Challenging the classic horror frame in American
film
American filmmakers appropriate the "look" of horror in
Holocaust films and often use Nazis and Holocaust imagery to
explain evil in the world, say authors Caroline Joan (Kay) S.
Picart and David A. Frank. In Frames of Evil: The
Holocaust as Horror in American Film, Picart and Frank
challenge this classic horror frame-the narrative and visual
borders used to demarcate monsters and the monstrous. After
examining the way in which directors and producers of the most
influential American Holocaust movies default to this Gothic frame,
they propose that multiple frames are needed to account for evil
and genocide.
Using Schindler's List, The Silence of the
Lambs, and Apt Pupil as case studies, the authors
provide substantive and critical analyses of these films that
transcend the classic horror interpretation. For example,
Schindler's List, say Picart and Frank, has the appearance
of a historical docudrama but actually employs the visual rhetoric
and narrative devices of the Hollywood horror film. The authors
argue that evil has a face: Nazism, which is configured as
quintessentially innate, and supernaturally crafty.
Frames of Evil, which is augmented by thirty-six film
and publicity stills, also explores the commercial exploitation of
suffering in film and offers constructive ways of critically
evaluating this exploitation. The authors suggest that audiences
will recognize their participation in much larger narrative
formulas that place a premium on monstrosity and elide the role of
modernity in depriving millions of their lives and dignity, often
framing the suffering of others in a manner that allows for merely
"documentary" enjoyment.