Which is the scariest movie in the scary movie canon? (Round 2)

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Same choices as last year ... minus a couple to get it down to 50 (all the ones from the aughts). Pathetically just hoping for more votes this time around.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
The Shining 11
Audition 7
The Exorcist 6
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 4
The Thing ('82 remake) 3
The Fly ('86 remake) 3
Night Of The Living Dead 3
Possession 2
Psycho 2
Halloween 2
Don't Look Now 2
Videodrome 2
The Blair Witch Project 2
Candyman 2
Peeping Tom 1
The Night Of The Hunter 1
The Wicker Man 1
Sleepaway Camp 1
Seven 1
The Tenant 1
Repulsion 1
Suspiria 1
Invasion Of The Body Snatchers ('78 remake) 1
The Birds 1
The Hills Have Eyes 1
The Haunting 1
Carnival Of Souls 1
The Silence Of The Lambs 0
Dawn Of The Dead 0
Cat People 0
Carrie 0
The Brood 0
Vampyr 0
The Bride Of Frankenstein 0
Wait Until Dark 0
Whatever Happened To Baby Jane? 0
The Devils 0
Alien 0
Rosemary's Baby 0
Jaws 0
Night Of The Demon 0
Freaks 0
A Nightmare On Elm Street 0
Nosferatu 0
The Last House On The Left 0
Poltergeist 0
Eyes Without A Face 0
The Evil Dead 0
Dressed To Kill 0
I Walked With A Zombie 0


Eric H., Saturday, 11 October 2008 15:45 (seventeen years ago)

Don't like that I had to cut 12 movies from last time around to get the poll choices to 50. When was that limitation of poll choices imposed?

Eric H., Saturday, 11 October 2008 15:45 (seventeen years ago)

The Thing. Most scary movies just make me laugh, but this one still unsettles me after repeat viewings.

Millsner, Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:02 (seventeen years ago)

I think I probably said on the last one that being scared by a film doesn't impress me.

Dr Morbius, Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:03 (seventeen years ago)

I probably chuntered on about the difference between suspense/jumps and being actually scared in a mid to long term sense. In the latter case, I'd probably go Don't Look Now or possibly Blair Witch.

Poll Wall (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:12 (seventeen years ago)

x-post

comedies that make me laugh are such b.s.

Alex in SC (latebloomer), Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:15 (seventeen years ago)

lol

s1ocki, Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:15 (seventeen years ago)

xp: That's a perfectly legit view.

An American Werewolf in London isn't particularly good at all, and it scared me more than pretty much anything on this list.

Dr Morbius, Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:19 (seventeen years ago)

It has a couple of effective shocks for sure. Also, lots of genuinely scary movies aren't horror movies.

Poll Wall (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:21 (seventeen years ago)

though it's not really a fun type of scary, i'll vote for Audition (because it's not 'fun' scary).

Joe Pinot (rockapads), Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:45 (seventeen years ago)

http://api.ning.com/files/7juhZFLXQaSPYVU871JwvgwpZtN3Cdn4ALEcmiFIz6E_/al_gore_valentine.jpg

negotiable, Saturday, 11 October 2008 16:45 (seventeen years ago)

There's something deeply unsettling about Carnival of Souls which has stayed with me. It got under my skin in the same way David Lynch does. I can see how it wouldn't work for everybody - the major special effect is black eyeshadow, and there are long stretches of not much happening, but still . .

Soukesian, Saturday, 11 October 2008 17:01 (seventeen years ago)

Hmm, I've only seen 23 of these (coincidentally, I just saw Peeping Tom earlier today! Alas, the room I was watching it in got rather too lively up during the second half, so it was a less than optimal viewing experience. Rather good film though)
The ones that I recall being most scared by are ones I stumbled into parts of as a kid, such as when my sister locked me into a room where "Poltergeist" was playing. I recall it being something with an evil clown doll or something. I -have- seen the two first Poltergeist films somewhat recently, but by then I was too old, I fear, and they didn't really work. (Though the preacher visiting the family in the second was a shockingly good scene for such a silly, silly film)
Just saw Audition a few days ago too, and well... I didn't find it to be scary, but it was definitely disturbing. Liked it a lot for the first 2/3rds, but when it was over I somewhat regretted even viewing it. So, definitely horrible (in a non-perjorative sense), but not exactly "scary", I think. Indeed, the only movie that I found "scary" in recent years was (the original) Funny Games. But who knows what makes seemingly random films seem scary while others aren't. I recall being terrified by "The Neverending Story" when I was but a small tyke. I believe it was some rubbish where the Atreyu kid was walking past two sizable totems that generally zapped whoever was unworthy or whatever. Path strew with smoldering corpses and all that.
Also, The Goonies!
Thirdly, the librarian at the beginning of the Ghostbusters film! "Ssh!" That creepy the hell out of me--and I don't mean the flying monster thing she becomes, just the buildup.

Not really sure what to vote for here. This would be easier if it was just "best film". Hm, on reviewing the list, maybe it wouldn't... Went with what I suspect will get the lurker vote, "The Exorcist". A dull choice, I suppose, but it really did freak me the hell out when I was a teenager, and that was the period of my life when I was rather unlikely to do much else than laugh derisively or approvingly at grim and gristly films, without being much affected.

(I thought Possession was was a film based on the Byatt novel. Did I miss something good here? I suppose there must be several films by that title. Is the horror film worth a look?)

