Definitely in this film one comes face to face with his/her own fear of weird, blood thirsty species and other general fears, and what horror films focus on like unexpected situations, death, thunderstorms, dark. The director sets fear in our mind with the help of the setting. The movie starts off with the protagonist painting which is quite mysterious on its own on a stormy night. As the night proceeds the storm gets worse, a tree barges into the house through the window. The director does a good job of bringing in fear in the audience’s mind using dark, wet locations initially. Later moving into the grocery which gets spookier in the dim light and with unrecognizable spider like species with tentacles trying to eat away people from the store. But this story has much more underlying definition and depth to it. As the story proceeds we realize that the mist stands for much more than a natural occurrence. In a way the mist also seems to be the mental mist people have. The film makes a connection with our human nature and tendencies in the worst of …show more content…
As a species we're fundamentally insane. Put more than two of us in a room, we pick sides and start dreaming up reasons to kill one another. This film showcases how unhuman, and beastly we humans can be. When faced with our fears, and horrific we become worse than animals. We lose most qualities that make us human in the first place. We realize this when it comes up that the very reason why the mist and the abnormal creatures were after them was because of a science experiment gone wrong. We may be passionate, and curious but that very drive could ruin as. The film brings in more fear in the audience when they start seeing how cruel we can be. The director makes us think of why are human’s actions so gruesome? Why are our emotions so complicated? Why is it so hard for us to even understand ourselves and keep our emotions in check? How people lose their sense of thinking and rationality in such