You ever seen 1408? Great movie, it's a Stephen King. I think I'm gonna rewatch that one tonight
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Watched this last night because of your comment, thank you!
I love when movies get multiple endings. Not a horror movie, but The Butterfly Effect is my favourite example of this.
Creepshow (1982), best horror movie ever
The Thing from 1982 and Annihilation are two of my favourites. The Thing is just well shot and interesting and Annihilation has some gorgeous surreal visuals.
If you haven't seen Color Out of Space you'd probably enjoy it as well!
Oh yeah I've seen it. Watched it and the Five Nights at Freddy's style movie Willy's Wonderland when I was doing a little bit of a Nicolas Cage binge.
Mandy is also worth a watch
If you haven't already, check out the V/H/S/ series if you're a fan of anthology films and/or found footage. It's easily my favorite FF series. The newest film, V/H/S/ 1985 came out last week and is awesome, but you can't go wrong with any of them (except maybe the third one).
I'd personally recommend VHS 1994 to start with because I think it's the most accessible and least offensive entry in the franchise
There's a few similar mini series like the ABCs of Death and Holidays. I think both feature a different team for each short which is an interesting premise
Just looked up 1999, looks like it was co-written and directed by Flying Lotus.
Will definitely have to check the series out!
Midsommar is one of my favorites, or you could try It Follows if you haven't seen either of those. Midsommar is a slow burn intrigue sort of thing, but quite realistic, most of the most horrifying things about it could happen to you for real.
It Follows is a very creative movie, very much about the fear of being chased by an entity that never stops, extremely interesting premise
I feel like Hereditary and Midsommer have similar vibes for some reason even though the plots are not at all similar
Same director, probably what you're feeling there is a sum of little touches. I liked the first half of Hereditary quite a bit, didn't really like where it ended up, got too fantastical for my tastes, I like pulp horror too, but I really really like horror that's plausible
I did not know they shared a director that's interesting
Midsommar is great but I rank it a lot lower on my tier list after watching the original 70s Wicker Man
Check out Kill List
My favorites are mostly classics: Alien, Return of the Living Dead, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978 version has Leonard Nimoy!), Shaun of the Dead, The Thing (1982), Tremors, and Hellraiser usually make my rewatch list.
Poltergeist for the best classic, imo. The acting performances are superb and the scares are still so effective.
A lot of contemporary horror is psychological, sometimes with one or two gory/violent/jump scare scenes. If you like that, watch recent ones like Talk to Me, Relic or the Babadook (all Aussie incidentally).
Hereditary is probably the best horror of the past decade, and before that, my 21st century favourite was Kill List. But there were so many more excellent horrors, slashers, psychological thrillers, and ghostly dramas last century.
Night of the Living Dead invented the zombie genre and is still probably my favourite movie of all time. Dawn of the Dead skewers consumerism and is similar but in lurid colour. The slasher craze of the 80s started with Halloween in '79 and continued with Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street and the many sequels from those franchises.
Other good ones in no particular order: High Tension aka Switchblade Romance, Dead Snow, Eden Lake, It Follows, Green Room, Hush, The Strangers, Martyrs, and if you're really looking to punish yourself AND read subtitles, check out the works of Gaspar Noe, especially Irreversible. Deeply disturbing. Enjoy!
Hereditary is good, but man, I just don't understand the insane hype around it. It was an enjoyable watch, but it wasn't all that much better than the typical modern horror movie.
Different strokes, I guess.
I rewatched it recently and became aware of how much I'd missed the first time, which made it a rich experience up there with some of the best films of any genre. It's pretty striking. Sometimes a universally respected piece of cinema doesn't grab me either though - a horror example that comes to mind is The Exorcist.
I agree with the other person that it is one of my favorites as it's one of the only movies to ever actually creep me out (though not a fan of the ending) as I feel horror should.
My wife is a big horror fan, and I can say that a majority of the ones I've seen with her are extremely predictable and rely on cheap tricks like jump scares most of the time, so outside of campy horror stuff or classics that I grew up with, it just doesn't do anything for me.
A little older, but Braindead (aka Dead/Alive) is a really great early 1990’s horror. It is one of Peter Jackson’s earlier films. It is a really good body horror that has a good sense of humor.
You can stream the whole movie on YouTube.
I'm a fan of slasher flicks! I love the Scream franchise the most. Nightmare on Elm Street, Friday the 13th, and Halloween are all classic slasher franchises, though because there's so many there's some real terrible movies in there (Jason X...omg). But the crummy camp is part of the charm.
The original Texas Chainsaw Massacre is also real good
Jason X is an absolute gem and blows the roof off anything that came after Part V. Also worth mentioning that Friday the 13th (2009) is an amazing movie in its own right and one of the best slashers of the 2000s imo
Event Horizon.
If you haven't seen any of the classic late 60s/early 70s horror movies, they are worth checking out. 'Rosemary's Baby', 'The Exorcist, 'Don't Look Now', or 'The Omen' are all fantastic.
Nope.
If you didn't want to answer, you didn't need to write a comment, jeez.
(Jk, Nope is a great one).
Here are a few worth watching in no particular order or selection
I occasionally do Halloween film marathons in October (haven't gotten around to it this year, unfortunately), but if you want some good recommendations, check out the archives of my review blog.
If you're on mobile, scroll to the bottom of the page and click "View web version." On the right is a Blog Archive category with dates. Expand each year and click on October. You'll see a list of all my scary movie reviews.
Be aware, some reviews have spoilers. I'm pretty good about mentioning it in advance in the review, but you can check at the end of the review, in the Labels section. If it says spoiler, avoid that review unless you want that film spoiled for you.
Hmm... maybe I should make a Halloween movie marathon label so people can quickly browse scary movie reviews. I'll work on that later today.
I don't have many movie recommendations, but I can't express how much I enjoyed the miniseries that Mike Flanagan has on Netflix. My order of favorites being Haunting of Hill House, Midnight Mass, and Midnight Mass. They're all excellent though! He also is coming out with his take on The Fall of the House of Usher that premiered on the 12th. Haven't gotten around to it to give my take though!
Host (2020) short and fun
Smile
A less popular one that was surprisingly awesome was His House. Its a Netflix movie but you should be able to find it a few other places as well (🏴☠️). I really liked it. Unique, creepy, and pretty well made. Definitely recommend.
As Above, So Below.
Basically: trying to find the philosopher's stone inside the Paris catacombs: hijinks ensues.
The Bay
The Ritual
Van Diemens Land
Smile. Seems cheesy, I know, but it's actually real good. The plot is that someone is trying to stop a curse that cause people to kill themselves, but the thing is, it's like a virus, so when someone sees the infected person kill themselves, they become infected and do the same.
Smile was pretty good. It was definitely put together well.
Autopsy of Jane Doe was very memorable.
Not a movie, but if you want scary you should try browsing real estate websites, the prices are truly horrific.
It's like "The Road" but so much worse.
not too scary but thought id drop a recommendation for dellamorte dellamore
Basically any documentary about climate change. No jump scares, but leaves you with an existential dread that fiction can't just quite match.
Yes, quite horrifying and to add the impending doom vibe - check out Bill Watersons new comic “Mysteries”
Speaking of documentaries Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is a pretty good meta horror movie.