Would you say its unfair to describe hk horror as being behind say korean amd jp output? I was watching a vcd called "Ghost Office", it was truly awful. I'm not saying that all kr/jp horrors succeed (kr horror Face was terrible) but in terms of the success of films like Audition, Ju-On, A Tale of Two Sisters, is it true to say that the HK horror genre is playing 'catch up' with the other main east asian cinema industries?
I wouldn't say it's unfair
per se. Hong Kong cinema has it's own very unique, rich history of horror films that, barring a few titles, have always seemed to play by their own rules when it comes to what's considered "scary," although these conventions generally seem to leave western viewers cold. GHOST OFFICE is one of dozens if not hundreds that I can think of that don't seem designed to
jolt the audience or make them queasy as do horror films from other countries. As such, they can seem remarkably behind-the-curve, even puerile, when compared with works from Korea and Japan, not that filmmakers in those countries always pull it off, mind you (but even FACE has some wonderfully jumpy moments, though like so many Korean films, it plays out like the script wasn't finished when they filmed it). Certainly the fact that many new Hong Kong horror films adhere to well-worn formulas that only seem to exist in Hong Kong cinema is a sign that many viewers simply have to attune to Hong Kong horror films rather than Hong Kong horror films attuning to the rest of the world. As I mentioned previous, THE EYE and NEW BLOOD, as well as INNER SENSES and a very small handful of other Hong Kong horror movies, seem to go against tradition by adding a layer of gloss more often associated with Hollywood, Korean and Japanese horror films, as well as utilizing more westernized plotting and cutting techniques to better telegraph suspense, maintain a foreboding atmosphere (without the use of green lights and Helena Law Lan) and more effectively frighten the audience, but even now, such films seem more like exceptions to the Hong Kong rules of horror.