Kathy,
that seems consistent with the Johnny Depp version, without the trucks of chocolate. We saw all the kids at the end with one notably blueberry colored and one stretched quite a lot.
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.
Kathy,
that seems consistent with the Johnny Depp version, without the trucks of chocolate. We saw all the kids at the end with one notably blueberry colored and one stretched quite a lot.
ION, The 25 Scariest Moments in Non-Horror Movies
We *just* did a poll about the scariest non-horror movie WW&tCF made it as did Requiem. Another one that we all wanted for the poll.
Time Bandits.
Here's the list
A Clockwork Orange
Basic Instinct
Blue Velvet
Dead Calm
Deliverance
Fatal Attraction
Heavenly Creatures
Jaws
Kalifornia
Misery
Mommie Dearest
Mulholland Dr.
No Country for Old Men
Requiem for a Dream
Time Bandits
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Oh, Dead Calm, Jaws, and Misery are all excellent calls.
No Country for Old Men
I thought this would be on that other list. That movie was scary as hell.
I thought Jaws and Misery were already horror movies.
I think Jaws is probably Action/Adventure, and Misery is probably categorized as Suspense or Thriller. Which is a fine line, it's true.
Clockwork Orange is also freaky scary, I forgot to say. That's a movie I can't really watch.
I think Jaws is probably Action/Adventure, and Misery is probably categorized as Suspense or Thriller. Which is a fine line, it's true.
Yeah, I can see that. Though I think people think of them both as "scary movies." The question then becomes, what makes a horror movie a horror movie? Are all scary movies horror movies? Are all horror movies scary movies?
Ladies and Gentlemen - start your Venn diagrams!
One of the best "jump out of my skin" moments I've ever had watching a film was during the big finale of Wait Until Dark, when (whitefonted for those who haven't seen it yet) Alan Arkin leaps out at Audrey Hepburn in the darkened apartment. Every time I show that movie to someone who hasn't seen it before, I make sure we turn off the lights before starting it, and then watch them to see their reaction to that scene.
I think the purpose of a movie needs to be to scare to qualify as horror. Or at least to focus on fear and, uh, horror.
The purpose of Jaws wasn't to scare. It was a classic conflict of man vs. beast/nature. It just happened to be scary, too. And Misery is really about obsession, or a twisted look at love.
Clockwork Orange, though, might qualify as horror under my definition.