Listen, we need to have a serious talk about Terrifier. Not the kind of talk where we sit around stroking our metaphorical beards and debating the semiotics of the slasher. Iโm talking about a real, boots-on-the-ground conversation about why this movie makes people lose their minds.โ
Every time I bring up Art the Clown in polite horror circlesโyou know the ones, the groups where everyoneโs wearing an A24 sweatshirt and talking about how Hereditary changed their livesโI get the same reaction. People roll their eyes. They call it cheap schlock. They say itโs meaningless. And then, inevitably, someone drops the big one: they say itโs degrading to women.
โAnd honestly? It drives me up the wall. Itโs like people have developed collective amnesia about what the word horror actually means. Look it up. Itโs right there in the dictionary: an intense feeling of fear, shock, or disgust. Itโs not a gentle meditation on grief that makes you feel slightly uneasy before you go to sleep. Itโs supposed to be horrific. And Damien Leone? Heโs one of the few people left who actually understands that.โ
So, sit down.
And letโs look at why Terrifier is actually the most honest horror movie weโve had in a decade, and why the people calling it trash are just too scared to admit they canโt handle the heat.โ

Putting The Horror Back Into Horror
โWeโve become too soft. Letโs just put that on the table right now. We live in an era of safe horrorโmovies that are basically dramas with a ghost in the background, or some family trauma hanging over the table. We want our villains to have understandable motives. We want to feel bad for the monster because he had a rough childhood.โ
Terrifier looks at all that and spits blood in its face.โ
Art the Clown doesn’t have a tragic backstory. He doesn’t have a why. He just is. And thatโs what people find so offensive. Theyโre ignorant of the fact that the most terrifying thing in the world isn’t a demon you can negotiate with; itโs a guy in a greasepaint mask who thinks your intestines are confetti.โ
When people call this cheap schlock, theyโre usually just reacting to the fact that it doesn’t have a $50 million marketing budget or a cast of Oscar-nominated actors. But if you actually look at the screen, there is nothing cheap about whatโs happening. Damien Leone is doing things with practical effects that make these massive studio blockbusters look like a joke. Heโs in the trenches, molding latex and mixing five different types of fake blood to get the consistency of a real human liver. That isn’t schlock. Thatโs craft. The refusal to let the art – no pun intended – of the physical effects die in favor of some soulless CGI monster that doesn’t have any weight.โ
If you think Terrifier is just mindless gore, you aren’t paying attention. Itโs a masterclass in tension. Think about the pizza shop scene. Thereโs no blood there. Thereโs no hacking. Itโs just a silent clown sitting in a booth, staring at two girls, wearing a tiny hat and blowing a horn. It is one of the most deeply uncomfortable scenes in modern cinema because it taps into that raw, terrifying reality of being watched by a predator. Thatโs not trash. Thatโs pure, distilled dread.โ

Letโs Talk About the Misogyny Elephantโ
This is the hill where most people want to fight me. They look at the hacksaw sceneโthe one where Art literally saws a woman in half while sheโs hanging upside downโand they immediately scream misogyny! They say itโs degrading to women.
โGive me a break.โ
First of all, Art the Clown is an equal-opportunity meat grinder. If you think heโs only mean to women, you clearly missed the part where he turns a guyโs head into a jack-o-lantern or systematically dismembers every living thing in his path. But more importantly, the degrading argument is such a lazy way to avoid talking about what the scene is actually doing.โ
Is it brutal? Yes. Is it hard to watch? Absolutely. But is it degrading? Only if you think that showing the reality of violence is the same thing as endorsing it. Terrifier isn’t a movie that hates women; itโs a movie that hates humans. It treats the human body like a biological machine that can be taken apart. Itโs looking at the spiritual core of our physical existenceโwhich is that we are all just meat and bone held together by hope and habit.โ
The hacksaw scene is a thesis statement. Itโs Leone looking at the audience and saying, “You say you like horror? You say you want to be scared? Fine. Letโs see if you can actually handle what it looks like when a human being is destroyed.” Itโs a test of your ideological conviction as a fan of the genre.โ
If you want to watch a movie where the girls survive because of the power of friendship, go watch a Disney movie. If you want to see what happens when a supernatural psychopath gets a hold of a hacksaw, and some big fucking chains, you watch Terrifier. To call it degrading is to miss the point of the entire genre. Horror is supposed to be transgressive. Itโs supposed to cross the line. If it doesn’t make you feel a little sick, it hasn’t done its job.โ
People get their panties in a bunch because Terrifier doesn’t give you a safe place to hide. It doesn’t tell you that the victims deserved it, and it doesn’t give them a heroic last stand. It just shows you the raw, terrifying reality of the end.

