Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

My Must-View Halloween Picks

Hey guys! So sorry that it's been almost a year since my last post but it's been a hectic, busy year. However, I wanted to put something up for Halloween, so this is just a list of my personal picks for films I feel complete the season for me as much as pumpkin carving, eating candy corn, raking leaves, or pick up games of football. If I don't watch some of these, the season just doesn't quite feel right.

I'll include small footnotes on the ones I feel I need to comment on.

Here's my Halloween post from last year: http://mattcottermovies.blogspot.com/2016/11/my-halloween-viewing-guide.html




Horror Standards:

The Exorcist (1973): This may not be deserving of the title of scariest movie ever made, depending on your tastes, but it is still one of the most effective and engaging horror films, blending the genre with drama for a sense of respectability and authenticity rarely seen these days in the genre.

Halloween (1978): The quintessential Halloween film, which still packs in some chilling moments despite its budget and age showing, in no small part due to the performances of Donald Sutherland and Nick Castle, and the iconic score by the director John Carpenter.

The Thing (1982)

Dawn of the Dead (1978)

The Shining (1980)

An American Werewolf in London (1981)

A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

Scream (1996)

Scream 2 (1997)

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)

The Blair Witch Project (1999)

Hellraiser (1987)

The Omen (1976)

Child's Play (1988)

Dracula (1931)

Frankenstein (1931)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931)

The Invisible Man (1933)

Cult Favorites: 

Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988)

Nightbreed (1990)

Trick r Treat (2007)

Freaks (1932)

Evil Dead 2 (1987)

Candyman (1993)

Would You Rather? (2012)

Braindead/Dead-Alive (1992)

The Frighteners (1996)

Re-Animator (1985)

Return of the Living Dead (1987)

Jeepers Creepers (2001)

The Lost Boys (1987)

The Hunger (1983)

The Fly (1958 or 1986)

The X-Files (TV series 1993-2001)

The Blob (1958)

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1978)

Donnie Darko (2001)

The Crow (1994)

The Monster Squad (1987)

Tales from the Crypt (TV series 1989-1996)

Creepshow (1983)

Nostalgic Picks:

Hocus Pocus (1993): Despite the at times cringe-worthy humor and overacting, and very early 90s feel, it has unmistakable and strange charm and authenticity that redeems it completely, while being strangely very entertaining

It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966)

The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949): You can choose to skip the Mr. Toad segment, as though it's good in its own right and has something of a fall feel with the color palate, it's not really the segment that best sets the tone- that would be the classic adaptation of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Casper (series of shorts, or 1995 film)

Mickey's House of Villains (2001)

The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

Corpse Bride (2005)

Scooby-Doo! Where Are You? (1969-1972)

Goosebumps (TV series 1995-1998)

Are You Afraid of the Dark? (TV series 1990-1996, 1999-2000)

The Munsters (TV series 1964-1966)

Critters (1988)

The Witches (1990)

Stephen King's IT (1990)

Comedy:

Beetlejuice (1988)

The Addams Family (1991)

The Addams Family Values (1993)

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, episodes "Who Got Dee Pregnant?" (2008) and "The Maureen Ponderosa Wedding Massacre" (2012)

Shaun of the Dead (2004)

Young Frankenstein (1974)

South Park, episodes "Pinkeye" (1997), "Spookyfish" (1998), "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery" (1999), "The Death of Eric Cartman" (2005), "Cartman's Incredible Gift" (2004), "Hell on Earth 2006" (2006), "A Nightmare on Face Time" (2012), and "Sons of Witches" (2017)

Ghostbusters (1984)

The Simpsons- Treehouse of Horror (TV episodes, 1990-present): standouts

Odd Ones (not really cult nor nostalgic nor classic): 

Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)

The Faculty (1998)

Interview with the Vampire (1994)

Eight Legged Freaks (2002)

Sinister (2012)

The Cabin in the Woods (2012)

Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments (2003): This five-part 2003 TV special may have had sequels, but this one is still the best. Mixing in interviews from horror icons, genre nerds, renowned critics, comedians, and just random celebrities, it creates a real cultural portrait for some of these movies and their impact to not just the horror fandom, but the general public as well.


