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Re: Horror Movies

Thu Oct 21, 2010 8:26 pm

I keep thinkin I'm gonna hate Paranormal Activity but I'm sure I'll catch it.

I haven't seen Human Centepede but that's because I know what I'd be getting and I'm more concerned about getting bored not shocked/grossed out. I work in a hospital, I see weird and gross things all day. But fuck Ebert, really. I hate that guy. I once a read a review of a movie I didn't like and he didn't either but his fucking review was insane. He disliked the movie for the nature of what it was. It was for a zombie movie (can't remember which) and what bugged him were all the damned zombies. WTF?! I generally think he has the worst reviews ever, whether they're sincere or just he's paid to write them a certain way, just bad.

Re: Horror Movies

Thu Oct 21, 2010 11:44 pm

Paranormal Activity gets hits ratings in my book, but it is a love it or hate it film. You need to be in the right mood for it.

Recently revisited Lets Scare Jessica To Death and Who Can Kill a Child. Both totally worth the time, really good creep fests. Especially Let's Scare Jessica to Death.

Completely forgot one of my all time favourites, starring the jaw droppingly gorgeous Delphine Seyrig at her most glamorous, Daughters of Darkness. Admittedly it has 2 of the most absurd deaths ever, but it's great getting there.

Re: Horror Movies

Fri Oct 22, 2010 7:48 am

I thought Paranormal Activity was a total bust. I only eventually broke down and saw it based on the hype, and the payoff was totally not worth the build up.

Everything is just lifted from those countless ghost hunter shows on TV, and I've actually seen scarier episodes of those.

Then again, maybe I've just been completely worn down by the myriads of cookie-cutter creepy, crawly ghost kid movies that have been cranked out from every country on the globe (but I'm mainly looking at you Japan and Spain!) in the past 10 years or so.

Enough with the ghosts already.

Re: Horror Movies

Fri Oct 22, 2010 8:00 am

I try my best to ignore or disregard hype, I tend to be pretty good at that, selective reading I suppose.
I detest Blair Witch, and see the two films as siblings almost. I think that while what PA did, may not have been terribly original, it succeeded where BWP failed. The production team seem to have sat down with BWP and gone over it saying, what can we do better.
For me, I thought they succeeded. And for the bloke down the front who squealed like a little girl it definitely succeeded :)

Re: Horror Movies

Fri Oct 22, 2010 8:54 am

Dean wrote:
Mecha wrote:watched Human Centepede last weekend.....i dont know if i'll ever be the same.


I'm careful about who I admit to having seen that one to. The shame, the shame. :lol:

Thing is, more is suggested than actually shown, and that's enough! I loved Robert Ebert's review of it. He talked about how there were some images he wished he'd never put into his head, or wished he could erase. He closed the interview by saying that even though his editor requires him to give "star" ratings to movies, he refused in this case, because "The Human Centipede exists in a place where the stars don't shine."

The over-the-top performance of the mad doctor was memorable for its wackiness. Probably the only "redeeming" thing about the movie.



My fuckin cousin told me about human centipede and then he never even watched, what a dick! I just couldn't believe that the surgery went down so early in the movie. I was like "Really? Already? So it's gonna be like this the rest of the time??!" I will say the Dr. was fun and I wish that they just would've left more to the imagination with that one. After watching it, I was actually truly angry that I could not un-watch those things. Sure it had alot of tension, but at what cost. Whatever happened to not even seeing the knife go into the person. I really like the film "The Strangers" because they kept things pretty old school suspense horror.

Re: Horror Movies

Fri Oct 22, 2010 12:19 pm

Dean wrote:I re-watched "Paranormal Activity" a few nights ago. Alone in a dark room late at night. I liked it much better that way than in the cinema. One thing though ... the ending was completely different from the one I saw in the theater! I need to look that up. I seem to remember reading something about how different theaters got different versions. I like both endings I've seen. Looking forward to the sequel.

It's not really horror per se, but Teshigahara's "Pitfall" is interesting. Just caught that last night. Very odd film ... I almost had a hard time keeping track of who was dead and who was alive in it LOL. Great atonal soundtrack by Takemitsu. Not the director's best, but definitely worth checking out if you like Japanese cinema and offbeat ghost stories. This one took a rather dim view of the afterlife. :-)

As for "Paranormal Activity": I believe there were about five different endings shot, including the one in which the boyfriend gets hurled at the camera - a glimpse of that was in the original trailer. For me, it didn't really work since I was too busy being annoyed by the boyfriend's moronic behaviour most of the time to get scared. So much, actually, that by the end I was rooting for the demon.

