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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/510px_clivebarker.jpg]]
2
3->''"I have seen the future of the horror genre, and his name is Clive Barker."''
4-->-- '''Creator/StephenKing'''
5
6Clive Barker (born October 5, 1952 in UsefulNotes/{{Liverpool}}, England) is a British horror and dark fantasy author responsible for over a dozen novels, several movies, a few graphic novels, some artwork, and a couple of video games as well.
7
8His works almost always feature sexual overtones that are graphic, disturbing, and disgusting in nature. His stories are usually set in a contemporary urban setting, but with AnotherDimension or many dimensions. On the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, his stories lie pretty far on the cynical side, with heavily flawed but sympathetic protagonists and an overall dark and gritty tone, although some of his novels have had [[EarnYourHappyEnding happy and magically enchanting endings]], and have featured themes such as love and [[HeelFaceTurn redemption]].
9
10Barker is also an artist, with some of his paintings having been featured in galleries in the United States, as well as illustrating the covers of his own books. He has also created characters and series for comic books, and some of his stories have been adapted to the medium. He has a nearly half-century long friendship and artistic partnership with ''Franchise/{{Hellraiser}}'' star Creator/DougBradley, the two having met when they were in secondary school and collaborated on dozens of projects since.
11-----
12!!Some of Clive Barker's works include:
13[[index]]
14
15[[AC: {{Comic Book}}]]
16* ''ComicBook/CliveBarkersBookOfTheDamnedAHellraiserCompanion''
17* ''ComicBook/CliveBarkersTheHarrowers''
18* ''ComicBook/CliveBarkersHellraiser''
19* ''ComicBook/CliveBarkersNextTestament''
20* ''ComicBook/CliveBarkersNightBreed''
21
22[[AC: {{Film}}]]
23* ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}''
24* ''Film/{{Nightbreed}}''
25* ''Film/LordOfIllusions''
26* ''Film/{{Candyman}}''
27* ''Film/RawheadRex''
28* ''Film/TheMidnightMeatTrain''
29* ''Film/{{Dread}}''
30
31[[AC: {{Literature}}]]
32* ''Books of Blood'': Volumes 1-3 and 4-6
33** "Literature/TheAgeOfDesire"
34** "Literature/{{Dread}}"
35** "Literature/TheForbidden" (the novella on which the first ''Film/{{Candyman}}'' was based)
36** "Literature/TheLastIllusion" (the novella on which ''Film/LordOfIllusions'' was based, introduced Literature/HarryDamour)
37** "Literature/TheMadonna"
38** "Literature/TheMidnightMeatTrain"
39** "Literature/RawheadRex"
40** "Literature/TheYatteringAndJack"
41* ''Literature/HarryDamour'' series
42** ''Literature/TheLastIllusion
43** ''Lost Souls''
44** ''The Great and Secret Show''
45** ''Everville''
46** ''Literature/TheScarletGospels''
47* ''Literature/TheHellboundHeart'' (the novella on which the first ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}'' was based)
48* ''Literature/{{Abarat}}''
49* ''Cabal'' (the book on which ''Film/{{Nightbreed}}'' was based)
50* ''Literature/TheDamnationGame''
51* ''Literature/{{Imajica}}''
52* ''Literature/TheThiefOfAlways''
53* The Book of the Art Trilogy (So far consisting of ''The Great And Secret Show'' and ''Everville'')
54* ''Literature/ColdheartCanyon''
55* ''Literature/{{Weaveworld}}''
56* ''Literature/MisterBGone''
57* ''Literature/{{Galilee}}''
58* ''Literature/TheScarletGospels''
59
60[[AC: Theatre]]
61* ''Frankenstein In Love''
62* ''Theatre/TheHistoryOfTheDevil''
63
64[[AC: Toys]]
65* ''[[Toys/CliveBarkersTorturedSouls Tortured Souls]]''
66
67[[AC: VideoGames]]
68* ''Videogame/CliveBarkersUndying''
69* ''VideoGame/CliveBarkersJericho''
70
71[[/index]]
72!!Tropes featured in Clive Barker's body of work include:
73
74%%* {{Antihero}}: Most of his protagonists are flawed.
75* AnyoneCanDie: Indeed, in the second novel of ''Abarat,'' it seems that Barker can only keep a certain number of characters alive at any given point, so for every new character introduced, another is cleanly hacked away.
76* AuthorAppeal: A few of his stories feature men getting raped by other men, and then realizing that they like it.
77* AuthorTract: Some of Clive Barker's works serve as this for his feminist and environmentalist views, respectively. ''Imajica'' and ''Sacrament'' are this in particular.