Øystein, Saturday, 11 October 2008 21:20 (seventeen years ago)

I voted Texas Chain Saw Massacre because I remember I had taped it off the television along with a Channel4 Mark Kermode introduction and had watched the intro so many times up until the very beginning just to the van scene, and not even that far into it and it was just like this sacred text by the time I did watch it, I had been so scared by it for so long, so in the end there was fear and fear of fear (has there been a fassbinder poll?) and I was pretty much cold sweat shaking all the way through, I remember how I wasn't just terrified, but so sad when she gets tricked by the guy halfway through.

I know, right?, Saturday, 11 October 2008 23:32 (seventeen years ago)

I voted for the Shining. The first time I actually encountered this movie was while watching Twister as a kid. There's a scene that takes place in a drive-in theater iirc, and you see the little kid cycling through the corridors of the hotel. At the time, I had no clue what that movie was, but the general atmosphere was so creepy that I was genuinely scared. Also, I was rather easily afraid as a child (still am actually, people hate sitting behind me in cinemas because everytime something unexpected happens I jump off my seat). Anyways, I was left with this terrible vision from my childhood that really frightened me. And then, one day, when I was 18 or something, I watched The Shining with my family. I had no idea that that scene that traumatised me as a child came from that movie, but as the movie went on I felt worse and worse until that one scene. And I have to say it still scared the shit out of me. I realise most of the movie is very amusing (bear blow job!!) but I still cannot watch it and not feel damned scared or at least very much ill at ease. So yeah, the Shining wins, mostly because it scarred me for life as a kid.

Jibe, Sunday, 12 October 2008 00:11 (seventeen years ago)

I'll have to roll this one around upstairs for a while, as I cherish a good horror film more than almost anything in the world. I know there will inevitably be a lot of bitching about missing list entries, but (off the top of my head) here are a few conspicuous ones: The Descent, Wolf Creek, The Changeling, Ringu

Pillbox, Sunday, 12 October 2008 00:11 (seventeen years ago)

I sort of arbitrarily removed all the new ones from the previous draft, even though I think Outer Space is scarier than about four-fifths this list.

Eric H., Sunday, 12 October 2008 03:51 (seventeen years ago)

I've got a challops here: Ringu and other Japanese horror movies I've found to be majorly overrated. They get huge hype among film critics as being horrifying (I think Peter Travers is the most egregious example of this) and then they are really nothing special. I was all prepared when I watched Ringu to be frightened, and there wasn't a single scary thing in it. (Which isn't to say they don't have other value - but I think their scariness is vastly overstated.)

Mordy, Sunday, 12 October 2008 04:04 (seventeen years ago)

Whereas I've seen pretty much everything on that list and THE RING (US) was the last movie that genuinely freaked me out. Beyond that I'm with Noodle Vague - BLAIR WITCH was effective as fuck when you saw it the first time and didn't know what was coming. Driving home through the trees that night was creeeeeepy.

my sweet coconut (rogermexico.), Sunday, 12 October 2008 04:32 (seventeen years ago)

Otm. Being a bunch of idiots, after seeing it me and my friends went off to hang out in a forest. That was fun.

Niles Caulder, Sunday, 12 October 2008 04:37 (seventeen years ago)

Hey! Let's go catch JAWS and go night-surfing!

my sweet coconut (rogermexico.), Sunday, 12 October 2008 04:54 (seventeen years ago)

i guess like other people have said, my "scary" meter tilts most strongly toward movies i saw when i was younger and more easily freaked out. i can still get freaked out by movies. ringu actually did scare me, especially the big payoff scene at the end where she comes out of the tv -- an iconic horror scene, imo. these days i find myself often more affected by things that aren't necessarily horror movies -- like, fires on the plain is by far the most horrific thing i've seen the last few years. anyway, of this list, i say the body snatchers remake, because i saw it when i was 9 or 10 and it scared the fuck out of me. it seriously messed with my sleep for weeks.

tipsy mothra, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:10 (seventeen years ago)

(poltergeist was pretty scary too, when i was 12 or 13)

tipsy mothra, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:11 (seventeen years ago)

Japanese horrors have the Blair Witch - filmed crappy - aspect to them that often make them seem more realistic.
I might vote Wickerman because Nicolas Cage does such a phenomenal job.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:34 (seventeen years ago)

But you took off The Omen, which I would have voted for, so yeah I choose Wickerman.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:36 (seventeen years ago)

The Birds is my scary-movie-viewed-young touchstone (age 11 or so), and I'm still kind of creeped out by birds. Turning over a dead bird with a stick a few years earlier and finding the other side teeming with maggots may also contribute to that, however.

nickn, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:42 (seventeen years ago)

I had a friend eat maggots on accident once... they were on his wheat thins or something.
Oh but the coolest thing that happened was that a dead rat spit out of a friend's washer once with the rest of the clothes.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:52 (seventeen years ago)

apparently it had been clogged in the cogs for some time

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 12 October 2008 05:55 (seventeen years ago)

OOOPS when this closes, -1 from audition and +1 to videodrome

p.s. where the fuck is jacob's ladder

Steve (Not Stevie) (Stevie D), Sunday, 12 October 2008 06:02 (seventeen years ago)

Not horror that freaked me the fuck out; Fire Walk With Me.

Niles Caulder, Sunday, 12 October 2008 06:21 (seventeen years ago)

thing on this list i've seen most recently that scared me was repulsion. fucked up.

tipsy mothra, Sunday, 12 October 2008 06:57 (seventeen years ago)

Mordy is sitting on a massive wad of twenties about Ringu! Like, I'm pretty sure they get about 72% of their critic lust for being foreign.

