Vol. 20", the book I'm currently reading. In the intro, Stephen Jones, the editor of the series' entire run, waxes nostalgic for a bit about the series. It started in 1989, and accordingly he notes that at that time "[W]e were coming off the horror boom of the 1980's". I know what he's talking about, as that was when I got into it. More to the point, I was working in a bookstore at the time. And it certainly was a Golden Age of sorts. Horror films (mainly slashers, for good or ill) and books were all over the place, and much of it good. I fear we'll never see the like again.
So of course that got me wonderin': why? Why was the 1980's such a Golden Age for horror? I can think of two reasons right off the bat: Stephen King and Clive Barker.
King made horror more accessible to more people than anyone before or since ever has. And while I know he has his detractors (several of whom @ DERP were very vocal in their distaste), I think most hard core horror fans, and many casual ones, and a large segment of the mainstream that only occasionally read horror books or see horror films would agree he was writing GOOD SHIT. Arguably, most of his better work had already been written (Carrie, The Shining, The Stand, 'Salem's Lot) before that decade even started. But the 80's did spawn Pet Sematary, Firestarter, Skeleton Crew, The first volumes of the Dark Tower Series, It, Thinner and the Bachmann Books (IIRC), and many more. Which of course sparked renewed interest in the older stuff, and led to some wonderful film adaptations (notably Kubrick's "The Shining" and the 'Salem's Lot TV miniseries). He had his share of turkeys, too (The Tommyknockers, for instance), but by and large his output was pretty solid & was enjoyed by many who developed a taste for horror in general (myself among them; I've mentioned before how my 1st actual horror novel was Cujo, which served as a gateway drug for me, sparking a lifelong love of horror), after reading his stuff, leading them to seek out other authors.
Which led many to Clive Barker. Nowhere near as accessible as King, he was no less talented. I'll admit: I didn't get a lot of his stuff. I don't think I'll ever understand Pig Blood Blues. I never finished The Damnation Game; Never even tried reading Weaveworld, and finished Everville just because I wanted to see where he took that train wreck that he made of the far superior first novel in that saga, The Great & Secret Show. But much of that was probably my problem, not Barker's. When he was on, he was ON. The large majority of the Books of Blood was incredible: things like the Yammering & Jack, In the Hills the Cities, Skins of the Fathers, the Midnight Meat Train. . . mind blowingly good. And of course, let's not forget Cabal (the excellent book, not the abominable movie), the Harry D'Amour tales (and the underrated Lord of Illusions adaptation) and The Hellbound Heart, masterfully adapted into "Hellraiser". I find it amazing, as off the wall as his fiction was, that he struck such a chord with the general reading public. My guess as to why would be that his work was laden with sex, and sex always sells. Of course, there was always death associated with the sex. . . no one understood, on an intuitive level, how these two things intertwine in the human psyche. But whatever the reason, in the 1980's he was a major figure in what had, up to that time, been a backwater genre.
Their success of course made it possible for others to follow in their footsteps: Peter Straub, F. Paul Wilson, Dean Koontz (admit it! his 80's output was GOOD!), Robert McCammon, Anne Rice (admit it! Interview & Lestat were GOOD!). . . to name a few.* Having so many to choose from was paradise of a kind.
In the celluloid sphere, we saw the slasher genre come into its own. That was good, in that we got some classic films and a venerated formula for writers & directors to play with for going on 3 decades now, to varying degrees of success (Hatchet: tribute or tripe? You be the judge). It was also good in that the success of these "splatter" films made it possible for other horror films in different categories to be made, as it became apparent they could make money, and some of them were pure gold (the above noted King & Barker adaptations, The Thing, the Blob, and the Fly, Scanners, Q, A Nightmare on Elm Street, etc.). To this we owe respect in the same measure we lavish it on King & Barker to John Carpenter's Halloween (which was actually released in 79, but laid out the formula as we know it) and Friday the 13th (which ushered in the decade in 1980). If those films hadn't garnered critical & commercial success, many of our faves may never have been made. It was bad in that for every good movie made, there was plenty of tripe released as well, and that tripe became the image many non-horror fans held - and continue to hold - in their minds as to what horror cinema is.
If Death Surge were here, he'd probably point out that we owe even more to the editors at the publishing houses that were willing to take a gamble on guys like King & Barker, and then, when that gamble paid off, to glut the market with their worthy (and not so worthy) successors. And to the execs at the film companies that eked every last bit out of the slasher/horror cash cow after seeing the success of Halloween & F13. Regardless of how talented King and Carpenter may be, if no one backed them financially, they'd have languished forever in anonymity. And the 80's horror boom may never have happened.
So, if you're old enough to remember the 80's first hand, or if you're an erudite enough a student of horror history to form an opinion based on your own research, share it here. Let's discuss!
* Jack ketchum was publishing awesome stuff as well, and deserves to be in this clique at least as much as anyone I mentioned. It's nothing short of a crime his books saw such spotty distribution until recently. Say what you will about King, but he got people talking about Jack ketchum on a more widespread scale than they might ever otherwise have done. We owe him for that as well.