78* BedsheetGhost: The protagonist of the short story "Confessions of a (Pornographer's) Shroud" is a straight-laced Catholic man framed as a porn kingpin and murdered, who possesses the shroud covering him in the morgue to take his revenge. The story is a BlackComedy based on the ridiculous visual gag of a bedsheet ghost murdering people in increasingly graphic fashion.
79%%* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Barbarossas and The Gearys in ''Galilee''
80%%* TheBlank: The Engineer in ''The Hellbound Heart''.
81* BloodBath:
82** Mister B. Gone, the demonic VillainProtagonist from the story of the same name, bathes in a tub full of blood from dead babies. He complains of how difficult it is to keep them alive long enough so the bath would be warm when he empties their blood into the tub.
83** The effigy in "Human Remains" needs to bathe in blood (the younger the better) to become human.
84%%* BodyHorror: So, so much Body Horror.
85* DarkIsNotEvil: Most of the monsters in his works, such as Pinhead of Hellraiser, are antiheroes or tragic beings, human or otherwise, that are feared for their powers despite being on the side of good. However, in Cliver Barker’s works, when DarkIsEvil, [[BewareTheNiceOnes angry,]] or at the least [[GoodIsNotNice doesn’t play nice with others]], run.
86%%* CosmicHorrorStory
87%%* DemonicInvaders
88%%* {{Doorstopper}}: ''Weaveworld'', ''Imajica'', ''The Great and Secret Show'', and ''Everville''.
89%%* FantasticNoir: His films ''Film/{{Candyman}}'' (which was based off Barker's short story "The Forbidden") and ''Film/LordOfIllusions'' qualify, however, the latter really falls into the FilmNoir territory in comparison to the former.
90%%* GenderBender: Happens to the protagonist of [[spoiler:"The Madonna"]].
91* GenreDeconstruction: ''Film/TheMidnightMeatTrain'', at least in its film incarnation, is a huge deconstruction of {{slasher movie}}s. Every single slasher movie trope used or referenced in it is either subverted or justified; the protagonists are responsible adults instead of rowdy teens, the authorities are useless because [[spoiler: they're working with the killer]], and the supernatural slasher turns out to be [[spoiler: upholding an AncientConspiracy to keep an EldritchAbomination out of our world]].
92* GoodIsBoring: Jack Polo in ''Literature/TheYatteringAndJack''. So much so that the Yattering is nearly driven insane trying to corrupt him. It's one of his funnier stories.
93* GothicHorror: His works are definitely overtly gothic, right done to the imagery and themes mixed in with explicit sexual and graphic violent content.
94* HellSeeker: In the short story "Down Satan!", a wealthy businessman becomes convinced God doesn't exist, and decides to find out whether the devil does by building a literal Hell on Earth.
95* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Stories combine fantastic and supernatural evil with the evil and cruelties that humans perpetrate against each other. Consider, for example, that the true villains of the novella ''The Hellbound Heart'' (basis for the ''Franchise/{{Hellraiser}}'' movies) are [[spoiler: Frank and Julia, wretched excuses for human beings (Frank even moreso than Julia)]], not the Cenobites.
96** Made much more explicit in ''Film/{{Nightbreed}}'', where humans are the monsters who have hunted the monstrous "tribes of the moon" to near-extinction.
97** ''The Confessions of (Pornographer's) Shroud'' focuses on a ghost possessing a bedsheet on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge who can kill people in [[NoKillLikeOverkill the most over-the-top ways possible]], but the story is set in a crime-ridden CrapsackWorld in which brutal murders are an everyday sight. In fact, most of the murders throughout the story are committed either by the protagonist before he became the ghost or by other (living) characters. At one point a cop character merely pretends how he’s shocked by one of the ghost’s murders so as not to stand out, even though he’s actually seen even worse crimes throughout his career.
98* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: (''[[WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation Clive Barker's]] VideoGame/CliveBarkersJericho, [[WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation by Clive Barker]]'', ''Clive Barker's Razorline'' (a short-lived imprint of Creator/MarvelComics))
99* InTheStyleOf: Barker can be seen as basically a GothicHorror Creator/KenRussell.
100* MagicalHomelessPerson: ''The Inhuman Condition'' includes one in the form of Mr. Pope. Although his exact nature is never clarified, he at minimum has [[spoiler:a knotted string sealing away monsters, and a book of spells.]]
101* MagicalLand: Most of his novels deal with an alternate reality or more than one realm, which maybe be accessible through paintings, rugs, [[Franchise/{{Hellraiser}} complex toy boxes]] or the like.
102* ManOfWealthAndTaste: Michael Maguire from "Confessions of a (Pornographer's) Shroud", at least in his own eyes. A gangster, now mostly retired, he lives in a mansion in an elegant neighborhood, surrounded by works of art, and cultivates "the noble art of bonsai". And he also thinks of taking up painting as another hobby.