I know, right?, Sunday, 12 October 2008 07:13 (seventeen years ago)

ringu actually did scare me, especially the big payoff scene at the end where she comes out of the tv -- an iconic horror scene, imo

OTM I still can't not see it

my sweet coconut (rogermexico.), Sunday, 12 October 2008 07:18 (seventeen years ago)

Even when you know it's coming, it still scares the shit out of you:

That subway entrance scene freaked me out for about ten years.

☑ (Pleasant Plains), Sunday, 12 October 2008 07:25 (seventeen years ago)

The movie that scared me was Funny Games US, like I wasn't just scared, I was emotionally exhausted, I think that's a good combination.

I know, right?, Sunday, 12 October 2008 07:27 (seventeen years ago)

I might vote Wickerman because Nicolas Cage does such a phenomenal job.

If this was serious I'm sending it to the Lol of the Month Club.

Funnily enough I was talking to some friends about Ringu/The Ring on Friday night. We all agreed that the Japanese version isn't all that, tho I think it has some neat ideas and scary moments. I haven't seen the US remake but one of my friends also said that he thought it was much better and scarier than the original.

Poll Wall (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 12 October 2008 09:52 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah, I thought that too!

I know, right?, Sunday, 12 October 2008 10:06 (seventeen years ago)

Wait Until Dark only has one scary scene/shot, but it's a doozy.

Simon H., Sunday, 12 October 2008 13:07 (seventeen years ago)

voted "don't look now"; it's creepy as all hell

"the exorcist" is pretty scary too

STINKING CORPSE (cozwn), Sunday, 12 October 2008 13:13 (seventeen years ago)

I think of Don't Look Now as more of a Tender is the Night/Death in Venice mourning veil.

I know, right?, Sunday, 12 October 2008 13:35 (seventeen years ago)

Its very beautiful but not really scary.

I know, right?, Sunday, 12 October 2008 13:35 (seventeen years ago)

To me it really is scary, voted for Don't Look Now as well (though it was hella close with The Birds). I somehow don't get scared by movies like Exorcist. I guess the archetype scary movie doesn't really scare me, not the 'look behind you! aaaaah!' type anyway. What does scare me is a two hour long scary, dark, disturbed suspense. I spiral down into it's atmosphere. Don't Look Now still does this to me.

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 12 October 2008 14:30 (seventeen years ago)

God, so many choices.

I voted Sleepaway Camp as it has a special place in my heart, but any list with Candyman, Audition, Night of the Living Dead, and Videodrome is a tough competition.

Life Begins at Death (Bo Jackson Overdrive), Sunday, 12 October 2008 15:03 (seventeen years ago)

Scariest (and most relentlessly unpleasant) movie I've seen recently is Wolf Creek. I watched Hostel for the first time about a week later and it was really lame in comparison.

chap, Sunday, 12 October 2008 15:31 (seventeen years ago)

anyone else finding it hard to 'find the demon' when those three red arrows are on the screen in that exorcist vid?

The Atlantis Mystery Solved! (Frogman Henry), Sunday, 12 October 2008 16:32 (seventeen years ago)

Possibly at 1:49 there's a vaguely human silhouette in the doorway but I don't really get what that vid's about anyway.

Poll Wall (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 12 October 2008 16:58 (seventeen years ago)

Is "Don't Look Now" the one where Donald Southerland is running around in Venezia looking for his lost kid-in-a-red-raincoat?
Uh, i'll up my count to 24 then. That was rather good too. I recall finding it pretty unnerving. In hindsight the ending seems all kinds of ridiculous though, and one of the scenes in the church has created a link in my head between it and _Bringing Up Baby_.

Øystein, Sunday, 12 October 2008 18:20 (seventeen years ago)

Texas Chain Saw Massacre is hilarious (albeit I saw it first as a middle-aged adult)

Dr Morbius, Sunday, 12 October 2008 18:59 (seventeen years ago)

I prefer "hysterical" to "hilarious," but yes.

Eric H., Sunday, 12 October 2008 19:07 (seventeen years ago)

will have to think about this one too, glad to see the lack of new movies which tbh all just look like Slipknot or Squarepusher videos.

Ant Attack |=| (Ste), Sunday, 12 October 2008 19:08 (seventeen years ago)

Is "Don't Look Now" the one where Donald Southerland is running around in Venezia looking for his lost kid-in-a-red-raincoat?

That's the one!

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 12 October 2008 20:33 (seventeen years ago)

ditto on The Exorcist, Videodrome (which i voted for), and Ringu (which WAS fucking super scary, but the one film that scared the living shit out of me and had me seriously shook for days afterwards was Children of Men. I've seen it one other time and I'm not sure I can do it again.

mikebee (BATTAGS), Monday, 13 October 2008 02:23 (seventeen years ago)

Bump, et al.

Eric H., Wednesday, 22 October 2008 15:59 (seventeen years ago)

tipsy dude you need some of this:

ringu actually did scare me, especially the big payoff scene at the end where she SPOILER -- an iconic horror scene, imo.

