Stephen Graham
Stephen Graham
Stephen Grahamis an English film and television actor who is best known for his roles as Tommy in the film Snatch, Andrew "Combo" Gascoigne in This Is Englandas well as its television sequels, This Is England '86, This Is England '88and This Is England '90, Danny Ferguson in Occupation, Billy Bremner in The Damned United, notorious bank robber Baby Face Nelson in Public Enemies, Scrum in the Pirates of the Caribbean films and a crooked police detective in the acclaimed...
NationalityBritish
ProfessionMovie Actor
Date of Birth3 August 1973
The whole 'starting with stories, ending with novels' thing, it's probably too ingrained in the industry and the psyche to change it.
The way humor's usually used in horror, it's as a pressure-release valve; without it, the drama would escalate out of all control almost immediately.
You can't negotiate with a zombie. They have only one impulse - that's to eat us or our brains.
Stories need stupid decisions that, at the time, seem absolutely rational and necessary. Without stupid decisions, the world isn't thrown out of balance, and so there's no need for a 'rest of the story' to balance it back.
Some people are born for Halloween, and some are just counting the days until Christmas.
With the Romero zombie, you usually did not have a reason for the infection, the plague, the virus, whatever it's called.
I would highly, highly recommend seeing 'Paranormal Activity' with a friend or, better yet, a group.
In the fast zombie stories, it's not our humanity that is at stake anymore. It's our survival.
In the 40 years since 'The Amityville Horror', dramatizations of those supposedly-real events have gotten loose enough - special-effects laden enough, star-power re-packaged enough - that the audience no longer trusts the dramatization's loyalty to the core story.
If the main character's not in jeopardy - physical, psychological, emotional, whatever - then you don't have any tension, and you don't have a story.
In 1990, I was an undergraduate freshman archeology major sneaking over to the English building and unearthing an amazing repository of books I'd never even suspected. By 1998, I'd have my Ph.D.
In 1984, when 'Nightmare on Elm Street' came out, not only was I twelve and couldn't get into an R movie, but I lived twenty miles from a theater. So my first experience of it was on VHS.
Horror, of all the genres, is the only one that can provoke an involuntary visceral reaction.
I figure anytime you put an adjective before 'writer,' it's a way of dismissing the writer.