Why do people watch
horror films?
According to some psychiatrists, the
modern horror film serves many of the
same functions for the adolescent that the
fairy tale serves for the child, for instance to
warn of evil in familiar places. Horror films
are designed to elicit strong emotional
reactions from viewers, including fear and
dread; and this they do. Nearly everyone
reports having been disturbed at some time
by an image from a film or television
program.
According to Glenn Sparks, Ph.D, one reason for the appeal is how you feel
after the movie. This is called the excitation transfer process. Spark's research
found that when people watch frightening films, their heart rate, blood
pressure and respiration increases.
After the film is over, this physiological arousal lingers, Sparks said. That
means that any positive emotions you experience – like having fun with friends
– are intensified, he said. Instead of focusing on the fright you felt during the
film, you recall having a great time. And you’ll want to come back for more, he
said.
However, if your experience was negative, you might not. For instance, let’s say
you were on a date that wasn’t going well or you got into a car accident on
your way home, Sparks said. Again, because your lingering arousal heightens
any emotions you experience, the negative feelings might sway you to skip a
scary flick in the future.
Gleen Sparks --- Transfer process
Some people are simply wired to enjoy high levels of
physiological arousal, Sparks said. According to the literature, he
said, about 10 percent of the population enjoys the adrenaline
rush. (Not surprisingly, these individuals also love rollercoasters)
Similarly, wiring may explain why others hate scary movies.
Specifically, some individuals have a harder time screening out
unwanted stimuli in their environment, Sparks said. For
instance, they might be hypersensitive to the temperature in a
room or the tag on their shirt. These same individuals are more
likely to have intense physiological reactions to horror films.
Research suggests that more men enjoy scary movies. This might be because
men are socialized to be brave and enjoy threatening things. Men may
derive social gratification from not letting a scary film bother them, Sparks
said. It’s the idea of mastering something threatening, he said.
“Men often like [scary films] as date movies because women are more likely
to seek physical closeness when they’re scared, and men can show off their
strength and bravery,” Cantor said. (This is aptly called “the cuddle effect.”)
In one study males liked a horror movie more when they saw it with a
female who was scared, and females liked the movie more when they saw it
with a male who wasn’t scared.
Men and Horror
Kids and scary films
Parents need to be especially careful about what their kids watch, according to both
experts. Cantor’s research found that college students who watched scary movies or shows
before 14 years old had trouble sleeping and felt anxious about typically safe activities or
stopped engaging in them altogether.
“Until the age of 5 to 7, seeing is believing,” said Cantor, who wrote the book Teddy’s TV
Troubles specifically for calming down kids after they’ve been scared by the media.
Even if it’s make-believe, she said, it’s still scary for young kids. For older kids, realistic
threats, such as kidnappings and child molestation, are scary, she said. Teens, like adults,
are more scared over abstract threats, such as disease and the supernatural, she said.
Physiology of fear
In a biological sense fear is related to death. For the human organism all emotions can be said
to be reactions to what Jeffrey Gray calls "reinforcing events," i.e., rewards and punishments, or
the removal of such rewards and punishments. A fearful response is an indication that the
perceiver believes that his well-being is in danger, and that he is threatened by death or injury,
which can lead to death indirectly.
Biologically fear is a warning signal that death, injury or destruction is imminent, and it is
designed to cause the perceiver to avoid the dangerous situation. Fear, psychologically, is also a
warning, and it basically functions to prevent the possibility of personality disintegration. A
victim of fear perceives a threat to his identity which he experiences as a loss of control.
According to Arno Karlen it is "a traditional Western fear that any loss of individual or social
control will start a snowballing loss of controls in general,” and such an effect in itself is
sufficient to arouse more fear and complicate the situation for the victim. That is, fear is
capable of generating more fear, and a victim of fear can find himself in a nightmare of his
own making if he allows his imagination to get out of hand and does not successfully gain
control on the situation.

