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I agree about "Ringu"---that ending gve me a start. The (Japanese) sequel was not very interesting, nor was the American remake.
Has anybody seen "Saw" ...? JS |
1. IT: the scariest thing to do is to make a clown into a monster real freaky shit i couldnt sleep for days when i was a kid
2.the sixt sense: that movie blew me away .the scenes with the woman who sliced her wrists was just 'pissing in my pants'' scene 3 also E.T :-) : the first half hour was shitting in my pants.actually after the first shot of et's finger i would just stop the vcr.another scene i would shit my pants was when that kid was waiting outside in the garden ,wow man coulndt get any scarier. and fourth but not least, Candyman: no words for this one :-) |
1. "The Shuttered Room"... at least until the last 15 minutes when it gets a bit cheesy. (I'm betting no one here's ever seen it--I've yet to meet anyone who has. It must be one of the first uses of handheld jittercam to illustrate the POV of the monster/thing)
2. Cocteau's "La Belle et la Bête" - not a horror film, but pretty eery imagery just the same 3. Some black and white made-for-TV movie that came out in the 60s where a man gets trapped in a department store at night and the mannequins come to life -- anyone remember that? 4. Audition |
Sorry, Chris, Suspiria is on the list of films you couldn't pay me to see again, along with Roman Polanski's Repulsion.
Though I'll see anything by Argento once. |
<<<-- Originally posted by John Sandel : I agree about "Ringu"---that ending gve me a start. The (Japanese) sequel was not very interesting, nor was the American remake.
Has anybody seen "Saw" ...? JS -->>> I saw Saw (saw2?) last night. One of the stupider films, IMHO, but with good production values and well-shot. |
If I'm not mistaken, most horror films released these days start strong and end weak. That's what I've heard.
hwm |
"The Shuttered Room"
John, was that the one where Gig Young was driving around in a convertible T-Bird, trying to save his career? In the end he wound up at a decrepit New England mansion and there were lots of POV shots through boarded up windows? And Oliver Reed succumbed to the "horror out of space," or some such hooey?
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Ding ding ding! Tell him what he's won, Dan. A pair of white loafers just like Gig Young wears in the movie.
It's definitely got a 60s cheese element to it...but something about those handheld POV shots of something watching is pretty creepy (until you find out what it is). P.S. I wonder if Gig's motivation was to save his career...or to co-star with Carol Lynley? And I agree...Oliver Reed definitely doesn't seem to fit in with the other New England bumpkins. |
My stuff isn't really horror (not into that), but:
The series "V", I was pretty young, and never saw anything like that! The last time was with the movie "Event Horizon". Sci-Fi horror in space. Saw it in an almost empty theatre at night. Thought I went to a sci-fi thriller, whoops.... edit: I just read that two others mentioned "Event Horizon" as well, small world! Dylan C: I know how you felt <g> |
Last House On The Left more of a "terror" film but a classic IMO.
Slumber Party Massacre - another classic trapped in the house run from the power tool killer film. |
<<<-- Originally posted by Matt Stahley :
Slumber Party Massacre - another classic trapped in the house run from the power tool killer film. -->>> I have seen Slumber Party Massacre more than any other horror film except Tremors (which arguably isn't horror). Rob, I was surprised too that Event Horizon turned out to be horror. |
I had read the book adaptation and knew what I was in for. Movie book tie-ins, my guilty pleasure!
hwm |
Dylan: yeah exactly... although it had some very interesting art
design etc. From what I remember there where some cool looking shots in it. |
Scariest film ever made: The Haunting of Hill House, a 1960s-era adaptation of the Shirley Jackson novel of the same name. This film had no special effects whatsoever and, at least for me, was the most terrifying thing I've ever seen.