I'm not a film critic but I love ringu. it's subtle and restrained, but the creepiness has a cumulative effect. half of what makes ringu scary is the sound design. seeing it in a theater or on a decent soundsystem makes a big difference.

yeah, "the big payoff" *is* an iconic horror scene. what I love about asian horror films is that they're rated R for "frightening images" - not for people getting their arms sawed off. I mean, I like gory movies too, but the asians brought back the quiet, irrational creepiness of certain 70s horror movies - don't be afraid of the dark, crowhaven farm, let's scare jessica to death, phase iv - bad acting and 0 special effects but they freak you out just the same.

the US remake of ringu is pretty damn good overall. but I still prefer the funky living room claustrophobia of the japanese version to the cgi devil child of the US version.

Edward III, Wednesday, 22 October 2008 18:37 (seventeen years ago)

p.s. where the fuck is jacob's ladder

OTM, that scene where he's dancing with the woman and she has a tail...I've been thinking about it all week. Creepy shit.

Abbott, Wednesday, 22 October 2008 18:57 (seventeen years ago)

The part in the Shining where he realizes he isn't dancing with a fine lady but a disturbing old boil-covered corpse woman and starts freaking out and she's laughing maniacally and it cuts to a weird shot of her rising out of the pool slowly. That part makes me cringe as I write this..

Also the conversation in the bathroom. Two guys standing in a room talking for 5 minutes, with like one or two different camera shots, and its still scary as shit.

Adam Bruneau, Thursday, 23 October 2008 00:00 (seventeen years ago)

pool = bathtub

Adam Bruneau, Thursday, 23 October 2008 00:00 (seventeen years ago)

(I thought Possession was was a film based on the Byatt novel. Did I miss something good here? I suppose there must be several films by that title. Is the horror film worth a look?)

― Øystein, Saturday, October 11, 2008 9:20 PM (1 week ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

it got my vote, even though I've things that are classically scarier or more suspenseful -- it's more for people who think that divorce is terrifying

http://www.amazon.com/Possession-Isabelle-Adjani/dp/B001B1Q3LW/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1224720822&sr=1-6

Andrzej Zulawski

Milton Parker, Thursday, 23 October 2008 00:16 (seventeen years ago)

The scariest scene of all time imo (I mean the first one, from the original Korean movie, the other two on the same clip are there just for comparison)

Jian Gui (The Eye), the chair scene:

Vision, Thursday, 23 October 2008 02:27 (seventeen years ago)

BTW, people often mention The Shining but seldom the scene I find the most terrifying: the conversation in the bathroom with the dead hotel employee where he tells Jack Torrance how he "corrected" his family.

Vision, Thursday, 23 October 2008 02:29 (seventeen years ago)

there's this creepy as fuck japanese horror film called 'the booth' about a dj working his show from what may or may not be a haunted radio booth. very subtle and completely unnerving imo.

scariest from this list may be 'candyman'.

omar little, Thursday, 23 October 2008 05:20 (seventeen years ago)

Vision I watched yr clip in broad daylight with no sound 'cause I knew it would freak me the fuck out - and it freaked me the fuck out. But not quite as much as this bit from The Woman in Black:

allez, allons-y, on y va (ledge), Thursday, 23 October 2008 09:44 (seventeen years ago)

I found The Grudge a lot scarier than The Ring and Audition - an example of the US version being better than the Jap original, simply because of better special FX. The shower scene, the scene in the stairwell, and especially the scene with the old lady in bed being harassed by an evil spirit. Saw it at the cinema and I was actually frightened, which doesn't happen an awful lot with movies these days.

I really liked the movie of Silent Hill. Very unnerving and atmospheric and when the sirens go off and the town goes into hell-mode, it's like one of those nightmares where you're trying to run away and can't.

There've been an awful lot of crp horrors coming out lately - Welcome To The Jungle, Shrooms, and any other scenario where a bunch of irritating American travellers argue a lot and eventually get hunted down one by one. 1408 was bollocks as well.

the next grozart, Thursday, 23 October 2008 10:18 (seventeen years ago)

the original Silent Hill game on playstation1 remains for me the scariest atmostpheric horror experience I've ever had. Those industrial background clangs, the limited torch view on some areas, the whole fucked up alternate world which made no sense at all.

I'm still struggling to pick from this list, it's either Alien or Shining

Ant Attack |=| (Ste), Thursday, 23 October 2008 10:28 (seventeen years ago)

Love the "from this list" answers.

This is the FUCKING CANON, people!! Show some respect!

(I'm starting to come to terms with the fact that my movie taste when it comes to horror is actually really really conservative.)

Eric H., Thursday, 23 October 2008 13:42 (seventeen years ago)

ok Vision what version is the last of those three clips from cuz that shit is cartoonishly awful

my other son is a zamboni (gbx), Thursday, 23 October 2008 13:48 (seventeen years ago)

Texas Chainsaw. Yeah, in retrospect parts of it are funny, but the first appearance of Leatherface still scares me to this day, something none of the gorier sequels have managed to do -- especially the part where he bludgeons the first girl and slams the metal door closed.

Dan Peterson, Thursday, 23 October 2008 14:38 (seventeen years ago)

I've gone with Texas Chainsaw. My vote is specifically for the flash camera sound effects near the start, and the dinner table scene with the half dead grandpa - when they all start laughing and screaming at her. so fucking disturbing.

Ant Attack |=| (Ste), Thursday, 23 October 2008 15:02 (seventeen years ago)

The worst scene in Texas Chainsaw is where the girl gets out of the house, runs down the porchsteps, the Texas sky is so blue, and nope, Leatherface catches her and takes her back into the house.

