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Fairy Tale and Film
The adolescent heroine in
Hellraiser
(Clive Barker, 1987) is set against
a wicked stepmother who fatally betrays her father and turns the family
home
into a charnel house, propelling Kirsty towards independence
when forced to rely on her wits.
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A similar theme is evident in
Halloween
(John Carpenter, 1978),
A
Nightmare on Elm Street
(Wes Craven, 1984)
and the
Scream
franchise (Wes Craven, 1996–2011), all of which situate
killers in ordinary suburbs where parents fail to protect their adolescent
offspring. Indeed, the slasher’s popularity with the teen market is partly
explained by confirming their suspicions about an uncomprehend-
ing and untrustworthy adult world.
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Parents are unable to keep their
children
from harm, or understand the hazards they face, and self-
sufficiency comes through realising this is the case. Fairy tales similarly
insist on a necessary separation from parents. Death generally takes at
least one parent before the child reaches adulthood, inviting ongoing
problems for bereaved children. When a mother dies – as is usually
the case – their daughters are either faced with ‘unnatural’ fathers who
regard them as a replacement, or experience
murderous jealousy from
stepmothers. Abusive parents abound, with abandonment, infanticide
and incest featuring among the perils child figures have to contend with
as adults shockingly repudiate their presumed role as carers, forcing the
protagonist to leave the family home. In most cases, however, a form
of compensation is provided. A supernatural figure may be assigned to
watch over bereaved
children and help them prosper, while villainous
parents generally get their comeuppance (admittedly mothers much
more frequently than fathers). Moreover, although families are often
positioned as sites of difficulty, successful adulthood is ultimately
equated with marriage and having a family of one’s own, recuperating
the familial ideal, even as this flies in the face of unhappy experience.
It is partly due to this ambivalence that Laura Hubner contends that:
The fairy tale,
as elastic, fantastical vehicle for imaginary worlds
and taboo subject matter, can act as a strong voice for societal fears.
But its powers to subvert and challenge existing codes and practices
only partly account for its functioning in respect of fear, since fairy
tales also use fear to purify and refine, to revert as much as to sub-
vert, often embracing long-established boundaries and pathways.
(Hubner, 2007)
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Accordingly, while the fairy tale uses dread and disorder to voice specific
anxieties, it also re-establishes order and normalcy. Witches, ogres and
abusive parents are
generally exposed and overcome, and the virtuous