42 Horror Movies Everyone Should See.
Not a terribly wide-ranging list. Definitely US-centric.
'War Stories'
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.
42 Horror Movies Everyone Should See.
Not a terribly wide-ranging list. Definitely US-centric.
Burnt Offerings fucked me up as a kid. Fucked me right up. Nightmares for days.
Burnt Offerings fucked me up as a kid. Fucked me right up. Nightmares for days.
It's one of those horror movies that's famous for giving people nightmares long after they've seen it.
Burnt Offerings fucked me up as a kid. Fucked me right up. Nightmares for days.
Unfortunately, it doesn't hold up, at least not for me. That seems to happen with so many movies that scared me as a kid. I was gratified that The Haunting (which pre-Suspiria was my biggest horror-movie-trauma event) still managed to give me the creeps when I saw it.
Oh, and speaking of Suspiria, is this the dumbest idea ever? [link]
I always confuse Burnt Offerings with Harvest Home, I think because Bette Davis was in both of them, they both feature young couples, New England villages, etc.
Harvest Home didn't make a *great* TV movie, but man, the book was chilling.
Early 70s horror? The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, people.
Also: The Last House on the Left. Theatre of Blood. And maybe High Plains Drifter; it's certainly more of a horror movie than it is a western.
I Spit on Your Grave
I was going to include that, but it was 1978. And Last House on the Left is almost the same movie.
oops I was thinking 70's. I missed the 1975 cutoff.
Does Jaws count as horror?