The new golden age of horror movies

A new crop of high-concept horror movies shows that fear isn't all about jump scares

From the 2017 'Get Out' movie poster.
(Image credit: Moviestore collection Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo)

Great horror masters are not known for dying well. Edgar Allan Poe died at 40 from unclear causes in the streets of Baltimore, and in clothes that were not his. An obituary in the New York Tribune read that "few would be grieved by it … he had readers in England, and in … Europe, but he had no friends." H.P. Lovecraft died at 46 in obscurity and poverty from untreated intestinal cancer — he feared doctors as much as he did the unknown. No one actually knows what happened to Ambrose Bierce when he went to Mexico and never returned.

These stand in stark contrast to the widely mourned passing of their cinematic peer George A. Romero last month. Instead of weirdly dismissive obituaries, Romero was justly celebrated for films that brought classic horror lore out of the mausoleums and right into our neighborhoods. And the standout tribute was the simplest.

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Chris Morgan

Chris Morgan is a writer living in New Jersey. His essays and reviews have appeared in Lapham's Quarterly, The American Conservative, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Open Letters Monthly, Vice, and The Awl, among others. He was previously the publisher of the cultural zine Biopsy. He writes on a blog called Black Ribbon Award.