RKMBs
Posted By: the G-man Obligatory Halloween Horror Movie Thread - 2009-10-31 4:37 PM
Martin Scorsese offers his picks for the 11 scariest films of all time
  • 1. THE HAUNTING

    “You may not believe in ghosts but you cannot deny terror!” was the tagline for this absolutely terrifying 1963 Robert Wise picture about the investigation of a house plagued by violently assaultive spirits.

    2. ISLE OF THE DEAD

    There’s a moment in this Val Lewton picture, about plague victims trapped on an island during the Greek civil war, that never fails to scare me. let’s just say that it involves premature burial.

    3. THE UNINVITED

    Another, more benign haunted house picture, set in England, no less atmospheric than The Haunting—the tone is very delicate, and the sense of fear is woven into the setting, the gentility of the characters.

    4. THE ENTITY

    Barbara Hershey plays a woman who is brutally raped and ravished by an invisible force in this truly terrifying picture. The banal settings, the California-modern house, accentuate the unnerving quality.

    5. DEAD OF NIGHT

    A British classic: four tales told by four strangers mysteriously gathered in a country house, each one extremely disquieting, climaxing with a montage in which elements from all the stories converge into a crescendo of madness. Like The Uninvited, it’s very playful…and then it gets under your skin.

    6. THE CHANGELING

    Another haunted house movie, filled with sadness and dread. George C. Scott, recovering from the death of his wife and child, discovers the angry ghost of another dead child in the mansion where he’s staying.

    7. THE SHINING

    I never read the Stephen King novel, I have no idea how faithful it is or isn’t, but Kubrick made a majestically terrifying movie, where what you don’t see or comprehend shadows every move the characters make.

    8. THE EXORCIST

    A classic, endlessly parodied, very familiar— and it’s as utterly horrifying as it was the day it came out. That room—the cold, the purple light, the demonic transformations: it really haunts you.

    9. NIGHT OF THE DEMON

    Jacques Tourneur made this picture about ancient curses near the end of his career, but it’s as potent as his films for Val Lewton. Forget the demon itself—again, it’s what you don’t see that’s so powerful.

    10. THE INNOCENTS

    This Jack Clayton adaptation of The Turn of the Screw is one of the rare pictures that does justice to Henry James. It’s beautifully crafted and acted, immaculately shot (by Freddie Francis), and very scary.

    11. PSYCHO

    Again, it’s so familiar that you think: great movie, but it’s not so scary anymore. Then you watch it…and quickly start thinking again. The shower…the swamp…the relationship between mother and son—it’s extremely disturbing on so many levels. It’s also a great work of art.


He seems a little overly influenced by what he saw as a kid.
does he have some kinda beef with romero? some conspicuously absent flicks on that list...
Posted By: Rob Re: Obligatory Halloween Horror Movie Thread - 2009-10-31 7:19 PM
he's a romerist
Posted By: allan1 Re: Obligatory Halloween Horror Movie Thread - 2009-10-31 7:47 PM
Don't care much for that stuff anyway.Here's my Halloween must watch(These can all be found on the Universal Legacy Collection DVDs):
Dracula(Bela Lugosi)
The Mummy(Boris Karloff)
Frankenstein(Boris Karloff)
The Wolf Man(Lon Chaney Jr.)
Creature From the Black Lagoon
The Invisible Man(Claude Raines)
Dracula's Daughter
Son of Dracula
House of Dracula
House of Frankenstein
Frankenstein Meets the Wolf-Man
Bride of Frankenstein
Ghost of Frankenstein
The Mummy's Hand
The Mummy's Tomb
The Mummy's Ghost
The Mummy's Curse
Revenge of the Creature
The Creature Walks Among Us
She-Wolf of London

I'm a fan of classic horror.Anything made after the 50's doesn't interst me too much.
or does it...
Posted By: allan1 Re: Obligatory Halloween Horror Movie Thread - 2009-11-01 4:01 PM
....it doesn't.

Rob is gay.
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