And I see your Teshigahara and raise to Shindo - how about "Onibaba" & "Kuroneko"? :D Haven't seen the latter yet, but "Onibaba" definitely is a brilliant film and a must-see for anyone into classic, eerie Japanese cinema!

backtrack wrote:Recently revisited Lets Scare Jessica To Death and Who Can Kill a Child. Both totally worth the time, really good creep fests. Especially Let's Scare Jessica to Death.

Good to know - haven't seen "Jessica" yet, but love "Who Can Kill A Child". Thanks! :D

Re: Horror Movies

Fri Oct 22, 2010 9:30 pm

i saw paranormal activity because the pre-screening for up in the air was overbooked. not even a year later, only one stuck with me, and it wasn't the gimmicky horror movie.

it's not a movie that deserves credit for anything but sucking people into its stupid orbit. the ending is the only horrifying part of the movie and it's not a worthwhile payoff since, as mentioned, the characters were too irritating to really empathize with. similarly, i've avoided the human centipede.

this thread is full of nice recs though - the only fulci i've seen is zombi and i'd like to see more from that era.

the last good horror movie i watched was dead alive.. one of the earlier peter jackson efforts. it's not unlike the evil dead series with its over the top camp, but it's not in a cabin or the past.

((speaking of clichés, and paranormal activities for that matter, check out the scream 4 trailer))

Re: Horror Movies

Sat Oct 23, 2010 1:09 am

Image

As Halloween aproaches, I tend to lean towards the cheese. Had to pull out my VHS copy of this old gem (this is the 70's movie - not the TV show). Total schlock, but great stuff.

Re: Horror Movies

Sat Oct 23, 2010 4:55 am

This is a great thread - makes me realise I need to see a lot of stuff listed here...

It might seem lame to some real horror-freaks on here - but I found Wolf Creek to be
pretty scary - and I'm a big fan of the original Halloween and Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Love the original of The Omen, and The Exorcist. I think these are all classics.

Really going to check out some of the recommendations on here... I think I'm missing
out. I saw Let the right one in - and I thought it was just so-so... but people went mad
for it...

Some of Enter The Void is pretty horrific...

Re: Horror Movies

Sat Oct 23, 2010 9:32 am

azjpeg wrote:Cannibal Holocaust is one of those for me - any film that kills real animals is sickest of all in my book - that shit's not right.

The Cannibal movies and real animal killing is a strange bit of history. They almost all had it, and I don't think I've ever met a fan of the movies that would excuse the inclusion. I would have issue with a current film attempting to do the same thing. I guess for myself I think Cannibal Holocaust is to good a movie to dismiss because of this issue, and I personally just do my best to think of those scenes as an unfortunate part of history. I bet there is a loooad of things we would be horrified that went on in the making of less obvious films even now.

Re: Horror Movies

Sat Oct 23, 2010 9:36 am

backtrack wrote:I try my best to ignore or disregard hype

Me too . . . ooops, wrong thread! :twisted:

Re: Horror Movies

Sat Oct 23, 2010 11:52 am

netflix has a bunch of good stuff going on right now.. I watched Vampyres last night.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 1:00 am

I remember the video for Skinny Puppy's Worlock which included several clips from Suspiria, Four Flies on Grey Velvet, Tenebrae, Phenomena, Opera, Demons, Eraserhead, The Beyond, etc.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 2:39 am

Eraserhead is my shit!!

So how terrible was the new Elm St.?? What a disaster.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 9:23 am

"Wolf Creek" was released at the peak of all the critical talk about "torture porn" and unfortunately got sort of lumped in with other movies of the time (e.g. "Hostel") which weren't nearly as good. "Wolf Creek" is hard for some people to take because of the cruelty, but as horror films go, it's got a lot more intelligence and integrity than most that get cranked out these days. John Jarrat's performance of Mick Taylor is excellent. I like the way the film builds up some backstory for the young travelers before the bad things start happening. Usually in horror you don't really care about the victims much. If you like horror and haven't seen this one yet, check it out. Scary and memorable.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 9:45 am

Dean wrote:"Wolf Creek" was released at the peak of all the critical talk about "torture porn" and unfortunately got sort of lumped in with other movies of the time (e.g. "Hostel") which weren't nearly as good. "Wolf Creek" is hard for some people to take because of the cruelty, but as horror films go, it's got a lot more intelligence and integrity than most that get cranked out these days. John Jarrat's performance of Mick Taylor is excellent. I like the way the film builds up some backstory for the young travelers before the bad things start happening. Usually in horror you don't really care about the victims much. If you like horror and haven't seen this one yet, check it out. Scary and memorable.


