In the 1997 horror film I Know
What You Did Last Summer a group of four teenage friends accidently hit a
stranger with their car and attempted to hide his body in a nearby lake despite
knowing that he was still alive. A year later they are receive threats and
experience attacks based off of the crime they committed the previous summer.
The movie continues as the four teenagers try to figure out who is behind the
threats until one-by-one people start to die at the killer’s hand, or shall I
say hook. This movie provides constant thrills for its viewers by the menacing
music and the dark, ominous setting. The four main characters consist of two
teenage girls, Julie and Helen and their two love interests, Ray and Barry.
Carol Clover is an American author
known for her analysis of how gender is represented in horror/slasher films. She
discusses different aspects of these films and how the characters, weapons, and
the settings all tell the audience something. I Know What You Did Last Summer
is no exception to Clover’s claims.
Most slasher films have a type of
“terrible place” that either the killers hold and manipulate, or that victims
go to. These terrible places are normally small, dark, abandoned areas. The viewers
of this film have no knowledge on the killer until the last five minutes of the
movie, but what they find out is that he has a boat where he has pictures,
newspaper articles, and other information on the four victims plastered on the
wall. This creepy display in a small dark room instills fear in Julie when she
discovers it, but also lets her know that she is trapped on a boat with the
movie’s killer. Throughout the final chase scene on the boat between Julie and
the killer she hides in a number of small, dark compartments on the boat. At
one point she traps herself in a long small tunnel with the killer right behind
her. As she travels down this tunnel, she finds a door which leads to a large
bright freezer filled with ice. When she opens the door, light shines in and
she climbs into the freezer and shuts and blocks it behind her. Though she is not
fully in the clear yet, this bright light at the end of a dark tunnel could be
compared to the female birth canal. Even though she is still being chased,
Julie does all she can from this point forward to fight him off and stand up
for herself. This can be portrayed as a rebirth of her as a character. She is leaving
behind her stereotypical feminized character by making bad choices, and shifts
into a more masculine character by attempting to rescue herself and fighting
back as hard as she could.
The victims of the killer are all
beautiful, popular, teenagers. The female victims are seen as always running
away from their attacker, and hiding in small unknown places, or always
choosing the wrong way. When being chased in her store, Helen took an elevator
upstairs to get away, while the killer walked up the stairs and was waiting for
her by the time she got up there. When she presumably gets away, she runs into
the killer again where he inevitably kills her in an alleyway. During the
attack, Helen fights him off as best as she can. This response, rather than
just complying out of fear shows that she is attempting to rescue herself. Even
though she was unsuccessful, this attempt shows that she has taken on some of
the killer’s abilities to fight.
(The killer hiding from and attacking Helen)
Even though Helen is not the “final
girl” at the end of the film, Julie is, and shows the exact same strengths.
When trapped on a boat in the middle of the river with the killer, Julie does
not just give in and accept her fate either. Even though she is unfamiliar with
the boat’s layout, she continues to hide and try to get away. She does fight
him off as well, shifting to more masculine characteristics, in a self-rescue,
physically strong type of way, but she does not entirely fit the “final girl” identity
because she is not the one to beat the killer. Ray hurries out on his own boat
to the boat that Julie and the killer are on and things like rope swings to
prevent the killer from harming Julie. Not only does he hit him with a large
iron hook, but he also manages to lift him into the air by a rope, which rips
off his hand and throws him into the water.
Julie and Ray are both saved and the killer is presumably dead.
Clover talks about the use of the
weapon in slasher films and how the type and size of the weapon both portray
something. Slasher films are called slasher films because that is exactly what
the killers do, slash. There is no gun use, only knives or other sharp objects.
In I Know What You Did Last Summer, the killer uses a large hook to kill his
victims. Being a fisherman himself, he uses the hook to complete the fisherman’s
coat and hat that he is wearing throughout the film. This hook is always held
close to his body, and the large size of it is seen as an extension of his
body. This weapon, though not the typical shape, can be perceived by the
audience as a phallic symbol because of how attached the killer is to it, since
he used it for every murder.
Overall this slasher film, like
most, has many of the characteristics that Clover discusses. This movie
provided all of these while keeping the audience on the edge of their seat. Every
dark corner paired with the weapon and character portrayals give the film’s viewers
a lot to think about.
You write quite well, but I think you have a bit too much summary.You successfully analyzed the weapon, but I couldn't help but want more analysis for the terrible place and the final girl. Aside from the analysis, your summaries were well written and they were easy to follow. I've never seen this movie, and your summaries helped me to understand what the movie was about.
ReplyDeleteYour use of pictures and movie images was a great way to catch the attention of any reader! I really enjoyed how you broke your blog into sections instead of using really long paragraphs which can get boring to readers. I liked your use of summary because it gave readers important elements that they should know to help understand your blog. I also liked how you brought Carol Clover into the blog and gave a little description about her in it. I really enjoyed the key terms you decided to focus on but my favorite was definitely the terrible place because I felt you went into the most detail with that paragraph.
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