Buffista Movies 4: Straight to Video
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
There was a tiny mark to denote where each piece fell on the lab floor.
Oh yeah, I remember that. That was damn funny.
My brain must be stuck on "evil" today. Now I'm wondering if any film, etc has shown someone falling into a vat of mercury. Because you'd pretty much just float on top of the mercury (very little of your body would be submerged) because mercury is so dense. Like, even steel will float halfway out of mercury. So putting a human in mercury would just look damn weird. Plus, you know, somewhat toxic to the human.
Because you'd pretty much just float on top of the mercury (very little of your body would be submerged) because mercury is so dense.
I remember an article in National Geographic on mercury (this is probably all the way back in the 70's) where they had a photo of a man, dressed in heavy clothing (boots, gloves, no exposed skin except his head) sitting on top of a pool of mercury. Pretty freaky. This is also an article where they went into how hatters used to use a lot of mercury in their business which is why the Mad Hatter was mad.
I was about 8 years old the first time I saw The Birds, and that moment when the birds first attack, where Tippi Hedron was trapped in the phone booth, freaked my shit right out.
Another early super-creepy moment was in the original The Haunting, when Julie Harris and what's-her-name sit alone in the room with the huge crashing sound outside their door.
Lessee, other favorite creepy film moments:
- In Nosferatu, when the vampire simply appears in the windows of that warehouse he's holed up in
- In Dreyer's Vampyr, the extended sequence in which the leading guy is buried alive
- When Carrie blows up the gym.
- Eyes Without A Face: the face surgery. Yeesh.
- OK, I'm about to run out to a meeting but wanted to also mention the my other favorite horror flicks are: Ravenous, The Shining, Night of the Living Dead, Dead of Winter, Evil Dead II, the Innocents, the Texas Chainsaw Massacre (the original one, natch), Carpenter's The Thing, Freaks, and M. Maybe The Hill Have Eyes, too, for the sheer queso.
M -- the chase scene.
The Lodger (talkie version) -- the lodger talks about his brother.
The Unknown -- learning how far the armless man has gone to keep his secret.
I also imagine that the Lon Chaney Phantom of the Opera would qualify (the first time you see the Phantom's face) if you're unspoiled.
(Edited to fix typo)
Our first sight of Norman's "mother" in the basement rocking chair in
Psycho.
Yikes!
Oh, yes. What Robin said. Especially since the shower scene is so well-known that there's no shock factor.
ETA: And the look on Norman's face in the last scene. BRRRRRRRR!
ETA: And the look on Norman's face in the last scene. BRRRRRRRR!
With a very fast and subtle super-imposition of Mrs. Bates' corpse over it just as it fades to the swamp.
In the last few minutes of The Blair Witch Project, when you see Mike standing in the corner. Don't ask me why, but just thinking about that scene freaks me out.
Yup yup yup. That movie was boring in the beginning, but the last half of the film, the tension ramped up slowly but inexorably, and then that last run through the house (with the bloody handprints on the walls) with the last image of Mike in the corner was completely mindblowing. Actually, I didn't understand what exactly was happening, so when the lights came up I asked my sister what he was doing. When she simply said, "Standing in the corner," I shrieked, "Oh, my GOD!!", which made her laugh at me.
Those damn flying monkeys in Wizard of Oz were a guaranteed "hide behind the couch" image from my childhood. Carrie covered in blood at the prom was also unforgettable.
My moment from
The Haunting
is the same scene, but not the attack on the door. It's when Elenor says, "Theo, don't squeeze so! You're hurting my hand!" and then it's revealed that nobody was holding her hand.
I watched
Wizard of Oz
religiously every year (except the year
The Wiz
came out, when I went to see that instead), and it didn't scare me...much.
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang,
now THAT was hide-behind-the-chair material. Also the Grinch.
The Wizard of Oz
has come up at least three times now....