The Top Ten Movie Monsters
Gale Encyclopedia of the Unusual and Unexplained
|
2003
|
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
The Top Ten Movie Monsters
David J. Skal, author of The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror (1997), has made the observation that the history of horror entertainment closely parallels the great social traumas of the twentieth century.
Monsters became popular at the box office during World War II (1939–45), particularly during the second half of the conflict, and Hollywood film studios responded to the demand by creating horror tales featuring vampires, werewolves, and mummies. In 1944 alone, 21 horror films were released.
After the war ended in 1945, audiences no longer were attracted to such classic monsters. Science fiction tales of UFOs and aliens replaced Earth-based supernatural monstrosities.
During the Vietnam conflict, monsters and madmen returned with a vengeance, and a remarkable 54 horror films were released in 1972. Then, after the United States Armed Forces pulled out of Vietnam, the movie monsters retreated again. In 1975, only 17 horror films were released by major studios.
In 2001, the Media Psychology Lab at California State in Los Angeles polled people across the United States from ages 6 to 90 in all ethnic groups to determine which movie monsters ranked as the favorites. According to the survey, the most frightening motion picture of all time for all groups was The Exorcist (1973). The favorite top ten monsters were the following:
- Dracula, the aristocratic vampire, in the 1931 version, Dracula, with Bela Lugosi as the blood-sucking count.
- Freddy Krueger, the slayer of teenagers with the razor-sharp metal talons on his fingers, from A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984).
- The Frankenstein monster, the original version with Boris Karloff, Frankenstein (1931).
- Godzilla, the prehistoric giant reptile that spews radioactive rays and stomps cities to rubble, from the original Japanese film, Godzilla of the Monsters (1954).
- King Kong, the giant ape, from the original King Kong (1933).
- Chucky, the possessed, murderous doll, from Child's Play (1988).
- Michael Myers, the masked murderer, who is described in the film Halloween (1978).
- Hannibal Lecter, the erudite, cannibalistic serial killer from The Silence of the Lambs (1991).
- Jason, the unstoppable monster in the hockey mask, from Friday the 13th (1980).
- The Alien, the multi-jawed, many-fanged creature in Alien (1979).
Sources:
seiler, andy. "oh, the horror! oh, boy!" usa today, october 25, 2001. [online] http://www.usatoday.com/life/lphoto.htm.
skal, david j. the monster show: a cultural history of horror. new york: boulevard, 1997.
stanley, john. creature features: the science fiction, fantasy, and horror movie guide. new york: boulevard, 1997.
theokas, christopher. "bela's dracula still has bite." usa today, october 31, 2001. [online] http://www.usatoday.com/life/enter/movies/2001-10-31-scary-movies.htm.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Imagining an American Utopia; In a post-Bush United States, four successive administrations work to improve democracy and the quality of life in sociologist Herbert J. Gans's "Utopian narrative.".('Imagining America in 2033: How the Country Put Itself Together after Bush' and 'Free Market Madness: Why Human Nature is at Odds with Economics - And Why it Matters')(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Futurist; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...How the Country Put Itself Together after Bush by Herbert J. Gans. University of Michigan Press. 2008. 210 pages...the United States (and his Cabinet appointees), Herbert J. Gans's "Utopian narrative" Imagining America in 2033...
|
|
SOCIOLOGY'S GANS, VAUGHAN RECEIVE HIGHEST HONORS IN FIELD
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 5/4/2006; 476 words
; ...issued the following news release: Herbert J. Gans, the Robert S. Lynd Professor...of sociology, said, "Even as Gans and Tilly continue to enrich the...With the honoring of Columbia's Herbert Gans, a year after the similar honoring...
|
|
Gans V. Kaus (Cont'd.)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 9/29/1990; 514 words
; ...for funding the needed day care. What I'm after is effective anti-poverty programs, whether ideologists call them liberal or conservative-and an America in which no one is mugged, because no one feels the need to mug. -Herbert J. Gans
|
|
Middle American Individualism: The Future of Liberal Democracy.
Magazine article from: The Nation; 6/4/1988; ; 700+ words
; ...Future of Liberal Democracy. By Herbert J. Gans. The Free Press. 208 pp...something of a shock to discover that Herbert J. Gans is now president of the American...or recondite about the work of Herbert Gans. The Urban Villagers (1962...
|
|
Provocative thoughts from an outsider. (Books).(Democracy and the News)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: American Journalism Review; 1/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; Democracy and the News By Herbert J. Gans Oxford University Press 184 pages $26 The biggest surprise in Herbert Gans' new book isn't his blunt diagnosis of what ails...
|
|
Renewing American Compassion.
Magazine article from: National Review; 6/3/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...look, it would be as easy to dismiss Herbert Gans's The War against the Poor as tired...Himself an aging Poverty Warrior, Gans argues that Lyndon Johnson's Great...born to teen moms are healthier, Gans claims. Indeed, this author is a...
|
|
The War Against the Poor: The Underclass and Antipoverty Policy.
Magazine article from: National Review; 6/3/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...look, it would be as easy to dismiss Herbert Gans's The War against the Poor as tired...Himself an aging Poverty Warrior, Gans argues that Lyndon Johnson's Great...born to teen moms are healthier, Gans claims. Indeed, this author is a...
|
|
The high cost of playing victim. (underclass label for blacks) (On Society) (column)
Magazine article from: U.S. News & World Report; 10/1/1990; ; 700+ words
; ...one on use of the term underclass. Herbert Gans, the Columbia University sociologist...paying job." The implication in Gans's piece is that all the crime...Kaus of the New Republic wrote that Gans "is enforcing, through semantic...
|
|
Minority retort
Magazine article from: The Village Voice; 3/19/2003; ; 700+ words
; Alterman and Gans Skewer Media Shibboleths WHAT LIBERAL...25 DEMOCRACY AND THE NEWS By Herbert J. Gans Oxford, 168 pp., $26 Earlier this...bias, Columbia sociology professor Herbert Gans picks up where Alterman leaves off...
|
|
The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber. (Book Reviews).
Magazine article from: Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 3/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...perpetuates intellectual redundancy and superficiality. As Herbert Gans notes at the beginning of volume one, "The discussion...Theory and The Substantive Problems of Sociology") and Herbert Gans ("Sociological Amnesia: The Noncumulation of Normal...
|
|
Gans, Herbert J.
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
Gans, Herbert J. 1927- Herbert J. Gans was born...to exist. SEE ALSO ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Gans, Herbert J. 1962. The Urban Villagers: Group...Americans . New York: Free Press. Gans, Herbert J. 1995. The War Against the Poor...
|
|
Herbert Gans
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Herbert Gans , 1927-, American sociologist and educator, b. Cologne, Germany. He came to the United States in 1940 and became a U.S...
|
|
Culture, Low and High
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
...others? According to sociologist Herbert Gans, cultures can be divided according...Changing Class Structure (1986), Gans argues that “ taste cultures...their levels of capital. According to Gans, “ it takes money to buy...
|
|
Rose, Arnold M.
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
...1962), edited by Rose and with contributions from (among others) Howard Becker, Ralph Turner, Herbert Blumer, Robert Dubin, Herbert Gans, and Manford Kuhn, all of whom are seen as offering an interactionist approach to the study of society...
|
|
suburbanism
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
...uniformity, even conformity, in style of life. A series of studies—notably by the American sociologists Herbert Gans and Bennett Berger—largely undermined these claims, showing that suburban areas vary considerably in class...
|