Happy viewing, and Happy Halloween!



Images:


By Source, Fair use,

By Warner Bros. - Impawards, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12964665

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10426100

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5698901

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

My Halloween Viewing Guide

As Halloween season seems to get earlier and earlier every year I figured I'd put out there my own personal favorite films (in addition to continuing a yearly tradition of giving a "top of the decade" list) and organize them into a sort of viewing guide for anyone looking to do some sort of crazy Halloween marathon, which I've always considered doing but never found the right time to.  Here goes nothing. Sorry this is late! Happy (belated) Halloween!

First, a few briefings, I would recommend from my own personal experience that if you wish to turn this marathon into a viewing party of sorts, to seriously consider limiting the amount of people you invite, and seriously think about who you are inviting. Whenever I've hosted a viewing party with more than 3-4 people, and these people aren't necessarily big into movies or binge-watching, the evening often devolves into just talking while movies play in the background. Now, I love going to social events with friends and parties as much as anyone, but if you actually want to watch some movies with friends, I suggest you pick a group of friends who would be ready to commit to several hours of movie watching, with maybe some funny banter.
    Now if you want to do a Halloween party, I recommend you do that separately. You can do both, but don't try to blend them because then the party/social atmosphere always eclipses the viewing aspect. I had this problem just last year, and surreally, in James Rolfe's terrific video here: http://cinemassacre.com/2015/10/31/celebrating-halloween/ , he and his friend Mike Matei hit the nail right on the head about my problem literally a day later, as this vid was posted on Halloween.
    Even when I have hosted a viewing party with friends who love movies recently, and as fun as it was, we still only watched a total of three movies. Why? Well, it often happens that we would end up talking at length ABOUT movies but never actually settling in and watching one, so hours ticked by like nothing. So if you're really thinking of strapping down for some ultimate Halloween marathon, I would suggest considering going solo or having an equally die-hard friend or two.
    Also, no one says this marathon has to be done on the date of Halloween. For one, there's lots of cool stuff to do like going to parties, going to corn mazes and haunted houses and such on the day other than sitting around watching TV, so you may consider doing it a day or two before OR just within the month of October.
     And you can spread this out into several days, too, or a few shorter bursts of bingeing is what I tend to do around the season, so feel free to mix and match or do whatever, this is by no means a definitive listing, and no one should be expected to follow this schedule to a rigid extent otherwise it's no fun at all.
    As for the films selected, these are personal favorites, and while there's plenty on here that others have on their top Halloween movies lists, there are some I have yet to find on anybody's lists. Also: you'll find not every film on this list is a horror classic or even particularly scary (or objectively good), but like I said these are personal picks, so some are nostalgic for me, others I have a genuine respect for, some are guilty pleasures, you get the gist. And for me, Halloween is all about finding that right balance of fun and scary, so I actually tend to gravitate less towards truly unnerving or disturbing films around the season.
    Just because this is a Halloween list doesn't mean a "horror" list. I love movies like The Witch and The Devil's Rejects but that doesn't mean I feel like watching them around Halloween. They just aren't really part of that fun vibe that Halloween has. Sure, something like Eraserhead or Requiem for a Dream or Irreversible may be gut-wrenching to watch, but so are a lot of other movies and you don't see those showing up on Halloween lists (not saying these films do usually show up on such lists but I think you know what I'm going for).
   Here are some videos by others I enjoy listening to about movies for their Halloween picks:

Chris Stuckmann-
(Original two-parter)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYIz6Mexxy8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuC-A2lHigo

(Guilty Pleasures)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvoG9YYtfNs

(Binge-Watch)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tijMPZFAul0

YourMovieSucks-
(Underrated horror list; however, a lot of his picks are more geared towards the genuinely chilling, so if that's not your cup of tea, or, like me, just don't think of those as "Halloween movies," maybe just save this list for another day)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPc5DGsudzs

   Now with that monster (seriously, no pun intended here, it just happened that way) list of stuff out of the way, time to delve into my picks.

