Rapid Response: A Nightmare on Elm Street

Upon Wes Craven’s passing, ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ how learned an auteur the director was.

NightmareonElmStreetPosterIt’s regrettable that it often takes an actor or director dying before I decide to catch up on some of their movies. This week’s culprit was Wes Craven, and I concede that both horror films and ’80s films make up a particularly weak area in my film lexicon, so it’s no wonder that his classic “A Nightmare On Elm Street” was an unfortunate blind spot.

The film is no doubt an ’80s classic, filled with horror, gothic and literary references and the inspiration for many others for years and decades to come. While “Elm Street” is not as self-aware as Craven’s later “Scream” films, it is so plugged in and conscious of all the themes it borrows from, and Craven is nothing if not a learned auteur. Tina crawling on the wall and being hurled around like a doll recalls “The Exorcist.” That the film switches protagonists from Tina to Nancy part way through is a big nod to “Psycho”. And the sheer buckets of fake blood are purely a staple of ’70s and ’80s slasher movies and B pictures.

The film works gangbusters for a number of reasons. Firstly the idea that we’re not safe even in our dreams, even under the covers of our bed, in our sleep or in our own minds, where we so often escape for solace, is terrifically scary. The film completely overlooks the science of dreams and sleep as well, to the point that Freddy feels omnipotent and their attempts of avoiding sleep entirely feel hopeless. Second it has a perfectly simple, iconic score that so many films, horror or otherwise, overlook today. Third, Freddy Krueger is a wonderful villain. He’s got physical features, from his fingernails like knives, to his pork belly hat, to his dirty striped sweater, that when the characters describe him it makes him instantly recognizable to other teens experiencing the nightmares and to the parents who were responsible for killing him. Better yet, he’s taunting, sadistic and even teasing, going as far as to reveal his true, monstrous form to Nancy and Tina. Finally, it uses sexuality as a catalyst for horror in more ways than one and in more sophisticated ways than many teen slasher films do. There are probably thousands of pages of think pieces or academic papers dedicated to the one shot in this movie where Freddy’s claws reach up from in between Nancy’s legs while she’s sleeping in the bath.

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But those have been areas that have been well-tread. What most interests me is how filmmakers dream. “A Nightmare on Elm Street” is all about dreams, but dreams of course are never the same between two people. We experience dreams in different ways and they provide different sensations for us depending on who’s dreaming. In “Elm Street”, Nancy and Tina wake up in their own worlds. Craven plays tricks on his audience to hide whether we can tell if we’re actually dreaming. When Nancy falls asleep in school, it looks as though her eyes have simply flickered shut for a moment. There’s no change in setting or in visuals that would indicate immediately that this is a dream, but before long we see something that’s out of place. The only problem is that it feels real.

We also know that getting hurt or killed in the dream world can hurt us in the real world, and that Nancy can bring back objects like Krueger’s hat into reality. And for the most part the laws of the dream world behave as they do in the real world. Only occasionally does the geography change, like when a curtain seals a boiler room wall behind Nancy, or when she hustles up the stairs only to get caught in quicksand sludge on each step.

Compare all this to something like “Inception”, in which Nolan’s dreams are transportive. They feel real, and we forget how we arrived there, but suddenly we can be in Paris, and suddenly we can be skiing in the Alps. Or what about “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”, where there are no physical laws within dreams, where things are malleable and fantastical.

I’d like to believe that each filmmaker dreams differently, and how they convey dreams in their films says something more about them as filmmakers. It’s a project I hope to explore in more detail sometime down the line, but until then, having watched “A Nightmare on Elm Street” finally, I’m having trouble getting sleep of my own.

Rapid Response: Scream

Some people like to guess the way a movie is going to end, unraveling the mystery and naming the killer before the characters do. It can be a fun way of engaging with a movie.

But sometimes, don’t you kind of hate the guy that tells you what’s going to happen next?

“Scream” is a movie that has it both ways.

I remember how immensely popular the movie was (although I must’ve been a few years removed because the movie came out in 1996 when I was only 6, and that’s very young). It was scary, shockingly gory, clever, self-aware and featured a simple, creepy and iconic villain that instantly became a Halloween costume staple.

Today, my generation remembers “Scream” as a sort of cult relic from the ’90s (“Why are you carrying a cellular phone, son?”), embodying all the best things about modern horror movies while providing a much needed throwback to ’70s and ’80s horror classics that arguably hold up better for horror fans than the torture porn films released today. All the while, it stays one step ahead of the audience and seems to be winking back at us every step of the way.

But “Scream” is winking so much it looks like it has an eye twitch. The famous “Do you know the rules” scene in which Jamie Kennedy explains the dos and don’ts of staying alive in a horror movie to me feels very forced. It’s Wes Craven’s act of showing his own hand, toying with our expectations such that he can yet another twist at the end.

Obviously this is all cheeky and self-referential, but by this point we get the joke. To be standing in a video store (what’s that?!) and claiming that “It’s all one great big movie” sounds like Craven screaming, “Look at how self-aware we are!”

The fact that it’s meta and self-aware shows why “Scream” has aged well in the 21st Century, because although it is very knowledgeable of horror movie cliches and formulas, “Scream” is not precisely a movie for horror movie buffs but for people who are simply familiar with the genre.

But beyond that, there are some stylish and suspenseful murder sequences that hold up un-ironically, most notably the opening scene with Drew Barrymore. It’s a good reminder that a horror movie can have a sense of humor and self-awareness, but it must be genuinely scary first.