THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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Talking about this at work a few came to mind (and the jury's still out 'cause I'd have to think this one out a little more), but some good possible candidates... 1) Henry, Portrait of a Serial Killer 2) Texas Chainsaw Massacre (the first one...an artful piece of early '70's celluloid nightmare) 3) The Reflecting Skin (maybe just plain disturbing...not scary) .....you know, I was continue on with this but there's way too many....maybe later when I have more time What are your votes?? |
The original "Night of the living dead". My sister woke my twin brother and I one night around 1am, because this movie was coming on. We were five. A formative film, to say the least. Sam Raimi's "The Evil Dead". Very nasty. Some pretty shocking stuff. I've got to give it to you, though. "Henry" is by far the most repulsive movie I've ever seen (although, disgusting art film "Begotten" holds a very close second). I don't know that I would call it a horror movie, but I would certainly urge the casual viewer to steer clear of this one. There really are so many good choices, and my list is subject to change. They don't seem to make them as violent as they did up into the mid 80's, but that was when I was in my teens. Jeez, they sure scared the shit out of me... |
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scared the holyheck outta me. I mean like I had nightmares for the next week. It even spooked my boyfriend pretty bad. I mean, I'd probably watch it again, but lemme tell you, it's one freakyass m |
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One more note. Haven't seen it since I was a kid, but Burnt Offerings really fucked with my head as a young lad. It may dissapoint if I saw it now, but it nailed a fairly distinct memory into my cranium years back. Would anyone else agree with that one... |
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In my early teen years the slasher movies I would manage to sneak into scared me, especially the surprise attack scenes like when someone puts their hand under the bed and is suddenly dragged under. The only movie that really scared me after I became experienced and jaded was "Eraserhead." "Oh, you are sick." EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE! |
i was about eleven or twelve... watching "Creature Double Feature" on Channel 48 (PhilaDELPHia) i still vividly remember the scene in which the hearse driver comes barrelling through Karen Black's bedroom door decked out in mirrored cop-shades and a casket he uses as a battering ram... that scene scared the shit out of me and had me twisting in my sleep for weeks... and then there's always Phantasm with the Tall Man. i think Phantasm was the impetus of a period in my youth when i found looking into mirrors extremely unsettling... i always expected to see some mind-shattering horror in the reflection... fortunately, the only horror i ever saw was the expression on my own face. i have a friend who swears that he used to see Angus Scrimm (the actor who played the Tall Man) in his lower east side neighborhood... but i imagine the massive amounts of psychotropic residuals stored in his fat cells are just reactivating and triggering b-movie inspired flashbacks... but who knows? maybe angus is back... i think by far the most violent reaction to a horror scene i've ever witnessed was during a viewing of Salem's Lot. i was over at a friend's house. (he wasn't too fond of horror movies, but, as with everything else during those days, i talked him into it.) i can't remember if the scene was the appearance of Mr. Barlowe or the boy-vampire's entrance in the hospital... but when the beast appeared, matt did two screaming back-flips and ended up cowering in the corner of the room, crying hysterically. his mother made me go home and prevented me from *ever* coming over to their house again. matt wouldn't talk to me in school for months afterward... even now (15 years later) when i run into him during visits home, he still gives me distrustful side-long glances as if i might just pull something else outta my pocket to fuck with his head... mental note: make sure to schedule some time this christmas to go over to matt's house in the middle of the night and scratch on his window... |
I think there's just something scary about 1970's cinematography. And it was short and compressed and had more of a direct effect. And it fed on my basic fear of a hidden danger, one that I know is there but can't quite find. |
