I thought I was going to be a horror story writer. My influences were horror writers, like Rich Matheson, Ray Bradbury and Bram Stoker.
War is the ultimate reality-based horror show.
For horror movies, color is reassuring because, at least in older films, it adds to the fakey-ness.
Horror by definition is the emotion of pure revulsion. Terror of the same standard, is that of fearful anticipation.
A win by an unsound combination, however showy, fills me with artistic horror.
I turn aside with a shudder of horror from this lamentable plague of functions which have no derivatives.
I've never done a horror movie, like a full-on gore slasher film.
I do like sci-fi, and I do like horror - those are my favorite genres. Good horror, though, not like slasher horror... psychological horror like 'The Shining' - really good stuff!
I do needlepoint from kits. I give them as gifts to people in the form of cushion covers and they are often speechless with horror.
The horror genre is vast and full of brilliance. Stephen King, Shirley Jackson, Herman Melville, the book of Esther. I'll happily join that list.
I am a big scaredy-cat; horror films terrify me.
I'm not a great one for classic horror or cheap thrills.
The horror of the Twentieth Century was the size of each new event, and the paucity of its reverberation.
I'm a fan of the 'Underworld' films, but I don't necessarily consider them horror.
What makes me laugh is, of course, the absurd, the horror - anything that upsets me.
While I was writing 'The Last Werewolf,' I didn't watch any horror movies.