How the Horror Movies of the Great Depression Reflected the History of the Time
By L. Vincent Poupard, published Jun 01, 2007
Published Content: 476 Total Views: 334,342 Favorited By: 43 CPs
In the 1930s, America was dealing with the Great Depression. There was a large separation of thought as to the future of America. Many immigrants that came to this country during the period worries that maybe they had not made the right decision about coming to America.
On the other side of the coin, many of those who were in the United States already believed that many of the issues of the time had been brought on by the immigrants that had come to this country. They believed that issues that the country was facing had a direct link to the influx of people from, "The Old Country."
During the 1930s, Universal Studios embarked on a mission to produce horror films that people would want to watch. The production company knew that with all of the fears that people had, horror films would be a great way to release their inner fears.
Dracula (1931), Frankenstein (1931), The Mummy (1932), The Bride of Frankenstein (1935), Dracula's Daughter (1936), Son of Frankenstein (1939), and The Wolf Man (1941) all had common threads that spoke volumes about what was going on at the time in the United States. An investigation into the themes of these movies will display more about the thoughts, hopes, dreams, and fears of Americans then any history book ever written.
All of the creatures from these horror movies have links to, "The Old Country." For those people that argued that the perils of the day came from the immigrants, they had an argument that was displayed in front of them on the screen. The creatures that these films portrayed reinforced the fears that these Americans had.
Dracula immigrated to America from Western Europe. The Wolf Man had a curse that was believed to be common in Western Europe. The Mummy was a curse that was born in Northern Africa. Frankenstein was a monster that was created from a madness that was in central Europe.
How the Horror Movies of the Great Depression Reflected the History of the Time
The monster that reinforced the fears of a generation.
Credit: Universal Studios
Copyright: Public
You may also like...
- A Review of the Best Horror Movies Out There
- The Great Depression, Working-Class Strife, and the CPUSA: Understanding Propaganda in John Steinbec...
- Economic Depression: Cause and Effects
- Conflict of Nations: Origins of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
- Cult Classic Rob Zombie Horror Movies: House of 1000 Corpses & The Devils Rejects
- The Violent Sexism of Horror Movies and Pornography
- Amityville - the True Horror of Poor Filmmaking
- The Great Depression and Great Engineer ( Hoover )
- The Effects of Public Housing in New York City
- The Concept Album:
Most Commented On



L. Vincent Poupard
Add a Comment
Posted on 06/27/2007 at 2:06:00 PM
Zane Ewton
Add a Comment
Posted on 06/27/2007 at 2:06:00 PM
Darlene Zagata
Add a Comment
Posted on 06/02/2007 at 8:06:00 AM