Why do people watch horror films?

  • 1.
    Why do peoplewatch horror films?
  • 2.
    According to somepsychiatrists, the modern horror film serves many of the same functions for the adolescent that the fairy tale serves for the child, for instance to warn of evil in familiar places. Horror films are designed to elicit strong emotional reactions from viewers, including fear and dread; and this they do. Nearly everyone reports having been disturbed at some time by an image from a film or television program.
  • 3.
    According to GlennSparks, Ph.D, one reason for the appeal is how you feel after the movie. This is called the excitation transfer process. Spark's research found that when people watch frightening films, their heart rate, blood pressure and respiration increases. After the film is over, this physiological arousal lingers, Sparks said. That means that any positive emotions you experience – like having fun with friends – are intensified, he said. Instead of focusing on the fright you felt during the film, you recall having a great time. And you’ll want to come back for more, he said. However, if your experience was negative, you might not. For instance, let’s say you were on a date that wasn’t going well or you got into a car accident on your way home, Sparks said. Again, because your lingering arousal heightens any emotions you experience, the negative feelings might sway you to skip a scary flick in the future. Gleen Sparks --- Transfer process
  • 4.
    Some people aresimply wired to enjoy high levels of physiological arousal, Sparks said. According to the literature, he said, about 10 percent of the population enjoys the adrenaline rush. (Not surprisingly, these individuals also love rollercoasters) Similarly, wiring may explain why others hate scary movies. Specifically, some individuals have a harder time screening out unwanted stimuli in their environment, Sparks said. For instance, they might be hypersensitive to the temperature in a room or the tag on their shirt. These same individuals are more likely to have intense physiological reactions to horror films.
  • 5.
    Research suggests thatmore men enjoy scary movies. This might be because men are socialized to be brave and enjoy threatening things. Men may derive social gratification from not letting a scary film bother them, Sparks said. It’s the idea of mastering something threatening, he said. “Men often like [scary films] as date movies because women are more likely to seek physical closeness when they’re scared, and men can show off their strength and bravery,” Cantor said. (This is aptly called “the cuddle effect.”) In one study males liked a horror movie more when they saw it with a female who was scared, and females liked the movie more when they saw it with a male who wasn’t scared. Men and Horror
  • 6.
    Kids and scaryfilms Parents need to be especially careful about what their kids watch, according to both experts. Cantor’s research found that college students who watched scary movies or shows before 14 years old had trouble sleeping and felt anxious about typically safe activities or stopped engaging in them altogether. “Until the age of 5 to 7, seeing is believing,” said Cantor, who wrote the book Teddy’s TV Troubles specifically for calming down kids after they’ve been scared by the media. Even if it’s make-believe, she said, it’s still scary for young kids. For older kids, realistic threats, such as kidnappings and child molestation, are scary, she said. Teens, like adults, are more scared over abstract threats, such as disease and the supernatural, she said.
  • 7.
    Physiology of fear Ina biological sense fear is related to death. For the human organism all emotions can be said to be reactions to what Jeffrey Gray calls "reinforcing events," i.e., rewards and punishments, or the removal of such rewards and punishments. A fearful response is an indication that the perceiver believes that his well-being is in danger, and that he is threatened by death or injury, which can lead to death indirectly. Biologically fear is a warning signal that death, injury or destruction is imminent, and it is designed to cause the perceiver to avoid the dangerous situation. Fear, psychologically, is also a warning, and it basically functions to prevent the possibility of personality disintegration. A victim of fear perceives a threat to his identity which he experiences as a loss of control. According to Arno Karlen it is "a traditional Western fear that any loss of individual or social control will start a snowballing loss of controls in general,” and such an effect in itself is sufficient to arouse more fear and complicate the situation for the victim. That is, fear is capable of generating more fear, and a victim of fear can find himself in a nightmare of his own making if he allows his imagination to get out of hand and does not successfully gain control on the situation.