☑ (Pleasant Plains), Thursday, 23 October 2008 15:40 (seventeen years ago)

the original Silent Hill game on playstation1 remains for me the scariest atmostpheric horror experience I've ever had

^^^

no movie (or game for that matter) has ever matched it for me.

I'm glad the chihuahua beat it this wkend (latebloomer), Thursday, 23 October 2008 16:22 (seventeen years ago)

after a second viewing I decided I really like 30 days of night

it takes itself way too seriously which contributes to its best and worst moments, the claustrophobia and desperation are palpable tho

Edward III, Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:03 (seventeen years ago)

^^^^^ I thought so, too!

my other son is a zamboni (gbx), Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:11 (seventeen years ago)

I thought the vampires in that movie were the weak link. They were lame, like music video extras or some shit.

I'm glad the chihuahua beat it this wkend (latebloomer), Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:13 (seventeen years ago)

Didn't hate the movie entirely, it has some good atmosphere in the beginning.

I'm glad the chihuahua beat it this wkend (latebloomer), Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:14 (seventeen years ago)

that's the thing: the premise was great, and i thought the slow build was going to last a lot longer. then it was like blood everywhere and it became more fun/funny than scary

my other son is a zamboni (gbx), Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:14 (seventeen years ago)

also i thought it was some weird commentary on terrorism, fear, and the other, but that's cuz i've only seen it when i've been hiiiiiiiiiiiiigh.

my other son is a zamboni (gbx), Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:15 (seventeen years ago)

especially the part where he bludgeons the first girl and slams the metal door closed.

it's a dude that gets bludgeoned, but that scene is classic. no stinger music cues, quick zooms, or special effects, it's all in the timing, like a horrific slapstick.

Edward III, Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:19 (seventeen years ago)

that's the thing: the premise was great, and i thought the slow build was going to last a lot longer. then it was like blood everywhere and it became more fun/funny than scary

it does step on the brake + gas alternately tho; quiet build-up, everything goes to shit (love that slow aerial pan over the main street chaos), but then it gets quiet again. my favorite parts of the movie are when they're all stuck in the attic after the town's been decimated.

agree w/ latebloomer that the vampires were too fields of the nephilim, would've been way more scary + effective if they were dressed like normal people.

Edward III, Thursday, 23 October 2008 19:28 (seventeen years ago)

allez, that scene is great, very nightmarish, and the woman's teeth will remain somewhere in my subconscious...

my other son, that's Naina

ok Eric H, fair enough, I choose The Shining. The Wicker Man is the strongest in terms of horrifying endings.

Vision, Thursday, 23 October 2008 23:41 (seventeen years ago)

Again, bump.

Eric H., Monday, 27 October 2008 22:14 (seventeen years ago)

30/50.

I love horror films.

the table is the table, Monday, 27 October 2008 22:18 (seventeen years ago)

Candyman is probably the scariest with Suspiria, the Shining, Alien, the Exorcist probably running shortly behind. None of those movies are even in the top ten movies on this list however (the best of which are more unsettling than scary.)

Alex in SF, Monday, 27 October 2008 22:19 (seventeen years ago)

I've seen everything on here, I think. Maybe not Night of the Demon?

Alex in SF, Monday, 27 October 2008 22:20 (seventeen years ago)

I watched The Strangers over the weekend. If you love good, old-fashioned "BOO!"-style shocka moments in your horror cinema (like I do), I reccomend you do this (like I did): If you own a laptop, watch the film alone in a dark room wearing headphones. The reasons being: (A) The first half of the film brings the chills better than any film of its kind in recent memory (yeah the final act bogs down a little into cliche' a little, but the penultimate conclusion is worth sticking around for) / (B) The usage of audio to enhance tension is masterfully done, but it is also very subtle. That is why I recommend headphones. Add all this up & you've got yourself a recipe for a nice, visceral Halloween scare.

Pillbox, Monday, 27 October 2008 23:35 (seventeen years ago)

None of those movies are even in the top ten movies on this list however

Curious to see what this list would be.

The same thing is true for me, btw. I think Candyman freaked me out more than Carrie, for instance, but think the latter is clearly a better movie.

Eric H., Monday, 27 October 2008 23:50 (seventeen years ago)

I can't narrow it ten, but it would be from this list:

Psycho
Repulsion
Rosemary's Baby
Carrie
Dawn Of The Dead
The Devils
Eyes Without A Face
The Night Of The Hunter
Night Of The Living Dead
Nosferatu
The Wicker Man

Alex in SF, Monday, 27 October 2008 23:55 (seventeen years ago)

Love the "from this list" answers.

This is the FUCKING CANON, people!! Show some respect!

yeah well there's a lot of films you left off your list, pal

Milton Parker, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

Black Christmas should really be on this list. More so than Dawn of the Dead which isn't actually scary.

Alex in SF, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 00:03 (seventeen years ago)

The Shining, definitely. For the scenes mentioned above and the bearsuit blowjob that always kind of creeped me out.

Rosemary's Baby and The Exorcist are probably the only other movies on the list that have scared me on repeated viewings. I have to say that with all the Cronenberg represented here, I'm bummed Dead Ringers is missing; definitely would have won my vote.

squeaky fromme where? (jessie monster), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 00:30 (seventeen years ago)

I really do hate the 50 limit on polls.

