Wednesday 23 January 2013

Research on suspense genre

                                  Suspense (genre)

Suspense is a feeling of uncertainty and anxiety about the outcome of certain actions, most often referring to an audience's perceptions in a dramatic work. Suspense is not exclusive to fiction, though. It may operate whenever there is a perceived suspended drama or a chain of cause is Left in doubt, with tension bring a primary emotion felt as part of the situation. In kind of suspense described by film director Alfred Hitchcock, an audience experiences suspense when they expect something bad to happen and have a superior perspective on events in the drama's hierarchy of knowledge, yet they are powerless to intervene to prevent it from happening. In thrillers, suspense is the key element that authors used to try to leave the reader or viewer hanging, trying to view out what will happen next, especially when the author does this at the end of the story without actually telling what happens next. This particularly leaves a strong effect. Suspense is what gives a person on the edge feeling.  Suspense builds in order to make those final moments, no matter how short, the most memorable moments in the work. The suspense in a story just keeps the person hooked into reading or watching more until the climax is reached, and the thrill and amusement of the suspension finally comes too close. A Mystery/Suspense film centres on a person of authority, usually a detective, that is trying to solve a mysterious crime. The main protagonist uses clues, investigation, and logical reasoning. The biggest element in these films is a sense of suspense, usually created through visual cues and unusual plot twists. Alferd Hitchcock has made the best movies, sticking on the suspense Genre and he is world known for his movies. A movie that includes suspense can be a romantic movie with suspens, a sad movie that contains an element of suspense in it or a thriller movie which has suspense in it.

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