Thanks, Strega.
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
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.
Heh. I saw you got it while I was posting -- now you're just humoring me!
You're right again! Thanks!
runs away
I haven't seen The Uninvited, The Tenant, and Carnival of Souls. I think Robin's right, Don't Look Now may be the most under-your-skin creeptastic of all of them, but I find The Innocents, The Haunting, and The Others all to be good goose-bump movies. The Shining is brilliant, but not so much scary as disturbingly strange.
The director's cut of The Exorcist that was re-released a few years ago watered most of the scares down by having those CGI demon face flashes everywhere just as the slow quiet tension was ratcheting up. It was like playing a 2 hour game of "Where's Waldo" with Pazuzu.
Regan's spider crawl down the stairs remains one of the freakiest things I've ever seen, though.
I haven't seen a single movie on that list...shows ya how much I avoid the scary-for-its-own-sake flicks.
But In Dreams, A Stir of Echoes and Jacob's Ladder freaked me all the way out.
LOVELOVELOVE The Univited. Creepy and lovely.
I love In Dreams. Both creepy and dark and vengeful. Plus Neil Jordan does great with fairy tale dreaminess (in this instance gone horribly awry).
Halloween scared me more than any other horror movie. But I saw it on its first run and before its impact had been watered down by endless slasher rehashes.
Don't Look Now is just a great movie. And, like In Dreams plays on parental loss.
I love The Haunting but generally didn't find it that scary - excepting the aforementioned scene.
I just saw An Inconvenient Truth (Al Gore's documentary about the environment), and I am so incredibly depressed.
It's an excellent movie -- basically just a concert film of one of his lectures, which some random biographical stuff thrown in to break up the pacing -- but...we're not going to have a planet in 50 years. And I don't think we're far enough along in our space program to do without one.
So yeah. Everyone should see this.
we're not going to have a planet in 50 years.
Will nuking Iran speed things up?
Anyway, yeah, I really want to see AIT....