Jasneet Singh is a writer who finally has a platform to indulge in long rants about small moments on TV and film in overwhelming detail. With a literature background, she is drawn to the narrative ...
Image Credit: Under The Skin, The Thing and Possessor (Image: A24, Universal, Elevation Pictures) Nothing can be more ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Horror movies and literature reflect people's anxieties by taking them to gory extremes. Body horror taps into the very human fear ...
Warning: Gross imagery and descriptions follow. Obviously! The human body is a mystery. A mass of tissue, muscles, vascular systems, and 70% water? Are we just walking flesh balloons filled with ...
Those who've followed some of the most buzzworthy horror movies to be released as of late may have noticed that body horror has been back in a big way. And that trend continues with the latest title ...
Following in the bloody footsteps of Coralie Fargeat’s 'The Substance,' a new wave of female filmmakers is reinventing body horror, melding grotesque transformations with sharp critiques of beauty ...
Horror is arguably the most versatile movie genre because there’s no shortage of things to be afraid of. Scared of the ocean? Great—there’s an entire subgenre of shark attack films. Believe in the ...
When asked to picture “body horror,” we conjure images that are best described as repulsive: growths of new appendages, spurts of pus and blood, dermatological mutation into some abject new form. But ...
Horror movies and literature reflect people's anxieties by taking them to gory extremes. Body horror taps into the very human fear of how unpredictable, and even uncontrollable, our bodies can be.