Steven Universe has the Cluster.
Star vs. the Forces of Evil has St. Olga's.
Gravity Falls is full of it both viscerally and psychologically, because Alex Hirsch is a mad genius.
I continue to worry that the things I write wouldn't make the same kind of impact, and thus, would lack profundity and provocation of thought. All I really can come up with is stuff like
this.
Comments
i mean that's what that stuff is, horror. it tends to make an impression, but i don't know how many people would consider it excellent
incidentally Adventure Time has this kind of stuff in spades
(it's sort of weird to me that you put St Olga's alongside the more unsettling stuff from GF and SU, but that's why this stuff is so subjective)
when i was a kid raggedy ann scared the living dickens out of me. no "profundity of thought" was involved, i can assure you. i suppose i was provoked into dislike of inanimate faces.
you mentioned gravity falls. it has plenty of spooky stuff, sure. but like, half of the stuff in the finale for example was just goofy images some animator came up with with no particular story concept, or wholesale rips from Hellraiser and other shit that kids and people who don't watch 80s movies don't recognize.
it is really easy to scare people! if you're not writing horror specifically you can just leave it with stuff like that. it's fine. nobody expects "profundity". what does that mean?
thinking a lot? have you really thought a lot about the cluster? what is there to think? oh, that was people once. oh, the aliens are kind of blasé when it comes to puréeing people. i'm not going to turn my life around based on these ideas. they are really pretty simple.
just write your shit. it's fine. you'll do great.
for example, madass describes Alien as being about a very nonhuman survivalist, but i've always thought of it as a subjectively exaggerated rapist. we started with "boy, that's scary" and went different directions.