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Two movies that made me shove my face under the couch and cry when I was 5 or so -- 1 - The Wizard Of Oz (when Elmira Gulch(?) grabbed Toto, stashed him in the picnic basket, and rode away on her bike. Something about cruelty to small dogs just made me cry back then - heh) 2 - Don't know the name of this one but it's a b/w movie featuring a gigantic black spider strolling through town and knocking down buildings and causing lots of mayhem. Still don't like spiders to this day (esp. 2 story-tall ones). But a movie that really really scared me when I was a teen was that "Night Stalker" tv movie with Darren McGavin as the newspaper reporter who went in search of vampires. For a tv movie with no gore or excess violence, that was one effective piece of scary shit.... |
The scariest movies are those that upset us the most....who would have thought Wizard of Oz would make ANYBODY'S list? and yet it did...so yeah the scariest movies are those that trigger the response..... |
also, I remember a similar scene in "poltergeist" that affected me. it's early on and they're in the kitchen and everything's normal, then a couple seconds later the camera turns back to the table, and the chairs are all stacked on top of it. I found that really frightening. |
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I was maybe 11. Would not sleep anywhere NEAR the closet for weeks. |
The Deer Hunter. Summer of My German Soldier. Nightmare on Elm Street (the original). Alien. Das Boot (despite the amazing Jurgen Prochnow fixation it gave me). The Shining. The Killing Fields. |
it looks kinda creepy. http://www.blairwitch.com/ |
Any of that alien-type shit set on some other planet/or some spaceship/never gets to me. Becuz I KNOW my ass will never be in outer space! The only modern-day horror flick that scared me as an adult was "The Hunger"/a vampire flick from the 1980's w/Susan Sarandon/Catherine Deneuve & David Bowie. It was directed by Tony Scott & set in the present-day. Which I think is what scared me abt it -- the fact that it wasn't the usual Anne Rice-gothic vampire tale. And the science angle/when they were studying Sarandon's blood. I remember watching it on cable during the middle of the day one Saturday when I was babysitting a friend's kids. And it scared the shit out of me! Gave me nightmares so bad I had to sleep w/the light on for 2 nites. The only other horror flicks (vs. suspense/ /thrillers/which I consider to be a different category) that ever really scared me were 3 movies I saw as a kid: -- "Night Of The Living Dead": (the '68 Romero version. That one STILL scares me) -- "The Mephisto Waltz": A flick from the early 70's & the 1st R-rated movie I ever saw (I asked my Dad to take me). It starred Alan Alda & Jackie Bisset. It was another present-day tale abt a bunch of Satanists who seek eternal life & other personal perks by switching bodies w/other human beings. Scared me but good! -- "Nosferatu" Those are the only ones that ever really got to me. The horror movies today are all slasher flicks & usually way too camp to be seriously frightening. But I too am looking forward to "The Blair Witch Project". |
The closest I ever came might be when I saw the Abyss (which was only a few months ago) and I was very tense throughout most of it. It didn't exactly Scare me, but it did make me wonder if my heart was still beating. Oh my god, I loved that freaking movie. |
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people check it out,it was made for around $25.000,and it is just scarey!! |
Space is having a contest for people who want to make a documentary. Send them a lil' one page treatment and they'll give you a bunch of money and equipment to make your film. Then they'll air it on their network. That sounds neat. |
I watched it for the second time ever last year, and cried like a baby. Yeah I had nightmares. Movies never scare me, much less make me cry. But I suppose the 'scary' thing about swing kids is totally different than the average fake blood and latex horror that bores me so. |
Our budget is about 10-15 grand. Especially with digital cameras, it's so easy to do a film cheap. And in Hollywood, few people are working after the new year and in the heart of winter. So we will pull all our strings an basically get a crew for cheap. The location will be his house. His brother is a Key Grip who will act as Direct/Producer, and we have many other friends who work as set dressers, electricians, set carpenters, and sound. To rent a digital camera for a week is next to nothing and much easier to work with than 16 or 35 mm. It' can be done...... Yeah I want to see the Blair Witch as well but it's only playing in 4 theaters in LA, and well for this town it's sold out almost daily...... |
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EIGHTEENTH ANGEL was also pretty suspenseful and just generally freaky. |
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