Q&A with Eric Red discussion
Writing horror.
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Eric
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Jul 10, 2012 04:20PM

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Comics certainly. When I did my comic series CONTAINMENT, it involved telling a horror story in largely visual terms using the paneling. It required writing incredibly detailed terror and gore images and atmospherics for the artist to render. The process was reminiscent of film storyboarding and like writing a screenplay and director shot list at the same time.

Excited to hear what you think, Donny!
One of the coolest things for me about writing a novel as opposed to making a film is that readers bring their own pictures to the prose, instead of you giving them those pictures in a movie. In that sense, people interface with books more than films. In the case of horror, readers bringing their own personal and private images to the story can be much scarier, can't it?
One of the coolest things for me about writing a novel as opposed to making a film is that readers bring their own pictures to the prose, instead of you giving them those pictures in a movie. In that sense, people interface with books more than films. In the case of horror, readers bringing their own personal and private images to the story can be much scarier, can't it?

In terms of the horror market in films presently, there's no question that the financiers have a hard-on for contained genre pieces, because of the low budget production cost outlay and high profit margins. From a creative standpoint, those have often been the best horror films to begin with. The real challenge when you're doing a contained horror piece with a few characters is coming up with a strong central concept and conflict, and generating enough twists and complications within those limited parameters to keep the audience interested. You kind of make a deal with the audience at the beginning saying this whole story is going to take place right here, with just these people, and I'm going to keep you on the edge of your seat. Then you have to deliver, and many of those stories don't.