Viral Marketing In Horror
Now more than ever, a successful project of any medium hinges on its ability to market itself in an engaging way to the right audiences.
Now more than ever, a successful project of any medium hinges on its ability to market itself in an engaging way to the right audiences.
Modern day movies and TV shows definitely expanded the horror and thriller genres in the past 100 years.
What we perceive to be is not entirely what there is to see. Both “The Haunting of Hill House” (2018) and “The Haunting of Bly Manor” (2020) muddy the waters of the circumstances surrounding the deaths of its characters.
The TV series, “Dracula,” originally released in the UK and later released on Netflix, was a limited series remix of Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula set over three episodes.
Horror is a wide genre casting its net over nearly every available medium.
In the film The Row and the series Scream Queens, both feature sorority girls.
It is King’s unique style that sets him apart from other authors in the horror genre. His ability to fabricate horror out of the most mundane is magical.
With Father’s Day at this time of the year, I thought I’d take the time to appreciate the great dads within the horror genre.
The horror genre has seen unbelievable advancements, splitting off into several sub-genres. And, now there is something for every purveyor of the macabre. One of those most interesting sub-genres to arise is the social-conscious horror.
On the surface, FX ‘s “The Most Dangerous Animal of All” (2020) is another program about an infamous serial killer. But the four-part docu-series is much more than that. It’s about a man who claims to be the son of the infamous Zodiac Killer.