In a good horror movie, it's easy to identify what makes it scary. Maybe it’s the chainsaw-wielding maniac that makes an indelible impression on the viewer, or the killer clown or other supernatural monster tormenting those plucky protagonists. But can the landscape itself inspire horror? Two Vermont-made films screening across the state the week before Halloween aim to do just that.
Over the next week, the Vermont International Film Foundation and the Vermont Folklife Center are bringing the to cinemas in Brattleboro, Greensboro, Montpelier and Woodstock.
The roadshow features two "spooky, atmospheric films shot and set in Vermont."
Those films are the 1972 short , and the feature-length 1976 film .
The two films are examples of what horror writer calls "folk horror," a subgenre of mostly British horror films like .
"The landscape impacts the filmmaker," Bissette tells Vermont Edition, calling the folk horror movies "slow, meditative films" that "steep the audience like tea bags" into the experience of the movie, creating what he calls "very eerie, effective" horror movies.
Bissette, who teaches at the in White River Junction, is also a cartoonist, writer, editor and publisher who's written books and articles on horror films and TV shows, including films made in Vermont.
Bissette is leading discussions on the two Vermont-made films and the folk horror subgenre at roadshow screenings in Brattleboro, Montpelier and Woodstock. Additionally, the Woodstock screening will feature the filmmaker behind The Animal, director Walter Ungerer.
Listen to the interview above to hear more about folk horror and the Vermont horror roadshow.
Broadcast live on Friday, Oct. 25, 2019 at noon; rebroadcast at 7 p.m.