Ju-On and
Gottfried Benn
By:
Ga Yue Lau
College Now Course - HUM 1
Expressionism
developed at the turn of the 20th century in Germany. Artists and
writers used this experiment to shock the viewers and readers. Gottfried
Benn's poem "Beautiful Childhood" and the original version of the
Japanese movie "Ju-On: The Grudge" are examples of expressionism because
of the style used to shock the viewers.
In the poem "Beautiful Childhood", Benn shocks the reader by describing
how the dead girl looks. The details are very graphic and the description
of how the inside of her body looked were terrifying. An example from
the poem is, "The mouth of a girl who lain long in this reads looked
so gnawed at." The explanation of where the rats lived in her body
and what they had eaten were disgusting. A line from the poem that
fits this sentence is," The others were living on liver and kidney,
drank the cold blood. . ."
In the movie, "Ju-On", the director shocks the viewer throughout the
film. In the beginning of the film, the mother's face was white and
lifeless. Afterwards, the dead mother appears everywhere and anywhere,
looking very bloodcurdling. The mother's face is as white as chalk.
Her eyes looked as if someone gnawed at them. When she opens her mouth,
only a dry sound comes out; and her mouth can open and twist in many
directions. She drags her bloody body across the floor by moving her
twisted elbows in a very quick pace.
The poem and movie are two examples of how expressionism can be used
by filmmakers and poets. Each art form is used to shock the viewer.
Benn uses graphic details to describe the dead girl in the poem. The
director of Ju-On uses the camera to scare and shock the viewer.