A governess in a country mansion, hiding behind a curtain as she plays hide-and-seek with her young charges, looks up to see a demonic face looming outside the window before her, then inexorably drawing away. A woman doing laps after hours in the pool of an abandoned gym thinks she hears something, and treads water, waiting, holding her breath, as she watches charged, mercurial shadows shift in the lighted dome above her. A father, stricken with sudden foreboding on an ordinary afternoon, runs from the house to find his premonition realized, his little daughter drowned in the pond outside.

The Innocents, Cat People, Donโ€™t Look Nowโ€“three great scenes from three classic horror films, each offering a different take on the idea of horror: Youโ€™re not sure youโ€™ve really seen what was there, or you think somethingโ€™s there but you canโ€™t see it, or you seeโ€“unavoidably, undeniablyโ€“what you cannot bear. The implication of sight in the dynamics of horror may explain the prevalence of the genre in film historyโ€“one of the first genre movies was a primitive riff on Frankenstein produced by Edison in 1910, with Charles Ogle as the monster. Even Boris Karloffโ€™s poignant turn in that role in 1931 looks a little primitive to modern audiences, and the recent resurgence of horror bids for a new relevanceโ€“as in The Blair Witch Projectโ€“via a return to the โ€œprimitive.โ€ Thatโ€™s what horror is, a full view of the primitive, and what it does, to show us how primitive sight is.

Besides the Western, horror may be the most regressive genre in movies, because itโ€™s so bound up with the energies of the primal. But itโ€™s also, among film genres, the most self-reflexive, so concerned is it with what we see, and how we seeโ€“the very bases of the medium. The best-known horror moviesโ€“The Haunting (1963 version) or Rosemaryโ€™s Baby, or The Exorcist or Carrie or The Shining or The Sixth Senseโ€“all, in one way or another, concern the clash of primal energies with the fact of mediating sight: โ€œI see dead people!โ€ This Halloween, when many may seek out horror as a kind of local anesthetic, an antidote to the experience of terror, some may be more aware than ever that believing is not always seeing.

Second to the Western as the most highly conventionalized genre, horror tends toward camp, even more powerfully than the Western, because itโ€™s most basic affinities are with the comic mode. Despite its concern with dire fates, horror has nothing to do with tragedy; its attitudes are typically mordant, caustic, ironic, funny. (Itโ€™s no accident that Mel Brooksโ€™ tender and knowing horror parody, Young Frankenstein, is his best film, or that such great movies as Kubrickโ€™s The Shining or Polanskiโ€™s The Tenant hover between comedy and horror.) The camp-horror classics let you experience an anatomy of horror without having to be its victim. They show you whatโ€™s supposed to be scary andโ€“partly because fashions in horror shift as quickly as those in any genreโ€“all you can do is laugh. Theyโ€™re the ones Iโ€™ll be renting this year.

Take Mad Love, for instance. Itโ€™s a 1935 variation on the old โ€œHands of Orlacโ€ chestnut, with a pianist in a train wreck (Colin Clive, Baron Frankenstein himself) that somehow mangles only his hands. He is given a hand transplant by a mad scientist and the new hands, suffice to say, are those of a killerโ€“and you can guess what comes next. What you canโ€™t fathom, though, are the crazed glories of the filmโ€™s visual design, which surpasses Edgar Ulmerโ€™s fantasia on Poe, The Black Cat (made the year before), for sheer Expressionist delirium. Directed by the photographer of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and shot by the photographer of Citizen Kane, it clearly prefigures the gothic excesses of Wellesโ€™ masterpiece, even down to the high-lit baldness of Peter Lorreโ€™s cue-ball pateโ€“an image Welles perversely resurrected for Kaneโ€™s dotage. If nothing else, the film features Lorreโ€™s most slyly fervent performance, as the maddest of doctors. (If you want to see his best Hollywood performance, look forโ€“but donโ€™t, sadly, expect to findโ€“Robert Floreyโ€™s 1941 Face Behind the Mask, a real heartbreaker.)

Or consider Curse of the Demon, a 1958 take on โ€œCasting the Runes.โ€ Itโ€™s directed by Jacques Tourneur, associated with the RKO horror series of the 1940s that was known for placing suggestive atmosphere above more literal, bluntly visualized horrors. Those films included Cat People, The Seventh Victim (the most influential of them, with echoes in Psycho and Rosemaryโ€™s Baby), and the unpromisingly titled but beautiful meditation on childhood reverie, The Curse of the Cat Peopleโ€“a movie critic James Agee loved so much he tried to recapture some of its spirit in his script for Night of the Hunter. True to form, Tourneur drenches the first half of Demon in well-wrought atmospherics. Then, in the second half, he loses it and vaults wonderfully over the topโ€“thrusting the demon in our faces, full-tilt boogie, with pulsing chords of music cueing a shock that, each time, can only come out as a guffaw. It takes guts to don a gilla-monster suit and expect scares, the kind of guts Jeepers Creepers can only dream of. That movie, for the record, steals its demon from Tourneur, who in turn, to be fair, seems to have plundered the Black Lagoon.

