The Home as Supplement: The Uncanny in When a Stranger Calls
A Stranger Calls. AI image Introduction: Domestic Security and Psychological Anxiety The notion of domestic security carries significant psychological and cultural weight. Homes are not merely spaces of shelter; they function as symbolic anchors for identity, selfhood, and order. Yet, as Freud (2003/1919) observes in his essay on the uncanny, the familiar can become disturbingly strange, revealing the fragility of perceived safety. Horror cinema exploits this vulnerability, transforming the home into a site of existential unease. When a Stranger Calls (1979) exemplifies this dynamic. The film’s escalating terror, communicated through repeated telephone threats, demonstrates how little it takes to destabilize our sense of security. Beyond its cinematic impact, the story resonates with philosophical insights from Jacques Derrida, particularly his notion of the supplement, which challenges assumptions about origin, wholeness, and interiority. By examining the interplay of uncanny...