I wanted to dive deeper into this article. My previous reply was quick and not detailed. From a strictly analytical perspective, Fulci’s work in the 1980s is a fascinating case study in how horror cinema can reject traditional narrative logic and still achieve lasting impact. If you look at City of the Living Dead, for example, the infamous drill through the skull sequence is more than just shock value. It is an example of Fulci using practical effects to create a visceral, almost tactile response in the viewer. Technically, it relies on clever editing, prosthetics, and camera placement, and it is still studied today for how effective it was under budget constraints. The Beyond is perhaps the purest expression of his style. The ending sequence where the protagonists are trapped in the desolate otherworldly landscape functions like a visual thesis statement. It abandons narrative closure entirely, instead forcing the viewer into a state of existential dread. Pair that with Fabio Frizzi’s score in a minor key built on repetitive motifs, and you get an audiovisual feedback loop designed to disorient. That is deliberate design, not accident.
Even The New York Ripper, for all the controversy, has technical merit in its editing rhythm and location work. It mirrors the grimy texture of 1980s New York and integrates giallo tropes with slasher pacing. You can argue the ethics, but from a film studies perspective it is structurally intriguing. In my opinion Fulci’s importance lies in how he proved horror did not have to follow the Hollywood model of cause and effect storytelling. He treated film like a nightmare simulator fragmented, surreal, and often cruel. That is why his work remains so heavily restored, reissued, and analyzed. It is less about conventional scares and more about the mechanics of discomfort.