Sean of the Dead for the win.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton

 ) so I was more inclined to laugh than scream.
  ) so I was more inclined to laugh than scream.I think the time [1973] was right for this type of movie. The movie won a Golden Globe for "Best Drama".seamusTX wrote:I think people who saw The Exorcist for the first time were quite freaked out, especially if they already thought of demonic possession as a real possibility.
By the time I got around seeing it, someone had recited the plot and described the more horrifying scenes to me, like the "pea soup," (thanks, buddy) so I was more inclined to laugh than scream.
BTW, I'm Catholic. The Catholic Church admits the possibility of possession, but very rarely.
- Jim
 
  
The Exorcist wrecked my childhood. Couldn't sleep with the lights off until....well, anyway.Kythas wrote:The Exorcist is still the movie that scares me the most every time I see it. Simply because it relates an actual account.
Something that scary that really happened? Yep, that's #1 in my book.
 
 
Kythas wrote:The Exorcist is still the movie that scares me the most every time I see it. Simply because it relates an actual account.
Something that scary that really happened? Yep, that's #1 in my book.
 I think thats why The Mothman Prophecies scares me.  It's based on a real account back in the mid 1960s.  When I was a teenager, The Amittyville Horror terrified me so much that when my friends planned a trip to the location, I wanted no part of it.  Now it has no impact.  I prefer any other movie genre over horror.  I don't need any additional help scaring the bah geeziz out of myself when I'm sleeping.
   I think thats why The Mothman Prophecies scares me.  It's based on a real account back in the mid 1960s.  When I was a teenager, The Amittyville Horror terrified me so much that when my friends planned a trip to the location, I wanted no part of it.  Now it has no impact.  I prefer any other movie genre over horror.  I don't need any additional help scaring the bah geeziz out of myself when I'm sleeping. 
When I was growing up, so many horror movies relied on the victims doing something stupid that gets them killed. Also the threat was something I thought could be stopped by the simple solution of 12ga buckshot to the head.seamusTX wrote:I saw Alien in a packed theater. As I said, it was the week it came out, and it was a hit. Grown men (which I was) were shrieking like little girls.The Marshal wrote:I remember watching "Alien" in a theatre by myself, but there were 5 other people scattered around inside....Note that in the 3 movies I mentioned, unlike today's movies, you rarely saw the monster full on. They all capitalized on your imagination being scarier than the special effects.
It is incredible now what Ridley Scott did with no CGI and the primitive special effects of that far distant era of 1979.
 
  The victims were armed and capable but that wasn't always enough to save the good guys, because the monster was tough and determined.  Not just hiding in the shadows and picking off the injured lambs.
  The victims were armed and capable but that wasn't always enough to save the good guys, because the monster was tough and determined.  Not just hiding in the shadows and picking off the injured lambs. 
 
Close -- "Wait Until Dark" 1967 Audrey Hepburn and Alan Arkin.TxLobo wrote:There is a difference in my mind between Scary.. and Horror..
Scary movies like, Psycho, When Micheal Calls, Rosemary's Baby, Carrie, and ... and.. arrrrrg!!! forgot the name of it.. The blind lady that is in her apt, the killer with the switchblade concealed in the Madonna ... (wait until midnight?)
Horror movies like Night of the living dead, Dawn of the dead, any of the Friday the 13th (but honestly, by the 3rd movie, how many different ways CAN you kill someone?) Nightmare on Elm Street..
My wife and I have been listening to the Gregg Bell Media on XM.. These are 40's and 50's serials that played on the radio. Lots of "scary" tales being told on the channel leading up to Halloween..

I second the The Mothman Prophecies and add the low budget, not particularly well rated, Jeepers Creepers --it just has some creepy elements to it.urnoodle wrote:The 2 that creep me out the most are The Mothman Prophecies and The Ring.