The question is this: I was reading the intro to the "Best New Horror Vol. 20", the book I'm currently reading. In the intro, Stephen Jones, the editor of the series' entire run, waxes nostalgic for a bit about the series. It started in 1989, and accordingly he notes that at that time "[W]e were coming off the horror boom of the 1980's". I know what he's talking about, as that was when I got into it. More to the point, I was working in a bookstore at the time. And it certainly was a Golden Age of sorts. Horror films (mainly slashers, for good or ill) and books were all over the place, and much of it good. I fear we'll never see the like again.
So of course that got me wonderin': why? Why was the 1980's such a Golden Age for horror? I can think of two reasons right off the bat: Stephen King and Clive Barker.
King made horror more accessible to more people than anyone before or since ever has. And while I know he has his detractors (several of whom @ DERP were very vocal in their distaste), I think most hard core horror fans, and many casual ones, and a large segment of the mainstream that only occasionally read horror books or see horror films would agree he was writing GOOD SHIT. Arguably, most of his better work had already been written (Carrie, The Shining, The Stand, 'Salem's Lot) before that decade even started. But the 80's did spawn Pet Sematary, Firestarter, Skeleton Crew, The first volumes of the Dark Tower Series, It, Thinner and the Bachmann Books (IIRC), and many more. Which of course sparked renewed interest in the older stuff, and led to some wonderful film adaptations (notably Kubrick's "The Shining" and the 'Salem's Lot TV miniseries). He had his share of turkeys, too (The Tommyknockers, for instance), but by and large his output was pretty solid & was enjoyed by many who developed a taste for horror in general (myself among them; I've mentioned before how my 1st actual horror novel was Cujo, which served as a gateway drug for me, sparking a lifelong love of horror), after reading his stuff, leading them to seek out other authors.
Which led many to Clive Barker. Nowhere near as accessible as King, he was no less talented. I'll admit: I didn't get a lot of his stuff. I don't think I'll ever understand Pig Blood Blues. I never finished The Damnation Game; Never even tried reading Weaveworld, and finished Everville just because I wanted to see where he took that train wreck that he made of the far superior first novel in that saga, The Great & Secret Show. But much of that was probably my problem, not Barker's. When he was on, he was ON. The large majority of the Books of Blood was incredible: things like the Yammering & Jack, In the Hills the Cities, Skins of the Fathers, the Midnight Meat Train. . . mind blowingly good. And of course, let's not forget Cabal (the excellent book, not the abominable movie), the Harry D'Amour tales (and the underrated Lord of Illusions adaptation) and The Hellbound Heart, masterfully adapted into "Hellraiser". I find it amazing, as off the wall as his fiction was, that he struck such a chord with the general reading public. My guess as to why would be that his work was laden with sex, and sex always sells. Of course, there was always death associated with the sex. . . no one understood, on an intuitive level, how these two things intertwine in the human psyche. But whatever the reason, in the 1980's he was a major figure in what had, up to that time, been a backwater genre.
Their success of course made it possible for others to follow in their footsteps: Peter Straub, F. Paul Wilson, Dean Koontz (admit it! his 80's output was GOOD!), Robert McCammon, Anne Rice (admit it! Interview & Lestat were GOOD!). . . to name a few.* Having so many to choose from was paradise of a kind.
In the celluloid sphere, we saw the slasher genre come into its own. That was good, in that we got some classic films and a venerated formula for writers & directors to play with for going on 3 decades now, to varying degrees of success (Hatchet: tribute or tripe? You be the judge). It was also good in that the success of these "splatter" films made it possible for other horror films in different categories to be made, as it became apparent they could make money, and some of them were pure gold (the above noted King & Barker adaptations, The Thing, the Blob, and the Fly, Scanners, Q, A Nightmare on Elm Street, etc.). To this we owe respect in the same measure we lavish it on King & Barker to John Carpenter's Halloween (which was actually released in 79, but laid out the formula as we know it) and Friday the 13th (which ushered in the decade in 1980). If those films hadn't garnered critical & commercial success, many of our faves may never have been made. It was bad in that for every good movie made, there was plenty of tripe released as well, and that tripe became the image many non-horror fans held - and continue to hold - in their minds as to what horror cinema is.
If Death Surge were here, he'd probably point out that we owe even more to the editors at the publishing houses that were willing to take a gamble on guys like King & Barker, and then, when that gamble paid off, to glut the market with their worthy (and not so worthy) successors. And to the execs at the film companies that eked every last bit out of the slasher/horror cash cow after seeing the success of Halloween & F13. Regardless of how talented King and Carpenter may be, if no one backed them financially, they'd have languished forever in anonymity. And the 80's horror boom may never have happened.
So, if you're old enough to remember the 80's first hand, or if you're an erudite enough a student of horror history to form an opinion based on your own research, share it here. Let's discuss!
* Jack ketchum was publishing awesome stuff as well, and deserves to be in this clique at least as much as anyone I mentioned. It's nothing short of a crime his books saw such spotty distribution until recently. Say what you will about King, but he got people talking about Jack ketchum on a more widespread scale than they might ever otherwise have done. We owe him for that as well.
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