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I thought it might be fun to all give our top ten scary movie lists, mine are not necessarily the ones I found the scariest but rather the ones I found to be the best overall films, here they are.
1. Alien (1979)
2. The Exorcist (1972)
3. Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
4. Silence of the Lambs (1991)
5. Jaws (1975)
6. The Thing (1982)
7. Black Christmas (1974)
8. The Thing From Another World (1951)
9. Wolf Creek (2005)
10. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
All classics. For once, you've actually created something worthwhile.
I've decided to write two lists, one of which is my favourite horror films, and another for the films I truly think are the most horrifying
Favourite (In No particular order)
1) Bad Seed (Except for the last few minutes)
2) Wicker Man (Original for the thrills, remake for the laughs)
3) Evil Dead trilogy (They are, after all, just one long film)
4) Dead Ringers (I hope one day to remake this movie with the Olsen Twins in Jeremy Irons' roles)
5) Se7en (I'm not sure if I'd call this a horror movie, but then again, I put all of the Evil Dead movies, and AoD, as awesome as it is, barely counts as horror)
6) Shaun of the Dead (I'm looking forward to Edgar Wright's next movie)
7) Black Swan (body horror, lesbians, an insane structure, what more could anyone want?)
8) Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (So much of what horror film stands for comes from this movie)
9) Ken Branagh's Frankenstein (on the one hand, the performances are over-the-top hilarious, on the other hand, the movie's closer to the original book than any other movie)
10) Blood For Dracula/Flesh for Frankenstein (Because to know death, you have to fuck life in the gallbladder. One of my own personal mantras.)
Scariest:
1) A Serbian Film
2) The Human Centipede (Full Sequence)
3) The Fly (Cronenberg Version)
4) Requiem for a Dream
5) Eraserhead
6) Threads
7) Funny Games
8) Human Centipede (First Sequence)
9) Passion of the Christ
10) Yentl
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
All classics. For once, you've actually created something worthwhile.
I've decided to write two lists, one of which is my favourite horror films, and another for the films I truly think are the most horrifying
Favourite (In No particular order)
1) Bad Seed (Except for the last few minutes)
2) Wicker Man (Original for the thrills, remake for the laughs)
3) Evil Dead trilogy (They are, after all, just one long film)
4) Dead Ringers (I hope one day to remake this movie with the Olsen Twins in Jeremy Irons' roles)
5) Se7en (I'm not sure if I'd call this a horror movie, but then again, I put all of the Evil Dead movies, and AoD, as awesome as it is, barely counts as horror)
6) Shaun of the Dead (I'm looking forward to Edgar Wright's next movie)
7) Black Swan (body horror, lesbians, an insane structure, what more could anyone want?)
8) Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (So much of what horror film stands for comes from this movie)
9) Ken Branagh's Frankenstein (on the one hand, the performances are over-the-top hilarious, on the other hand, the movie's closer to the original book than any other movie)
10) Blood For Dracula/Flesh for Frankenstein (Because to know death, you have to fuck life in the gallbladder. One of my own personal mantras.)
Scariest:
1) A Serbian Film
2) The Human Centipede (Full Sequence)
3) The Fly (Cronenberg Version)
4) Requiem for a Dream
5) Eraserhead
6) Threads
7) Funny Games
8) Human Centipede (First Sequence)
9) Passion of the Christ
10) Yentl
Great lists as well, I will have to check out Bad Seeds. I have not seen that one. I didn’t do a list of the scariest because it’s tough for me to define what scary is. A lot of people think it is a movie that makes you jump, but that isn’t really what I consider scary. I would probably define it as a movie that makes you uneasy about coming home to a dark and empty house. How would you define it?
I think The Exorcist has to be the all-time scariest movie, even though I don't believe in the devil or demonic possession. I have the director's cut DVD and it includes some deleted footage, much of it with subliminal shots. It's well worth a good scare by watching with the lights off.
Christian apologetics is the art of rolling a dog turd in sugar and selling it as a donut.
(November 2, 2011 at 5:30 pm)Doubting Thomas Wrote: I think The Exorcist has to be the all-time scariest movie, even though I don't believe in the devil or demonic possession. I have the director's cut DVD and it includes some deleted footage, much of it with subliminal shots. It's well worth a good scare by watching with the lights off.
We agree on something. It's one of the few movies that can give me the jitters.
November 2, 2011 at 5:41 pm (This post was last modified: November 2, 2011 at 5:43 pm by Doubting Thomas.)
Oh and the part where she did the spider walk down the stairs was freaky. That's a scene that was deleted from the theatrical release, but available on the director's cut DVD.
November 2, 2011 at 5:45 pm (This post was last modified: November 2, 2011 at 5:45 pm by Statler Waldorf.)
(November 2, 2011 at 5:41 pm)Doubting Thomas Wrote:
Oh and the part where she did the spider walk down the stairs was freaky. That's a scene that was deleted from the theatrical release, but available on the director's cut DVD.
Haha, love it; does the Director's Cut DVD have “the making of” documentary on it? I have the Blu-ray director's cut and it has a pretty interesting documentary on it.
(November 2, 2011 at 4:46 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Great lists as well, I will have to check out Bad Seeds. I have not seen that one. I didn’t do a list of the scariest because it’s tough for me to define what scary is. A lot of people think it is a movie that makes you jump, but that isn’t really what I consider scary. I would probably define it as a movie that makes you uneasy about coming home to a dark and empty house. How would you define it?
Personally, I would define it as movies that leave a lasting impression not unlike trauma. Films that can easily be said to be traumatizing; if you read what's in movies like A Serbian Film, and the second Human Centipede movie, you can't deny that merely watching it could very well be traumatizing to even adults.
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.