(no subject)
Sun, Oct. 3rd, 2004 01:55 am*sniff* Last day of work today. Very strange. Sigh, am going to miss the bookstore, but I have people's emails, and must remember, it is just down the street. And also must remind myself that I don't have to shelve books next week! Woot.
But it was very nice, and everyone said bye, and they even had a cake and a card. I feel very appreciated now. It is nice knowing that they thought I was quite a wonderful employee -- counteracts the ughness of ibanking. Also, heh, I like having my ego stroked (I told this to the boy and he responded by stroking my hair. "That's not where my ego is!" I said.). I also bought another giant load of books. I probably have enough non-fiction to last me through the year. Sigh. And then I had to return everything I had borrowed, half of which I haven't even finished yet, which made me remember that I can't just pop in there and borrow stuff anymore. Best library ever.
Then the boy and I went to see Shaun of the Dead and left half-nauseated, half-amused. The first part was great, absolutely hilarious, but then it starting hunkering down and really being a zombie movie, which is when I started getting nauseous. So yeah, that's about all the zombie movie I can take. That got me thinking: I instrinsically dislike horror. I can't off the top of my head think of any other genre that I intrinsically dislike. I mean, I am indifferent toward mystery but can be persuaded by good characters or humor or the like. Obviously I enjoy romances (depending on the quality of the writing). I tend toward scoffing at thrillers, but again, it depends on the level of characterization mostly. Also, a lack of comparing one's hero to an aging Indiana Jones helps (*cough*DanBrown*cough*). But I will not watch or read or listen to horror.
Unless, of course, the horror is extremely minimal, and even then, I dislike the horror elements (yes, I closed my eyes through half of Sixth Sense). I think perhaps the big exception to this with me is Buffy, in which case I take the scary portions, like Hush or Conversations with Dead People, because the rest of the show is wonderful. Basically, when it comes down to it, I'm incredibly squeamish (ergo the general un-excitement about thrillers) and really hate being scared. Slightly frightened I can do, but I don't want to be given nightmares or the like.
So I wonder if people who don't like romance or sci-fi or fantasy or mystery have this same sort of visceral reaction. And I wonder what it's to? The pseudo-historical settings in fantasy? The magic? The intrinsic not-of-this-world-ness? A story focused on emotions? It's strange thinking about it, because obviously I enjoy the genres and as such, can't quite bend my head around what other people would find off-putting.
But it was very nice, and everyone said bye, and they even had a cake and a card. I feel very appreciated now. It is nice knowing that they thought I was quite a wonderful employee -- counteracts the ughness of ibanking. Also, heh, I like having my ego stroked (I told this to the boy and he responded by stroking my hair. "That's not where my ego is!" I said.). I also bought another giant load of books. I probably have enough non-fiction to last me through the year. Sigh. And then I had to return everything I had borrowed, half of which I haven't even finished yet, which made me remember that I can't just pop in there and borrow stuff anymore. Best library ever.
Then the boy and I went to see Shaun of the Dead and left half-nauseated, half-amused. The first part was great, absolutely hilarious, but then it starting hunkering down and really being a zombie movie, which is when I started getting nauseous. So yeah, that's about all the zombie movie I can take. That got me thinking: I instrinsically dislike horror. I can't off the top of my head think of any other genre that I intrinsically dislike. I mean, I am indifferent toward mystery but can be persuaded by good characters or humor or the like. Obviously I enjoy romances (depending on the quality of the writing). I tend toward scoffing at thrillers, but again, it depends on the level of characterization mostly. Also, a lack of comparing one's hero to an aging Indiana Jones helps (*cough*DanBrown*cough*). But I will not watch or read or listen to horror.
Unless, of course, the horror is extremely minimal, and even then, I dislike the horror elements (yes, I closed my eyes through half of Sixth Sense). I think perhaps the big exception to this with me is Buffy, in which case I take the scary portions, like Hush or Conversations with Dead People, because the rest of the show is wonderful. Basically, when it comes down to it, I'm incredibly squeamish (ergo the general un-excitement about thrillers) and really hate being scared. Slightly frightened I can do, but I don't want to be given nightmares or the like.
So I wonder if people who don't like romance or sci-fi or fantasy or mystery have this same sort of visceral reaction. And I wonder what it's to? The pseudo-historical settings in fantasy? The magic? The intrinsic not-of-this-world-ness? A story focused on emotions? It's strange thinking about it, because obviously I enjoy the genres and as such, can't quite bend my head around what other people would find off-putting.
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(no subject)
Sun, Oct. 3rd, 2004 04:53 pm (UTC)Was about to write my own post on this, but alas no time, have to make dinner, then veg, before getting up for work tomorrow.
At any rate - I'm the same way. Very squeamish. I can't watch Zombie movies. The best I could do was Angel's Habeas Corspes (and even that I watched partly through fingers.) I watch all the operating sequences in Nip/Tuck either through fingers or just listen. And, nope, can't handle being scared. I remember my mother asking me why
I liked Buffy, "I thought you hated horror"? And I said, it's not the same, doesn't scare me. Angel - bugged me for a while at first, but then it became less scarey/monster of week and more character driven.
So could handle. It's why I was never a fan of X-Files (too scarey and gross in places), never saw the original "Alien" and had to be dragged to the original Star Wars (because I was convinced as a child it would be scarey like the Star Trek episodes I'd seen.)
Doesn't help that I have a vivid imagination and tend to embellish.
Or a visual/picture memory - so I remember whatever I see and experience on a screen like it's placed in my brain. So while I enjoy reading some horror here and there, or some films and shows, I can't watch a lot of it. I'll avoid the Grudge, new SMG film, for instance, the previews alone bug the heck out of me and give me nightmares. I know it will bother me. Took me a week to get past The Ring. And I'm hesistant about Shaun of The Dead due to the gore factor. Still haven't made it through George Romero's original Night of The Living Dead or 28 Days, and haven't gotten over the mistake of seeing the original Nightmare on Elm Street in the 1980s in College. Me and gross-out horror are non-mixy things, much to many a friends frustration.
(no subject)
Sun, Oct. 3rd, 2004 09:47 pm (UTC)Gah, I didn't even bother to see The Ring -- my roommate saw it and summarized it for me, and even that made me nervous and jerky for a week.
(no subject)
Mon, Oct. 4th, 2004 01:02 am (UTC)I like romantic movies etc, if the characters and their relationships are reasonably believable. I guess I feel that there is enough crap in the real world for me to deal with, so I really don't need to pay to see it on screen.
(no subject)
Mon, Oct. 4th, 2004 06:47 pm (UTC)I enjoy dark stuff, as long as they don't feel nihilistic to me... it's a fine line to tread, and I'm sure each person's is different. But sometimes I just don't feel like reading or watching stuff that's too down.
(no subject)
Mon, Oct. 4th, 2004 06:39 pm (UTC)I feel pretty much the same way. Psychological horror interests me more than blood and guts. Buffy and Angel rose above "let's be scared" and were more interested in character and psychology. Same with segments of the X-Files, I tended to watch it more for the interaction of the characters.
My favorite X-Files episodes aren't scarey episodes, but more character driven, with a few exceptions.
Same with Angel - I enjoyed Damage - for the psychological elements, for the same reason - I enjoyed Hellbound (an episode friends complained wasn't scarey enough for them or horrifying enough, I found sort of interesting in places due to the psychological elements and foreshadowing.) Aliens - the sequel to Alien, along with Jaws, are two horror movies that I oddly enough enjoy - why? Great characters - and the horror plays second or third fiddle to them as opposed to the reverse. In fact I can overlook the horror most of the time.