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Haptic gaze in Asian female ghost films, Ringu (1998) and Juon (2002)Haptic gaze in Asian female ghost films, Ringu (1998) and Juon (2002)

Other Titles
Haptic gaze in Asian female ghost films, Ringu (1998) and Juon (2002)
Authors
조영준
Issue Date
Mar-2023
Publisher
한국영화학회
Keywords
haptic; gaze; female ghost; touch
Citation
영화연구, no.95, pp 75 - 104
Pages
30
Journal Title
영화연구
Number
95
Start Page
75
End Page
104
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hongik/handle/2020.sw.hongik/32028
ISSN
1598-9682
Abstract
Female ghosts’ gaze in Asian horror films is foregrounded because it is used like a weapon to kill people, while in Hollywood horror films, monsters or killers’ gazes moves objects to kill people. In Asian female ghost horror films, he victims always make eye contact with female ghosts, and they go mad or die following that contact. female ghosts’ gaze in Asian horror films is haptic. The female ghost’s gaze touches characters’ eyes and kills these characters (who see ghosts which are not real) in the film narrative, sending a bone-deep chill through the viewer. In Hollywood horror films, characters are killed by a lethal weapon or objects that causes bodily harm because female protagonist’s gaze moves objects, while in Asian horror films, female ghosts’ gaze kill people without any external wounds. Gazes are foregrounded, and their power is maximized in Asian horror films. In Ringu, Sadako’s gaze is haptic, striking the victims’ and the viewers’ eyes, and engendering fear from both characters and audience. The close-up of Sadako’s eye is actually for projective haptic gaze as touch, implying that it is intended to shock the character (Ryuji) and the viewer. What is interesting in Juon is the similarity between the female ghost‘s assaultive gaze and the living character’s reactive gaze. While in Hollywood horror films, the assaultive gaze and the reactive gaze do not mirror each other in such a fashion, in Juon, gazes between female ghosts and living characters are similar, mimicking each other A female ghost’s gaze is haptic, touching the eyes of characters and viewers, and engendering a somatic response from them.
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Cho, Young Joon
Department of General Studies(Sejong Campus) (교양과(세종))
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