“A miser is sometimes a grand personification of fear. He has a fine horror of poverty; and he is not content to keep want from the door, or at arm's length, but he places it, by heaping wealth upon wealth, at a sublime distance!” WantSometimesWealthPovertyDoorsArmsFineHorrorDistanceLengthSublimeMisersPersonification Author:Charles Lamb
“Occasional observers of horror movies have a nasty habit of asking why it is that there is always some poor misguided soul who opens the door to the cellar or to the attic or to the crypt when it's quite clear that no sane person would even consider it.” PersonsSoulFilmPoorClearDoorsHabitHorrorHollywoodAskingSaneNastyObserversOccasionalMisguidedCellarsAtticsAsking Why Author:Andrew Tudor
“It is true that I grew up in an affluent neighborhood and went to a prestigious school. But there were horrors that went on behind closed doors.” SchoolBehindsDoorsGrewHorrorGrew UpNeighborhoodClosed DoorsAffluentBehind Closed DoorsPrestigious Author:Kirby Wright
“What makes horror movies work is the idea that "oh my God, what would I do if I were in that situation? How would I get out of that alive? What would I do if I saw the door to my closet creaking open in the middle of the night and a doll on a tricycle comes riding out?"” IfsIdeasNightSituationSawsAliveDoorsMiddleHorrorRidingClosetsDollsMiddle Of The NightTricycles Author:James Wan
“In junior high I read a lot of Stephen King, whose Americana approach to writing was often about "the terror next door" and at the same time I was reading a lot of Clive Barker, who was on the other end of the horror pendulum: insidious and disturbingly psychological. I found it fascinating how these two authors came at horror from two totally different perspectives.” WritingTwoDifferentEndsReadingNextFoundDoorsPerspectiveKingsHorrorApproachTerrorPsychologicalFascinatingJuniorsDifferent PerspectiveInsidiousJunior HighPendulumsAmericana Author:Bryan Fuller