Fear Before the Fall: Horror Films in the Late Soviet Union

Paperback Published on: 27/01/2023
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Synopsis

Alienation, generational tensions, rampant nationalism and the pervasiveness of atomic danger are all topics that haunted late Soviet citizens, and those fears are reflected in the films meant to represent their horror genre. In the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, production of horror movies from independent filmmakers and Hollywood skyrocketed. It was a time of intense Cold War conflict and a resurgence of conservative ideals. It’s not difficult to imagine that the ascent of horror occurred in conjunction with an increasingly scary and alienated world, and horror reflected those freights in the form of nuclear holocausts, toxic waste pollution, alien clown invaders and undead houseguests. Everyone was at risk - teenagers especially - because their present and future remained most uncertain. If we can agree that such feelings underpinned American viewers in the age of Reagan and neo-liberalism, then what about late socialism? How did film makers depict Soviet society’s fears?

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Collective Ink
  • ISBN: 9781789049794
  • Number of pages: 144
  • Dimensions: 216 x 140 mm
  • Languages: English

Customer Reviews

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Fear Before the Fall
Hugely Interesting
The horror genre is a popular one, that has always been around in some form or another. Whether it be scary stories around a fire at night, the written wor... READ MORE
Amy Walker