Eric H., Tuesday, 28 October 2008 00:53 (seventeen years ago)

The quality ratio of the writing on the Popmatters site is pretty hit or miss, but this is actually very well done IMO: An extensive retrospective honoring the 40th anniversary of Night of the Living Dead

Pillbox, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 00:57 (seventeen years ago)

poltergeist, but i was tiny when i saw it

remy bean, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 02:18 (seventeen years ago)

I watched The Strangers over the weekend.

asked my wife if this should be our halloween night horror flick and she said "I can't even make it through the trailer"

Edward III, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 17:21 (seventeen years ago)

IMDB synopsis makes it sound kinda slapstick: "She then runs into the house and hides in the kitchen closet. Then she leaves the closet and runs into the bedroom, she then runs out of the bedroom".

I can't stand that kind of flick where the horror is all in the violence though. I don't find them that scary, just deeply deeply unpleasant. Give me weirdo supernatural shit any day if you really want to fuck me up.

ledge, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 17:52 (seventeen years ago)

p.s. where the fuck is jacob's ladder

OTM, that scene where he's dancing with the woman and she has a tail...I've been thinking about it all week. Creepy shit.

ding ding ding

The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:04 (seventeen years ago)

doggies u know wut was really scary when i was a kid?

those fucken dinosaurs attack trading cards!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://www.headinjurytheater.com/Entertainment/da%20devil%20dinosaur.jpg
http://www.headinjurytheater.com/Entertainment/da%20nightmare%20death%20scary.jpg
http://www.bobheffner.com/dinosaursattack/df28.jpg

ಥ﹏ಥ (cankles), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:05 (seventeen years ago)

http://www.bobheffner.com/dinosaursattack/df24.jpg

shittttttttt

ಥ﹏ಥ (cankles), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:07 (seventeen years ago)

The scariest scene of all time imo (I mean the first one, from the original Korean movie, the other two on the same clip are there just for comparison)

i didn't really see the scariness in this.

Jordan, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:25 (seventeen years ago)

most of these movies aren't scary (though most of them are also great). jacob's ladder and eraserhead are the two movies i can think of that really creeped me out

metametadata (n/a), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:27 (seventeen years ago)

i actually never finished watching eraserhead because it creeped me out too much

metametadata (n/a), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:28 (seventeen years ago)

Jacob's Ladder is probably still my favorite film of all time.

I really liked the movie of Silent Hill. Very unnerving and atmospheric and when the sirens go off and the town goes into hell-mode, it's like one of those nightmares where you're trying to run away and can't.

I was actually shocked at how much I liked this movie! Lots of it was really silly, but MAN when the town shifted there were some scenes that were just like YIKES (and not even the gonzo gory scenes).

One of my college roommates saw "Eraserhead" 14 times in a row thanks to his obsessive mom.

Black Seinfeld (HI DERE), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:33 (seventeen years ago)

The Shining? scary? I saw it on opening night w/ my high school buddies, and we all agreed it was Kramer vs Kramer with a hedge maze.

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:36 (seventeen years ago)

i want more horror movies to go for awesome creepy shit like the haunted ww2 sub movie "below" or the best bits in "candyman" or some of the best j-horror shit. the so-called "torture porn" stuff isn't scary at all. i mean i really like "hostel" but that was as scary as "inside man".

omar little, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 18:37 (seventeen years ago)

man, I've seen 45 of these. courtesy of being a horror movie addict during my childhood.

ones I think are scary:

Alien - so much effective silence and tension in it, a haunted house in space.

Carnival Of Souls - wins the award for most effective scares per production dollar spent. I'll probably pull the handle for this since no one else will, it's one of my favorite films to boot.

The Exorcist - horror film as sledgehammer, not sure if it has aged well though?

Halloween - carpenter demonstrates how much mileage you can get out of sting cues and a white mask appearing in the frame corners. the murders are not particularly gory but they are violent and disturbing. for some reason the scene that scared me the most as a kid was the insane asylum breakout.

The Last House On The Left - not too scary I guess, but it is my #1 childhood trauma movie. when my uncle took 10-year-old me to a drive-in triple feature of amityville horror/dawn of the dead/last house on the left, it was the latter that freaked me out. I didn't believe in ghosts or zombies but I was aware there were people who actually liked to sadistically kidnap, rape, and murder people.

A Nightmare On Elm Street - some bad acting and 80s oh noes, but the nightmare sequences are spectacular at capturing the heightened confusion of bad dreams. was it the 3rd entry that was good as well?

The Shining - the DVD restorations have been revelatory. if the premise sucks you in this will freak you out but good. morbs, I saw it back in the day too and it somehow seems scarier now than it did then.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - manages to be gory, scary, creepy, and disturbing. the documentary-style production values give it realism, while the outlandish set and costume design make it surreal + nightmarish.

inland empire isn't on this list, but the movie is seriously scary, not just in its creepy/jump moments, but in how it conveys the general terror of identity dissolution. the more I think about it the more I want to watch it on halloween.

Edward III, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:19 (seventeen years ago)

The Last House On The Left - not too scary I guess, but it is my #1 childhood trauma movie. when my uncle took 10-year-old me to a drive-in triple feature of amityville horror/dawn of the dead/last house on the left, it was the latter that freaked me out. I didn't believe in ghosts or zombies but I was aware there were people who actually liked to sadistically kidnap, rape, and murder people.

That's always scarier, tho.

You know, Devils Rejects was pretty sadistic in this way.

Whiney G. Soundgarden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:21 (seventeen years ago)

I'm such a big pussy about scary movies -- hate 'em, hardly ever watch 'em. They screw with my dreams and ability to get a good night's sleep. Dates back to the first time I watched Frankenstein, when I was 8 or 9 -- that night, I got wound up in the sheets in my sleep, couldn't move, so I dreamed I was paralyzed in my bed, and the Frankenstein monster appeared in my doorway, totally silent for what seemed like five minutes. Then it took one step forward. Awful.

