It Follows: The Paranoia of the Wide Angle
The modern horror film is obsessed with the jump scare. The camera frames a character tightly, the music drops to silence, and something loud jumps out from just off-screen. It is cheap, biological manipulation. David Robert Mitchell’s It Follows rejects this entirely. It generates terror not by hiding the monster, but by showing you exactly where the monster is, in a massive, inescapable frame. The Deep-Focus Threat Mitchell and cinematographer Mike Gioulakis abandoned traditional, tight horror framing in favor of extreme wide-angle lenses and deep-focus photography. By holding these tableau-like shots for agonizingly long durations, they weaponize the audience’s own eyes. You are forced into a state of active paranoia. You stop looking at the actors in the foreground and start obsessively scanning the deep background, looking for anyone walking at a steady, inexorable pace. ...