Thereโ€™s a certain innocence in these films that more recent forays in camp usually lackโ€“but Vincent Price in 1973โ€™s Theatre of Blood performs one of the greatest exercises I know in self-conscious camp. Price plays a ham actor who, lambasted by a criticโ€™s circle, knocks off the critics one by one, in an ever more baroque series of murders modeled on Shakespearean deaths. (Coral Browneโ€“Mrs. Priceโ€“and the great Robert Morley are among the critics, with a hilariously staunch, post-Emma Peel Diana Rigg also on hand.) The movie has little of the ardently straight-faced high camp of Priceโ€™s โ€™60s Poe vehicles, or the strutting low camp of the Dr. Phibes series. With its fey, sardonic wit, it has more in common with the Alec Guinness classics, Kind Hearts and Coronets or The Ladykillers, than with a British Hammer horror showโ€“but youโ€™ll never see Price having more fun.

Certainly not in Witchfinder General, an uncompromising and grimly horrific study of the pathology of sadism (in which Price is magnificent), made in 1968 by the gifted, short-lived Michael Reeves, who had directed The Sorcerers in 1967, a late Karloff vehicle with an unshakably oppressive aura. Among the films of the 1960s and 1970s in which aging stars dutifully don their fright wigs, camp is obviously the order of the dayโ€“think of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, Whatโ€™s the Matter with Helen?, Who Slew Auntie Roo? But those, like Reevesโ€™ films, that go for something more, can exert a strange fascination. The best of these is Jimmy Sangsterโ€™s 1965 Hammer film The Nanny, a delicate psychological study with a post-Baby Jane Bette Davis trying to act again, as the title character with possibly murderous designs on her precocious charge. Itโ€™s not just her best horror performance, but one of her best turns ever: An unforgettable scene where she watches a boy drowning in a bathtub (recalling her demonic character in The Little Foxes) is among her greatest screen moments.

These movies flirt with the โ€œart-horrorโ€ cycle of the โ€™60s and โ€™70s, movies with real scares but enough aesthetic distance to make them bearable in times of real trouble. They have their camp quotient tooโ€“we have this genre, after all, to thank for Dario Argento. That quality is largely what enabled their marketing as gore fests at a time when more straightforward European art films were being purveyed stateside as sex movies. Soon after Bergmanโ€™s masterpiece The Clownโ€™s Evening was shown in the United States under the salacious title The Naked Night, Georges Franjuโ€™s remarkable, poetic new-wave horror film of 1959, Eyes Without a Face, played here under the sensationalistic title Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus.

Sometimes the sensationalism was well earnedโ€“as in the case of Roger Vadimโ€™s disastrously influential 1961 film Blood and Rosesโ€“but often the art outweighed the schlockโ€“as in Peeping Tom (1960), Black Sabbath (1964), Daughters of Darkness (1969), or Bergmanโ€™s own semi-horror film Hour of the Wolf (1967). (Honorable mention in this category goes to The Hunger, a punk-vampire film by Tony Scott from 1983, back in the days when one might still have thought he was vaguely human; and if youโ€™ve never seen Carl Dreyerโ€™s Vampyr (1931), the film Vadimโ€™s potboiler rips off, then dump the rest of these suggestions and rush to get it: As art, it has no peer among the classics of horror.)

Closer to home, a few Hollywood efforts of the past 25 years might be worth another look. The Fury is Brian DePalmaโ€™s most โ€œmainstreamโ€ effort of his early career (pre-Untouchables, that is), but also perhaps the most lyrical, accessible and powerful. 1980โ€™s Motherโ€™s Day is one of the creepiest and sleaziest slasher movies Iโ€™ve seenโ€“a kind of pre-I Spit on Your Grave, with a real sickoโ€™s sense of humor. (It features an inbred family that harks back to Murder He Says, a 1945 Fred MacMurray horror comedy, one of the funniest movies ever made in Hollywood.) A little-known 1983 adaptation of Ray Bradburyโ€™s Something Wicked This Way Comes (directed by Jack Clayton, who made The Innocents) captures some of the autumnal glee and childlike exuberance of Bradburyโ€™s horror stories (and riffs wonderfully on the great 1964 Tony Randall vehicle The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao, to boot). Wes Cravenโ€™s The People Under the Stairs (1991) mixes trenchant commentary on Reagan-era class politics with a series of real, albeit tawdry, frissons. And Candyman (1992) has a great (largely unrealized) premise, andโ€“the real reason to see itโ€“Philip Glassโ€™s best film score, except for Kundun. See it, hear it, in stereo.

The TV, it occurs to me, is something like a modern equivalent of the proverbial jack-o-lantern. Mysteriously lit from within, it wards off spirits by seeming to welcome them. This Halloween, thatโ€™s how Iโ€™ll be using it.

Pleasant dreams. EndBlock