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<<<-- Originally posted by Paul Tauger : Scariest film ever made: The Haunting of Hill House, a 1960s-era adaptation of the Shirley Jackson novel of the same name. This film had no special effects whatsoever and, at least for me, was the most terrifying thing I've ever seen. -->>>
Not available through Netflix unfortunately. :( |
I found new VHS copies on . . . where else? Ebay.
There's also a decent transfer out on DVD. |
<<<-- Originally posted by Paul Tauger : Scariest film ever made: The Haunting of Hill House, a 1960s-era adaptation of the Shirley Jackson novel of the same name. This film had no special effects whatsoever and, at least for me, was the most terrifying thing I've ever seen. -->>>
I think you're talking about The Haunting (1963). My screenwriting teacher at USC wrote that movie. Huh. According to IMDb, he passed away last year. I hadn't heard. There's also The House on Haunted Hill (1959). Both films were remade in '99. |
The Haunting ('63) was a SCARY flick! I own the DVD. Or is it the original House on Haunted Hill that I own...
heath |
Quote:
"Hill House, where walls met walls and floors met floors and doors were sensibly shut. And whatever walked in Hill House . . . walked alone." |
Last year, I took my girlfriend to see "Wrong Turn". About 2 weeks later we went for drive in the country and I pretended to be one of those wackos in the movie...she flipped out. I had her thinking I was taking her into the woods and was going to "drop her off at a remote barn where my buddy was waiting". lol...I'm so bad.
Oh, also.....anyone see "Session 9" about the Danvers, MA mental hospital? If you haven't...rent it. I live about 30 minutes from that place and it's creepy...after watching it I told my girlfriend I was taking her there. She flipped out about that too... Needless to say, my girlfriend hates watching horror movies with me. The movies get it all going...and I seem to scare the crap out of her afterwards!!! lol |
<<<-- Originally posted by Christopher C. Murphy :
Oh, also.....anyone see "Session 9" about the Danvers, MA mental hospital? If you haven't...rent it. -->>> I saw it and it didn't do anything for me.. The steadicam work was certainly quite competent though. |
Session 9--first film released somewhat wide in theatres shot on the CineAlta. I forget the indie film that was the first to shoot with it in 2000 before Star Wars Ep. 2...
heath |
Heath, I'm pretty sure the first theatrical release of an HD 24p film was "Jackpot". It was before SW...here is a link:
http://hd24.com/hd_feature_reviews.htm I never saw it and I can't recall hearing it was very good. |
I will look up a magazine from 2001 that talks about the first shot film on the F900. It's probably that one and probably they changed the name.
heath |
<<<-- Originally posted by Robert Knecht Schmidt: I think you're talking about The Haunting (1963). My screenwriting teacher at USC wrote that movie. Huh. According to IMDb, he passed away last year. I hadn't heard. -->>>
If I hadn't found out last week, I would have found out tonight. Nelson Gidding had a slide in the "In Memoriam" presentation on the Oscars tonight. Gidding was himself a nominee for his screenplay I Want to Live (1958). Godspeed, doc. |
Sorry to revive a very old thread... but my 6-year old son is WAY into the classic black and white Universal horror flicks... and who am I as an indulgent parent, to refuse, right?
Anyway, it's reintroduced me to some of these really early ones, and watching them now, with 40-year-old eyes, I can see why they're considered classics. Great cinematography and editing, but what really stands out to me is the straightforward way they spin a good yarn. Very refreshing when so many horror movies today seem to depend on a cool CGI monster and lots of gore to make up for a lousy script. Here's a few my boy and I have really, really liked lately: Bride of Frankenstein (1933): I realize now I knew this movie more through Mel Brooks' "Young Frankenstein," than the original. So, I was completely unprepared for how effecting this movie is, and how sorry I felt for Frankenstein's monster when his only hope for a friend psychotically hisses in his face. Werewolf of London: Aside from the fact that this is the wimpiest werewolf of all time (he can't even handle one lone, middle-aged English gent), the storytelling is really strong. Nicely paced, decent thriller. Invisible Man: Claude Rains is amazing in this one! Oozing psychotic menace! And the special effects are really ingenious. I enjoyed imagining the crew trying to figure out how to operate a pistol in mid-air, with no visible wires, and of course, no CGI/blue screen to make it easy. Most of these, together with their campy, B-Movie sequels, have been reissued on DVD as parts of Universal Studios "Legacy Collection." Even if you don't watch all the feature films, check out the theatrical trailer collections. |
Cat People was kind of cool when it came out on the big screen.
