DollyKim wrote:It would be interesting to find out how many people creeped out by dolls don't like body horror movies or if it's the other way around.
Only really "creeped" if the dolls are "staring" at me, which may be due to other psychological issues (I am undiagnosed, but me and my gran are/were both suspicious I might be on the autism spectrum).
Body horror films do not bother me. Even when I was much younger (as in middle school age due to grandparents that let me do whatever I want since I acted like a small adult anyway), I would stay up late watching the horror films of the time. Including Hellraiser and such. Fell asleep during a Nightmare On Elm Street Marathon once, which still seems amusing to me. Not fond of more modern slasher films (like the Saw series) not because of any squick but because they rely too heavily on the "shock and gore" method which really has no effect on me at all, meaning the films are pretty much just boring. I feel similar disappointment in films that rely too much on jump-scares. They irritate me for startling me repeatedly. The only movie I can think of from the starting edge of the jumpscare era that actually managed to scare me was The Ring. It's also the last/most recent horror film I can recall that scared me at all. Most is just boring shock value and no actual dread to hold it up...
But I got off-topic, so back to "body horror". I had a fairly good interest in special effects when I was younger (and still do), and I understood even at an early age enough to know that no matter how something looked on screen, it was fake and someone DID something to make it look that way. I was always more fascinated in figuring out how they did it if I saw something particularly extreme, and that seemed to leave no room to be disturbed by it.
I don't know how much of this is normal or how much might be related to some sort of non-neurotypicality. I've never had an interest in body modification for myself, and don't even normally wear earrings (tho I have pierced ears, which were done to me as a child despite protests). I am, however, not disturbed emotionally if I am injured. Yes, they hurt, but if something happens and I'm bleeding I've always managed to stay calm and do something to treat it. When I was younger I used to think that was just because I was a girl and it wouldn't make sense to freak out over seeing some of my own blood if I was going to be seeing it every month for a good segment of my life, but I had to rethink that after one time I cut my leg and my gran completely flipped out while I just sighed and hobbled downstairs to get an ace bandage. (Tho, granted, she could have been concerned about tetanus, as I cut it on a metal file box.)
Semi-related to body horror, I also seem immune to the Uncanny Valley effect. I found it interesting and confusing to learn about way back when I first got internet in the 90's and find that humans squicking over 'giant dolls' was one of the things holding up research into more human-like robots.
And to get back to dolls (and body horror), two of my current OOAK projects pending are a Silent Hill Bubblehead Nurse and Pyramid Head set (for the Evil Overlord). Which also reminds me. There IS one part of that project that disturbed me in 'body horror' terms. We got a cheap poseable doll for the nurse that had insert eyes... which were removed in preparation for the OOAKing because no point in wasting them. I am somewhat uncomfortable looking at a doll face with no eyes, similar to how I am uncomfortable if they are staring right at me. The action figure guy to be turned into Pyramid Head is similar as (when purchased secondhand) he has marker on his face specifically marking out the eyes. I also remember one horror movie clip from when I was a kid that disturbed me (no idea which film, actually, as I have not seen it again) that had a teddy bear on some kind of turntable (or the camera moved around) with its eyes pulled out and it was bleeding. Oddly, Tommy Tortoise, my oldest plush, is missing one eye and THAT doesn't bother me, but it might be because there's no hole (his eyes were applique or some kind of iron on, not sewn on) and because he's been like that for decades and I'm used to it. And even more oddly, this does not extend to humans. The staring thing does, but the "eye scream" not so much. Someone in a horror film loses an eye, or something like the notorious needle-in-the-eye scene in Dead Space and it has no more effect on me than other gore. It's just dollies and plushies losing eyes that I find disturbing.
Hope that ramble helps with any research (weird psychological studies are another thing that interests me XD), and sorry about the link to anyone not so interested.