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silly
"That rabbit's DYNAMITE."
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Posted - 10/10/2008 : 18:30:36
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Inspired in part by this, and given the fact that a certain holiday is coming up in a few weeks...
What are your favorite scary movies?
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demonic "Cinemaniac"
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Posted - 10/10/2008 : 22:48:46
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My top 10 in no particular order, (after some pained decision making)...
The Shining Evil Dead II (or is this in my top 10 comedies??) Poltergeist Psycho The Thing The Ring (yes, the remake) The Haunting (no, not the remake) Alien The Fly The Exorcist (although I have a particular affection for part III as well)
Some horrors are very hard to catagorise though... is Jacob's Ladder more of a thriller? How about The Devil's Backbone - a supernatural drama? Angel Heart - voodoo noir? Silence of the Lambs? - they're all scary movies.... |
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chazbo "Outta This Fuckin' Place"
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Posted - 10/11/2008 : 02:51:55
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The best off the cuff, and also in random order...
Psycho The Shining Alien Night of the Living Dead Hour of the Wolf (Bergman) The Thing (Carpenter's remake) Vampyr (Dreyer) Nosferatu (both versions--Murnau's and Herzog's) The Exorcist Ringu (Japanese)
There's definitely a lot of good stuff not listed here (no Dario Argento, no Halloween, for example), but these are the films I return to again and again to be horrified.
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w22dheartlivie "Kitty Lover"
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Posted - 10/11/2008 : 04:33:48
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10. Jacob's Ladder 9. Magic 8. Alien 7. The Exorcist 6. Jaws 5. The Thing 4. Psycho 3. Night of the Living Dead 2. 'Salem's Lot 1. Halloween
In about 1990, I watched Halloween on TV on Halloween night with a friend and his 70ish year old mother, who was prone to sitting around in her bra and half slip, a shawl over her shoulders, in their big 200 year old house with the bare plank wooden floors. She became bored with the film and about half way through, was suddenly stricken by a sweet tooth attack and began to eat the little 2-bite sized Three Musketeers bars left over from the trick or treating. They were in a bowl by the front door, 20 feet away. She would sigh, stand up ungracefully, tromp across the room and get one bar at a time. She would tromp back, sit down heavily and proceed to loudly unwrap the candy and eat it, then crumple the wrapper and start the process over. All of this obviously drowned out the soundtrack. We were sitting side-by-side on the couch and by the 15th candy bar, had begun to visually track each trip, much like a tennis match, our increasingly hard to stifle giggles compounding. Finally, I pulled a notepad from my purse and wrote "Oh. My. God. It's a feeding frenzy!!" No longer able to suppress it, we were overcome with laughter. His mother, on the other hand, was less than amused. She refused to watch it with us the next year.
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Edited by - w22dheartlivie on 10/11/2008 16:36:12 |
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ChocolateLady "500 Chocolate Delights"
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Posted - 10/11/2008 : 15:08:12
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quote: Originally posted by silly
Inspired in part by this, and given the fact that a certain holiday is coming up in a few weeks...
What are your favorite scary movies?
I'm not into scary movies and while I might see one once in a while, and am scared while I watch it, there's nothing about them that actually "gets" to me. Except one movie. That movie gave me nightmares and daymares and whatevermares you can think of. I just freaked me out totally. That movie was:
The Birds
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Sean "Necrosphenisciform anthropophagist."
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Posted - 10/12/2008 : 00:26:17
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Off the top of my head:-
Alien Dawn of the Dead '78 Evil Dead II The Exorcist Invasion of the Body Snatchers '56 Ju-on: The Grudge Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht The Others Ringu Rosemary's Baby Shaun of the Dead The Shining The Thing Vargtimmen The Wicker Man '73
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randall "I like to watch."