^ You are absolutely right - Wolf Creek did get lumped in with crap like Hostel. The 'torture porn' genre seemed to forget about things like plot, unfortunately, and seemed to assume that the audience wasn't interested in any kind of story - rather a loosely strung together chain of sex and gore (not mutually exclusive) sequences.

The total 'out there' depravity of Mick Taylor in Wolf Creek put me in mind of the relentless horror of the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre - which was one of the reasons for which TCM got banned for so long.

I think Wolf Creek definitely deserves to be re-evaluated - and as you say, it is a very memorable and scary piece of film making.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 9:54 am

frass wrote:
Dean wrote:"Wolf Creek" was released at the peak of all the critical talk about "torture porn" and unfortunately got sort of lumped in with other movies of the time (e.g. "Hostel") which weren't nearly as good. "Wolf Creek" is hard for some people to take because of the cruelty, but as horror films go, it's got a lot more intelligence and integrity than most that get cranked out these days. John Jarrat's performance of Mick Taylor is excellent. I like the way the film builds up some backstory for the young travelers before the bad things start happening. Usually in horror you don't really care about the victims much. If you like horror and haven't seen this one yet, check it out. Scary and memorable.


^ You are absolutely right - Wolf Creek did get lumped in with crap like Hostel. The 'torture porn' genre seemed to forget about things like plot, unfortunately, and seemed to assume that the audience wasn't interested in any kind of story - rather a loosely strung together chain of sex and gore (not mutually exclusive) sequences.

The total 'out there' depravity of Mick Taylor in Wolf Creek put me in mind of the relentless horror of the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre - which was one of the reasons for which TCM got banned for so long.

I think Wolf Creek definitely deserves to be re-evaluated - and as you say, it is a very memorable and scary piece of film making.


This movie is definitely in my top ten. It is soo underrated. The first time I ever watched it I was actually thinking that it was going to be about aliens or something too, haha. All because of the crater part. With no knowledge of what the movie was it really felt like it was going in that direction. Silly me. I think there is a lot of depth to this movie and filmed extremely well too.

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 10:01 am

^ Glad there's some fans of Wolf Creek on here. When I saw it, I had little idea of what I was getting into;
the film purposefully makes you second guess what might happen - like the idea of aliens etc... and then it all
kicks off! I guess it's also in my top ten horror films as well...

Re: Horror Movies

Sun Oct 24, 2010 11:27 am

frass wrote:This is a great thread - makes me realise I need to see a lot of stuff listed here...

It might seem lame to some real horror-freaks on here - but I found Wolf Creek to be
pretty scary - and I'm a big fan of the original Halloween and Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Love the original of The Omen, and The Exorcist. I think these are all classics.

Really going to check out some of the recommendations on here... I think I'm missing
out. I saw Let the right one in - and I thought it was just so-so... but people went mad
for it...

Some of Enter The Void is pretty horrific...


I'm curious as to what you thought was horrific in Enter The Void?

Re: Horror Movies

Mon Oct 25, 2010 2:51 pm

^ I think the repetitive footage of the accident involving the main characters as children - especially the sequence
towards the end of the film - was horrific and distressing - especially as you have to wonder what was necessary to evoke such a response on film from such young children.

But it's certainly not a "horror film" - but still a bleak and disturbing film.

(sorry if this is a bit elusive - didn't want to spoil the film for anyone who hasn't seen it )

Re: Horror Movies

Tue Oct 26, 2010 12:26 am

Was anyone else affected by Martyrs as much as I was? I didn't know what to do for quite a while after that movie... I literally just sat down and did nothing.

Re: Horror Movies

Tue Oct 26, 2010 3:51 am

Myself and apparently a few others were. Brilliant film, just the way it pulls the rug from under your feet halfway through is a stroke of genius in my opinion.

Re: Horror Movies

Tue Oct 26, 2010 6:11 am

Since I'm a glutton for pain I plan to watch "Survival of the Dead" this week and then follow it up with the new "Walking Dead" show which should make up for Romero's crap.

Re: Horror Movies

Wed Oct 27, 2010 9:27 am

watched FROZEN last night and def enjoyed it. what a fucked up situation to go through...

Re: Horror Movies

Wed Oct 27, 2010 1:16 pm

Greasebat wrote:netflix has a bunch of good stuff going on right now.. I watched Vampyres last night.



I watched Vampyres last night.Also watched Let Sleeping Corpses Lie for the first time.I cant believe it eluded me for so many years.Such a cool flick.
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