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Best Horror Film
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.night of lepus for its giant killer rabbits(!) is close to being a favourite
of modern day horror only coppolla's dracula seems to stands out.
there arnt in my experience any truly scary ones i can remember apart from salems lot
i much prefer horror from the 50s to 70s and ive whittled it down to night of the demon (1959) and my fave which is the mummy (christopher lee) which makes stephen sommers the mummy look like tripe( in which incidentally the mummy of the title isnt actually a mummy when he is reincarnated)
Find yourself a copy of the Woman in Black and watch this late one night. It is a classic ghost story, commissioned by the BBC, full of suspense and features one of the scariest moments in film history. Those who have seen it will know exactly which bit I mean! I watched this with my brother about 10 or so years ago when it was on shown on Christmas Eve. There is also a stage version which I am told is as scary.
Difficult, but here goes.
- Those that frightened me in their day: "Shining"; "The Wicker Man" (Robin Hardy, 1973); another but I can't remember the title, it was about a babysitter - the phone keeps ringing telling her to check on the kids and in fact the guy is upstairs and he's already killed them.
- Those that still 'worry' me when watched: "The Haunting" (the original by Robert Wise, 1963); "Wait until dark" (Terence Young, 1967); plus one whose title I can't remember unless it was "The Honeymoon Killers" made in B&W, based on a true story - not to be confused with a remake by Arturo Ripstein circa 1998 which was good but not half as chilling as the original.
- And THE one which I still haven't been able to see all the way through - "The Shuttered Room" with Oliver Reed (David Greene, 1969).
Saw the Ring a couple of days ago - very good!
When I was a kid I saw Don't be afraid of the dark - and I was very very afraid of the dark for quite some time... probably would seem silly if I watched it again now, with its little goblins.
I don't like slasher-type films at all, prefer the ones that play on your imagination.
The problem with The Shining for me was that I read the book before I ever saw the film - which spoiled the film for me. The original version of The Haunting was scary, as was the Blair Witch Project - I watched it alone with all the lights out because I'm so hardcore :O)
I first saw Salem's Lot when I was about nine or ten. I know - too young, but I was a fan of Starsky & Hutch and it had David Soul in it, so...anyway, that scene where the guy is (I think) lying on a bed in a jail cell, the camera pans to the end of the bed, and the hideous vampire leaps up out of nowhere scared the living bejabers out of me.
No, tali122 I don't think it is the supernatural monsters but the atmosphere with a capital 'A'. Then everything you don't see or, maybe worse still, do see but you haven't the foggiest why and you're too frightened to take time off to think about it!
The film "have you seen the children" or whatever it was called, had me scared of cupboards for years after whether the cupboard door was open or closed. It was only when I saw it again a few years ago on TV that I was able to sleep in a room on my own with cupboards - that's not easy when it's a bedroom!