The Genius of Art the Clown
โLetโs talk about David Howard Thornton, because we donโt talk about him enough. People act like anyone can put on a clown suit and be scary.
Wrong.โ
Art is the first truly iconic horror villain weโve had since the 80s/90s. Heโs not a copy of Freddy or Jason or Michael Myers. Heโs something entirely different. Heโs a silent movie star who wandered into a Snuff film and is happy to be there.
The humor is what makes it work. And I donโt mean “ha-ha” funnyโI mean that pitch-black, vaudevillian humor that makes you want to laugh and throw up at the same time. The way he mimes being shocked by his own violence, or the way he wears a victimโs scalp like a wigโitโs brilliant. Heโs mocking the very idea of death.
โArt is funny because heโs a performer. Heโs not just killing people; heโs putting on a show. And we, the audience, are the spectators, who cannot look away. When he looks into the camera, heโs acknowledging us. Heโs saying, “I know youโre watching, and I know you want to see whatโs in the bag.” Itโs a direct, confrontational connection that most horror movies are too cowardly to make.โ
The people who call this mindless are ignorant of the incredible physical performance Thornton is giving. He doesn’t say a word, yet we know exactly what heโs thinking. We see his glee, his boredom, his sudden flashes of rage. Heโs a fully realized character who just happens to be a demonic force of nature. He is the gospel of chaos that rejects everything polite society stands for.

The “No Plot” Defenseโ
“It has no plot.”
โI hear this one all the time, usually from people who think a movie needs forty minutes of exposition about a haunted locket to be good.
Letโs be real: most horror plots are garbage anyway. Theyโre just filler designed to get us from one scare to the next. Terrifier is just honest enough to cut out the middleman. Itโs a lean, mean, 80-minute survival horror. Itโs a night in a tenement building with a killer. Thatโs the plot. What more do you need?
โDo you need to know why the building is abandoned? No. Do you need a scene where the main character talks about her strained relationship with her father? God, no. Terrifier understands that in the moment of true terror, none of that stuff matters. Your arc doesn’t save you from a hacksaw. Your trauma doesn’t make the clown go away.โ
The simplicity is its strength. Itโs a throwback to the slasher in its purest form. Itโs about the feeling of being trapped in a space with something that doesn’t follow the rules of logic or mercy.
โThe people who complain about the lack of plot are just looking for a reason to feel superior. They want to be intellectuals about their horror. But you can’t be intellectual about a clown eating a pizza while covered in someone else’s blood. You either feel it, or you don’t. And if you don’t, then don’t try and ruin it for every other fucker because it offended your sensibilities.

Defending “The Trash” To The Deathโ
At the end of the day, Terrifier is a movie for the fans. Itโs for the people who grew up in the back of the video store, looking at the covers of movies they weren’t allowed to watch. Itโs for the people who appreciate the smell of latex and the sound of a practical blood squib.
โItโs not for the critics. Itโs not for the elevated horror crowd who thinks The Babadook – a boring ass piece of shit that’s about as horrific as an episode of Scooby fucking Doo – is the peak of the genre. And thatโs why I love it.โ
Itโs an act of uncompromising resistance. In a world where everything is being sanded down and made acceptable for the widest possible audience, Damien Leone made a movie that is aggressively unacceptable. Itโs a movie that doesn’t care if you like the characters. It doesn’t care if you think itโs too much. It doesn’t care if you think itโs degrading.โ
It’s honest. Itโs raw. Itโs terrifying.โ
And that, my friend, is exactly what horror is supposed to be. If we lose movies like Terrifier, then weโve lost the heart of the genre. Weโve traded in our hacksaws for metaphors, and I, for one, refuse to do that. I will defend this movie to the death because itโs one of the few things left that still has the balls to be truly horrific.โ
People are ignorant. They think that because something is gross, itโs easy. They think that because itโs violent, itโs dumb. But there is a spiritual core to the carnage in Terrifier. Itโs a reminder that we are all just flesh and blood, and that there are things in the dark that think thatโs hilarious.โ

Final Thoughts
So, next time someone tries to tell you that Terrifier is just cheap schlock or that itโs degrading to women, do me a favor. Tell them to fuck off. Tell them to go watch a romantic comedy if they want to feel safe.
โHorror isn’t a “safe space”. Itโs a slaughterhouse. And Art the Clown is the guy with the apron and a lot of sharp fucking tools in his bag.
The first film was just the beginning. It was the warning shot. It was Leone saying, “Iโm here, and Iโm not playing by your rules.” Itโs the rawest, nastiest, most unapologetic slasher of the 21st century, and it deserves our respectโnot because itโs important -which it absolutely fucking is – but because itโs real.โ
Itโs a flame burning bright in a sea of lukewarm studio garbage. And if you canโt handle the heat, stay out of the tenement.
โBecause if you thought the first one was too much, you haven’t seen anything yet. Terrifier 2 takes everything we just talked aboutโthe craft, the humor, the absolute refusal to play niceโand turns it up to eleven.


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