103* NoAccountingForTaste: A lot of marriages have long since gone sour after the couple has been together for many years, whereas romantic relationships where the man and woman have just met will be full of love and the two will struggle against all odds to come together. This isn't always the case, but it's common enough in his stories to be worth mentioning.
104** Also worth mentioning is that an old couple doesn't even need to be officially married to fall apart. In ''Mister B Gone'', the two [[spoiler: demons]] who are described as having a relationship ''similar'' to an old married couple end up separating.
105* NothingExcitingEverHappensHere: Both ''The Thief of Always'' and ''Abarat'' open with the child or pre-teen protagonists in towns like these. ''Abarat'' begins in a town called ''[[CrapsackWorld Chickentown]]'', for Christ's Sake, where the place's entire purpose seems to be to [[ButtMonkey make Candy Quakenbush miserable.]]
106%%* OldFriend
107%%* OccultDetective: Literature/HarryDamour.
108* OlderThanTheyLook: He's nearing seventy and looks quite a bit younger than that. Of course, if you go back and look at photos when he was younger, he always looked older than he was, so it's starting to even out. His infirmities have definitely taken their toll on him, though.
109* OopNorth: He was born and raised in Liverpool.
110* PsychosexualHorror: A lot of Clive Barker's stories involve the darker or more sordid aspects of sex; such as BDSM, prostitution, sexual misconduct, and [=STD=]s. These stories were inspired by Barker's own experiences as a male prostitute.
111%%* PurpleProse
112* SealedEvilInACan: In the ''Franchise/{{Hellraiser}}'' movies, as well as the novella that they are based upon, ''The Hellbound Heart'' the only way the Cenobites will come after you is if you open the puzzle box known as Lemarchand's Box. So much so, in fact, that, at least in the novella, the Cenobites [[spoiler: make and honor a deal with the protagonist (who has accidentally opened the box, and has no idea what it is or does) to spare her if she can lead them to the novella's REAL villain, who has escaped their clutches]].
113* SelfAdaptation: Clive Barker was exclusively a horror writer before becoming a film director. He has based several of his films on his earlier stories, such as ''Franchise/{{Hellraiser}}'' (based on his novella ''The Hellbound Heart'') and ''Film/LordOfIllusions'' (based on his short story "Literature/TheLastIllusion").
114* SomethingBlues: Short story "Pig Blood Blues".
115* SpiritualSuccessor: He can be this to filmmaker Creator/KenRussell, especially when comparing Russell's work ''Film/AlteredStates'' to Barker's works. Even one of taglines for ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}'', "He'll tear your soul apart" on the original poster could may be a reference to Russell's 1975 film adaptation of ''Music/{{Tommy}}'', which features the same poster tagline in exactly the same font.
116* STDImmunity: Averted in "Human Remains". [[TheProtagonist Gavin]], a male prostitute, does not mind occasionally dealing with crabs but gonorrhoea, which he has caught twice, is really bad for business as it means three weeks off work.
117* SummoningArtifact: The Lemarchand's Boxes, and especially the Lament Configuration, which summon the Cenobites.
118* ThatPoorCat: Barker really dislikes cats, and it shows. If a cat appears in a story (e.g. ''Literature/TheYatteringAndJack''), it ''will'' meet a horribly gruesome demise.
119* TooDumbToLive: Frank in ''The Hellbound Heart''. He tracks down the Lemarchand Box because he thinks the Cenobites (who he assumes will be beautiful naked women) will teach him new methods of attaining pleasure. However, he's disgusted to see that they're all heavily pierced and mutilated, and even at ''this point'' it doesn't occur to him that their offering of "sensual experiences" may not fit the classic English definition of the word. But he learns. [[ToThePain Quickly.]]
120%%* TortureCellar
121%%* UrbanFantasy
122* TheVerse:
123** "Literature/TheLastIllusion," ''Literature/TheHellboundHeart'', ''Weaveworld'', ''The Great and Secret Show'', "The Lost Souls", ''Everville'' and ''Literature/TheScarletGospels'' all take place in the same universe due to the crossover between Harry D'Amour and the Cenobites in the latter work and the prominence or cameos of either in all of the others. Other works may also share the universe, though this is not confirmed.
124** In addition, the Epic Comics adaptations of Nightbreed and Hellraiser share a universe, which also includes Rawhead Rex.
125* WouldHurtAChild: Rawhead from "Rawhead Rex" treats children's meat as a delicacy, particularly the meat of newborns "still blind from the womb".
126* WouldntHurtAChild: The shroud from "The Confessions of (Pornographer's) Shroud" exacts really cruel and brutal revenge on his enemy--and afterwards is worried about the feelings of said enemy's little daughter and even tries to comfort her.
127* WriteWhatYouKnow: Barker's heavy focus on sexual horror was derived from his own experiences moonlighting as a male prostitute during the 1970s.

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