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Posted - 10/12/2008 : 21:26:49
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ALIEN THE DESCENT THE EXORCIST HALLOWEEN [Carpenter original -- the all-time scariest movie ever] THE INNOCENTS LOVE STORY [uniquely, it also ranks as one of the all-time funniest!] PSYCHO RINGU ROSEMARY'S BABY THE THING [Carpenter remake]
Scary individual moments: *Opening sequence of SCREAM *Jack-in-the-box and fridge light in WAIT UNTIL DARK [they both work on stage, too!] *Flying monkeys scoop up Toto in THE WIZARD OF OZ; also, Aunt Em dissolves to Witch in magic viewer *Last recognizable shot in THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT *Joan Cusack revealed at pay phone in ARLINGTON ROAD *Mary Philbin yanks off mask in THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, and we see before she does *Donald Sutherland's last shot in INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS *Sutherland on the receiving end at the reveal of DON'T LOOK NOW *Final reveal in the original VANISHING |
Edited by - randall on 10/12/2008 21:33:03 |
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w22dheartlivie "Kitty Lover"
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Posted - 10/12/2008 : 21:47:45
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It speaks volumes that so far, with the exception of Chockie, we all list The Exorcist, The Thing and Alien, while The Shining has a huge percentage (sorry I couldn't agree - I've frequently had issues with film adaptations of Stephen King, with the exception of the mini-series adaptation of 'Salem's Lot - "Let me in Danny, I'm hungryyyy" and Geoffrey Lewis in the rocking chair "Hello teacher."). Despite my one viewing anecdote, Halloween scared the *#)% out of me when it came out, as did NoLD. |
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randall "I like to watch."
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Posted - 10/19/2008 : 01:31:25
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I have the same problem with King horror adaptations [SHAWSHANK and GREEN MILE were right on], but I did love the miniseries STORM OF THE CENTURY. It played just like a typical King novel: incredibly creepy up front, then loses steam as he has to explain things. THE SHINING is far scarier as a novel than either filmed adaptation. THE MIST is many times more effective on paper, too. |
Edited by - randall on 10/19/2008 01:32:29 |
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w22dheartlivie "Kitty Lover"
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Posted - 10/19/2008 : 04:46:57
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quote: Originally posted by Randall
I have the same problem with King horror adaptations [SHAWSHANK and GREEN MILE were right on], but I did love the miniseries STORM OF THE CENTURY. It played just like a typical King novel: incredibly creepy up front, then loses steam as he has to explain things. THE SHINING is far scarier as a novel than either filmed adaptation. THE MIST is many times more effective on paper, too.
I agree wholeheartedly with your assessments of Shawshank and Green Mile, though I'd also put Stand By Me (The Body) in that category, and perhaps Misery. I listed 'Salem's Lot in my scary list, the original mini-series was scary, and stayed that way. The remake wasn't. I liked It, but it wasn't quite as good as the novel, as was Secret Window (that may just have been Depp),
In general, I find that filmmakers don't do well in interpreting King's work into good films, be it novel or short story. I agree on The Shining, and fairly hated Maximum Overdrive (Trucks - the short story was quite creepy), Pet Sematary (although I didn't like the storyline, so I might have been biased), Christine, and Dreamcatchers.
Then there is The Stand. It is still my favorite King book, it always has been my favorite, and I used to read it every year - until I realized I nearly knew it by heart. I had a specific cast in mind for it from the start in the late 70s, including Dennis Quaid and Kurt Russell as Larry and Stuart, and Robert Carradine as Randall Flagg. (Flagg was a puny little guy in the book.) I couldn't fathom others doing it nor it being done well enough in a feature film. So when they produced the mini-series, I was skeptical. I must say, with the possible exception of Molly Ringwald, I thought it was well done. Gary Sinise did well, and while it took a bit to adjust to Jamey Sheridan as Flagg, he did well. All in all, I was pleasantly surprised. |
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benj clews "...."
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Posted - 10/19/2008 : 13:23:52
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The Eye (original) Ju-On: The Grudge The Shining The Ring (remake) The Descent The House On Haunted Hill (remake- ignoring the crap ending) An American Werewolf In London Jacob's Ladder The Omen 28 Days Later
Whilst this list is in no particular order, I would almost certainly put The Eye at #1 every time just for it's unrelenting and highly unsettling tone interrupted only by completely untelegraphed scares.
I've never really rated The Exorcist- it bored me more than anything, but I should probably revisit it now I have a bit more patience with slower films. |
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