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Memories
I recall fondly sitting with my dad on the stoop of our little tract house in Denver, a million years ago, as he told me the tales of the old Universal monster movies. They'd scared him as a boy, too.
I might have been six and was always terrified to hear of Van Helsing's stealthy creep through the catacombs beneath Dracula's castle, armed only with a hammer and stake; of the scene when the Monster first reappeared in Frankenstein's lab by entering backward, like a dumb machine; and of the horrible moment when the mask was ripped from Erik's face and his skull-like features were revealed deep under the Paris Opera House. I'd sit there, transfixed, as the streetlights came on and fireflies twinkled over the evening lawns, and my dad (I now know) delighted in scaring the poo out of me. But he always escorted me back inside, where the warm kitchen glowed and my mom waited with dinner ready. Dad would very methodically lock the front door--to keep out the night, I thought, with all its ghoulies and ghosties. All these miles down the road, I'm married with a house of my own to lock up at night. I know all too well about the real world and the horrors it can produce. I understand the popularity of celluloid Wolfmen and Vampires for a country just waking, in the 1930s and 40s, to the mass-murder that stormed across Europe. Movies have changed, because the world has changed. But I prefer the cozy safety of those silvery old mellerdramas, with their half-tragic heroes. They feel like childhood and give me a thrill to this day. JS |
The Exorcist and Jaws scared me the most.
But a couple of tv-movies: Trilogy of Terror segment "Prey," about the Zuni fetish doll with the big teeth. Burnt Offerings-same people made it--some really spooky stuff-especially the ending. And the Dark Secret of Harvest Home. Havent seen it in forever but it spooked me badly back then. Dark Night of the Scarecrow and back to theaters: Race with the Devil |
Kelley - those are some great movies.
I totally remember Karen Black chased by the Zuni doll. If it's not earlier in the thread, get your umbrellas out for... The Devil's Rain!! Ernest Borgnine is terrifying! Then they put the goat makeup on, he not so scary. Has anyone brought up the Hammer production of 'The Devil Rides Out'? A lost Hammer classic, IMO. |
Just saw the devil rides out last week, had to return the disc cause it was bad. Fun movie, listening to the commentary with christopher lee is cool. He's a virtual library of the paranormal!
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sam raimi's......EVIL DEAD
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Don't apologize, this is great! Horror films we don't want: any movie of ANY genre with Ashton Kutcher!
heath |
Quote:
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When I saw it again more recently I was particularly spooked by the very last shot with her sitting in the corner stabbing the floor with the knife. Scary!
Another tv movie--Night Gallery, was kinda spooky too-the Roddy McDowell episode with the ever changing painting. Pretty cheap effects but it sure worked for me. |
Jacob's Ladder
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The Others
The Grudge Dawn of the Dead (remake). I've liked all the zombie movies from Resident Evils to Shaun of the Dead, but this is my favorite. on the low budget side of things.. May Dead Birds |
rosemary's baby , ninth gate... realistic films that subtly hint at the supernatural, using audiences imagination to scare
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Unless I missed it.... has anyone mentioned Black Christmas?
Classic horror flick! My family watches it every year... :) |
"The Omen" my favorite Gerry Goldsmith score! and good acting...
"The Sentinel" scared me when I was little. "Mother's Day" 1st slasher I saw at the theaters. Didn't sleep for a week! "Phantasm" a little dated now but still some memorable creepy scenes... |
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