Rock Hardy, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:31 (seventeen years ago)

the weird thing about rob zombie is he somehow makes that style of torture-porn socially acceptable, and you end up identifying with/rooting for the sadists... maybe because his films are so heavily stylized and ironic? whereas if somebody identified with the villains in last house on the left (or tcm) I'd be worried about their mental health. xp to whiney

jacob's ladder frustrated me because the first half was awesome, but once it tried to "explain" what was going on it started losing its footing. supposedly the original cut was 30 minutes longer and it actually was test-screened for audiences, I would've liked to have seen that. I should probably go back and watch it again, I don't think I've seen it since it was in the theatres.

Edward III, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:36 (seventeen years ago)

v. true about Zombie.

But also, I mean, I root for the sadists in Hostel since they did such an excellent job of painting the tourists as vulgar d-bags.

I think that's why "Devil's Rejects" and "Hostel" are FUN, and "Last House On The Left" is SCARY.

Whiney G. Soundgarden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:39 (seventeen years ago)

^ true ^

One of my college roommates saw "Eraserhead" 14 times in a row thanks to his obsessive mom.

do you visit him nowadays at the sanitarium?

eraserhead is the most disturbing PG movie ever made.

Edward III, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

IMDB synopsis makes it sound kinda slapstick: "She then runs into the house and hides in the kitchen closet. Then she leaves the closet and runs into the bedroom, she then runs out of the bedroom".

I can't stand that kind of flick where the horror is all in the violence though. I don't find them that scary, just deeply deeply unpleasant. Give me weirdo supernatural shit any day if you really want to fuck me up.

― ledge, Tuesday, October 28, 2008 1:52 PM (3 hours ago) Bookmark

I understand how you could get that I idea from the IMDB description, but The Strangers could only be considered "slapstick" if you consider, say, the original Halloween to be slapstick. It's actually a very effective home-invasion thriller. If that isn't your cup of tea, so be it. Personally, while I love "weirdo supernatural shit," it almost always fails to hit me on the visceral level that transgressive sadism/nihilism does. Another perfect example of this, as discussed upthread, is Last House on the Left, which I'm leaning toward voting for at this point.

Question: Have any of you seen Cannibal Holocaust and, if so, how do you think it stacks up against some of these other films scary-wise? I've always been curious to see it, but I don't think I could let myself get past the animal torture stuff.

Pillbox, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:13 (seventeen years ago)

this is very hard. very.

Surmounter, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:14 (seventeen years ago)

The scariest movie for me is Open Water, which is more of a scary shark attack film than a horror film. I'm more easily scared by films that are "realistic" as opposed to "supernatural" as I don't generally buy into the latter.
After seeing Open Water, I was convinced that if I ever went diving, snorkling, swimming, or took a long bath, I'd probably end up being eaten bit-by-bit by swarming sharks.

From the list, I'm going with The Exorcist which pretty well creeped me out when I saw it as a pre-teen. Probably wouldn't scare me as much if I went back to it now.

The Shining is a close second for the part with the twin girls and the part where Jack finds the lady in the tub.

Moodles, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:19 (seventeen years ago)

Cannibal Holocaust is awesome, but not scary per se. It's another avenging conscience fantasy movie where a bunch of ugly American tourists get what they deserve (through getting eaten). Plus it's part of the whole italian cannibal trend of the 70s, so it sends up the idea of distant tribes as "savages." The "handheld video" aspect of it is pretty creepy tho.

Plus the Riz Ortalani soundtrack is one of the best horror soundtracks of all time.

There's two animal parts and you can close your eyes for both of them (like I do).

Whiney G. Soundgarden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:31 (seventeen years ago)

I root for the sadists in Hostel since they did such an excellent job of painting the tourists as vulgar d-bags.

So vulgar and douche baggy that they deserve torture and/or death?

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:32 (seventeen years ago)

Do I have to write a freshman english paper on why horror movies exist for you, Kevin James Bozelka, or can you just find your way out of this thread on your own?

Whiney G. Soundgarden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:35 (seventeen years ago)

Freshman English paper please.

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:36 (seventeen years ago)

Although I would've written the question like so: "Do I have to write a freshman english paper for you on why horror movies exist?"

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:39 (seventeen years ago)

zinged on my own zing.

Whiney G. Soundgarden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 28 October 2008 21:41 (seventeen years ago)

Cannibal Holocaust is a very underestimated movie, not just because it holds a load of juicy gore and nasty scenes but it's very well made with it's documentary style. The pace is interesting too, as it just gets gradually more and more fucking insane!

Ant Attack |=| (Ste), Wednesday, 29 October 2008 00:20 (seventeen years ago)

Cannibal Holocaust, pretty great

Alan Yates: Oh, good Lord! It's unbelievable. It's horrible. I can't understand the reason for such cruelty. It probably has something to do with some bizarre sexual rage with the almost profound respect these primitives have for virginity.

Milton Parker, Wednesday, 29 October 2008 00:36 (seventeen years ago)

Hmm, in theory, "Jaws" wins, in that it's still the only reason I'm afraid of getting attacked by sharks. In, like, swimming pools (though I believe that was a gsg used in "Alligator." And "Pirana," also). A couple of those on the lids don't really count as "scary," per se: "Bride of Frankenstein?" Cronenberg's "The Fly?" Love 'em, but nah. And where is "The Descent?" That movie is intense!

