Paranormal Activity is one of those movies that you laugh at, and then you get home alone in your bed and every sound your house makes starts freaking you out.
YepDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Paranormal Activity is one of those movies that you laugh at, and then you get home alone in your bed and every sound your house makes starts freaking you out.
HawthornAggie said:
Another one of my favorite thrillers, and incredibly underrated in my opinion, is The Descent. This is one I always showed to friends in high school/college when someone suggested we watch a "scary movie".
Just looked that up. Nightmare fuel.RightWingConspirator said:
You ought to watch the video on the death of the guy in the Nutty Putty caving incident in Utah. I'm not really claustrophobic, but that video made me squirm. Truly tragic and horrifying.
it's definitely a polarizing film. Nice mix of psychological horror and ofcourse the gore. But it's a complete story that drives the movie rather than some cheesy storyline to shallowly carry jump scares and blood and guts. The film editing is outstanding as well. Yes, it definitely punches you in the gut and makes you feel horrible, but that achieved by the story itself. Definitely a hate or love movie, but everyone should give it a try if they like the genre.Rule Number 32 said:
Gah I hate that movie. As much as I love horror, that one was absolutely just a guy punch of a movie and made me feel horrible for watching it. Not for the average movie watcher...
nickstro66 said:"Because you were home" is one of the creepiest lines in horror historyAggieArchitect04 said:
Has a movie ever truly scare you? Like stuck with you.
What's at the top?
For me, The Strangers (first movie) was terrifying because of just how practical it was. That one was in my head for a while.
I've never seen the movie, but this reminded me of a SNL sgement on Weekend Update about a blogger who snarkily reviewed movies ("B**ch, Please). It was hit or miss, but one that made me laugh out loud was A Haunting in Connecticut.Pac1698 said:
The Exorcist will always be my top scary movie. Aliens and American Werewolf in London scared the crap out of me (being in a deer blind alone as a kid before sunrise and at sundown and seeing shadows after watching that werewolf movie was not fun). The show that ruined horror movies for my wife and I was the documentary of A haunting in Connecticut. I never watched the movie, but the story and imagery from the documentary haunted us for months. I think we finally started watching horror movies years later (combo of young kids/not having time and still shook up from that doc series).
Followed by a trip to the bathroom to get that 4-year-old mouth washed out with soap, ala A Christmas Story?Max Power said:
I can distinctly remember seeing The Thing on tv when I was too young. Not even on purpose, just happened to pass by the living room and the scene with the dogs was playing. I'm pretty sure at 4 or 5 years old I yelled something to the effect of holy ****ing **** what the **** is happening?!?!?!?! That movie imprinted on me from that moment.