Anyway, a lot of these movies (many if not most of which I love) are genuinely creepy or eerie, but not terribly scary.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 29 October 2008 00:46 (seventeen years ago)

I'm such a big pussy about scary movies -- hate 'em, hardly ever watch 'em. They screw with my dreams and ability to get a good night's sleep. Dates back to the first time I watched Frankenstein, when I was 8 or 9 -- that night, I got wound up in the sheets in my sleep, couldn't move, so I dreamed I was paralyzed in my bed, and the Frankenstein monster appeared in my doorway, totally silent for what seemed like five minutes. Then it took one step forward. Awful.
― Rock Hardy, Tuesday, 28 October 2008 20:31

have you ever seen spirit of the beehive? could be cathartic... or maybe traumatize you all over again.

Edward III, Wednesday, 29 October 2008 04:25 (seventeen years ago)

I was lending a friend a stack of horror movies yesterday, and I actually wondered whether or not I should give him "Spirit of the Beehive." Definitely spooky stuff. (Also, massively ripped off paid tribute by "Pan's Labyrinth")

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 29 October 2008 04:44 (seventeen years ago)

inland empire isn't on this list, but the movie is seriously scary, not just in its creepy/jump moments, but in how it conveys the general terror of identity dissolution. the more I think about it the more I want to watch it on halloween.

Yeah, Inland Empire would've been on this list of nominees if I didn't have to pare it down to 50. So would've Cannibal Holocaust. And Pulse. And Jacob's Ladder. Damnit, I suppose I probably should've ditched Baby Jane to make room for at least one of those.

Eric H., Wednesday, 29 October 2008 04:46 (seventeen years ago)

Last House on the Left, which I'm leaning toward voting for at this point.

i think this is what i'm voting for as well. and for similar reasons. the more plausible seeming a moive the more it scares me, if not during the film than certainly after. i was really freaked out by man bites dog for the same reason and that's supposed to be comedy!

¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶ (Lamp), Wednesday, 29 October 2008 04:49 (seventeen years ago)

I really agree with all those of you who asked about David Lynch movies because while they don't aim for scary (I suppose) they are usually very very unsettling. I remember being terribly scared while watching Mulholland Drive but:
i) i'm a terrible wuss and am scared very easily while watching movies, to the point that I usually upset people sitting behind me in theaters because I'm tall and jump a bit everytime something unexpected happens on screen
ii) I saw that movie at 3am or something in an apartment full of wooden furniture and wood floors and they kept creaking.

The same applies to Inland Empire or Eraserhead or Lost Highway or Blue Velvet. They all scared me. I guess that's what people mean when they talk about a Lynchian atmosphere or whatever, this kind of creepy ambiance that I really can't define or explain.

Jibe, Wednesday, 29 October 2008 11:25 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Thursday, 30 October 2008 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Friday, 31 October 2008 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

Didn't realize Audition had stiffed up that far into the upper echelon, but it could have something to do with the fact that I cleared away most of its recently-made competition.

Eric H., Sunday, 2 November 2008 22:07 (seventeen years ago)

I don't even think Kubrick was trying to make The Shining particularly scary.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 3 November 2008 15:27 (seventeen years ago)

The Thing is pretty scary now that I think about it.

Whiney G. Torture Garden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 3 November 2008 15:31 (seventeen years ago)

eleven months pass...

To re-poll or not to re-poll ...

boring movies are the most boring (Eric H.), Monday, 5 October 2009 12:31 (sixteen years ago)

Re-poll!

she is writing about love (Jenny), Monday, 5 October 2009 12:56 (sixteen years ago)

I think the results are pretty solid. Most of the movies that I find unnerving got at least one vote. The only thing I'd add to the list at this point (although I don't particularly agree that it's as scary as it is just kind of vaguely nightmarish) is Inland Empire. The first half of The Descent is legitimately scary, but the second half kind of defuses the first.

I HEART CREEPY MENS (Deric W. Haircare), Monday, 5 October 2009 13:01 (sixteen years ago)

Oh, and that Paranormal Activity movie which is currently in extremely limited release is supposed to be, like, terrifying or something.

I HEART CREEPY MENS (Deric W. Haircare), Monday, 5 October 2009 13:02 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah, I really want to see that but I'm studiously avoiding reviews/over-enthusiastic blog posts about it lest it fall victim to its own hype.

she is writing about love (Jenny), Monday, 5 October 2009 13:20 (sixteen years ago)

First version of this poll had Inland Empire in it. If I redux this year, I may take out Shining, Exorcist, et al, for the sake of a new winner.

boring movies are the most boring (Eric H.), Monday, 5 October 2009 13:22 (sixteen years ago)

Jaws 0

That is just crazy.

Daniel, Esq., Monday, 5 October 2009 14:16 (sixteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

I imagine some (looking at you Kevin) probably think the vangard horror period stretching from Night of the Living Dead through The Fly remake has been overly venerated to the point of exhaustion, but this documentary is by far the best montage-based argument I've seen in support of treating the genre in this particular time period as some of the most socially-conscious American filmmaking ever.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cniEdq4Jwaw

cough syrup in coke cans (Eric H.), Monday, 26 October 2009 13:52 (sixteen years ago)

Rob Nelson's review of the doc

cough syrup in coke cans (Eric H.), Monday, 26 October 2009 14:00 (sixteen years ago)


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