1. Start the evening off light: 

I recommend something along the lines of nostalgic or ironic viewing with something like Hocus Pocus or Halloweentown, something dumb and airy and not exactly requiring attentive viewing. This will give you time to chat amongst the boring parts and laugh at the dumb moments and just kick the marathon off.

Other options include: Scooby Doo! Where Are You?, Ernest Scared Stupid, The Witches, Casper, and The Halloween Tree, and really any of the in-hindsight-awful Disney Channel movies like Tower of Terror, Phantom of the Megaplex, or Don't Look Under the Bed; again, keeping with the nostalgia/non-serious theme, these little nuggets that evoke fond childhood memories as well as uncontrollable laughter at the bad acting and production values set the mood for the evening.

2. Treading into darker territory:

Now while I said there wouldn't be too many dark/disturbing movies, this is about as dark as I'll go, and this includes the balls-to-the-wall, campy, gruesome House of 1,000 Corpses, which is Rob Zombie's rock n' roll tribute to grindhouse cinema, and the short film Off Season. Now that short is genuinely chilling and well-produced, and I really put it on here because I feel it's kind of an unknown gem that doesn't take up much time (I believe it's about 12 minutes long), and can be found for free online.
   Other options include: Misery, the ever-praised adaptation of the Stephen King novel starring James Caan and Kathy Bates in a brilliant part which won her an Oscar; Hellraiser, Clive Barker's twisted journey into the underbelly of society, using a unique and interesting ideology and mythos and introducing the world to horror icon Pinhead, leader of the S&M demon troupe the Cenobites, is still as effective and eerie today as it was in 1987; Candyman, Clive Barker's equally nightmarish and disorienting vision of urban legend culture and the power of fear, featuring an understated and excellent performance by Tony Todd; May, Lucky McKee's debut and an equal-parts upsetting, awkward, funny, depressing, and frightening character study of a young woman whose lack of social skills leads her life to fall apart around here. While that sounds like more of a drama than a horror, I assure you McKee delivers on the chills, particularly in the Halloween-set finale, which, by the way, is spoiled in the trailers so just trust me, it's worth a look; Ju-On: The Grudge, the original Japanese version, and the only version I feel is worth a look, with a cool visual style and some very creepy concepts; The Blair Witch Project; forget the sequel (most people already have), forget the abysmal-looking reboot, and forget the Paranormal Activity films, this is found footage at its best. Funnily enough, I never thought of this as much of a Halloween movie, I always watch it over summer (that's when I first saw it, and I think the woods setting always contributed to me seeing it like a summer campfire story), but it definitely fits the feeling of a good scare. A lot of people feel it's more historically significant than genuinely a good movie, but I beg to differ, as I experienced it in the perfect way: I was in sixth grade, on a camping trip in a wooded area, with my friend, watching it on an old shitty VHS copy at night. If there was ever a way to see a movie, that was it, so I may be biased because of memories of how it first effected me, but the lore and the final moments of the film still stick with me to this day. Sinister and Insidious make solid picks as well from the past few years, but I rarely watch them around this season because I kind of tired them out through rewatches soon after I first saw them. V/H/S and V/H/S/2 are mixed bags, but each have some great individual shorts (the first has "Amateur Night," "10/31/1998," and "Second Honeymoon;" the second is far more thoroughly enjoyable, but "Safe Haven" in particular sticks out, followed by "A Ride in the Park" and "Slumber Party Alien Abduction"). Skip the abysmal third film. The ABCs of Death is far too mixed a bag for me, but look up some individual ones on YouTube if you wish, just look up the sypnoses on Wikipedia and make your own call.

3. Wash that bitter taste out with some so-bad-it's-good fare:
    While it may seem a bit counter-intuitive to follow up a negative ending to a film with a bad movie to boot but these films will provoke laughter, often intentionally, and sometimes unintentionally, and some even pack in some decent scares top top it off. These type of films include Jeepers Creepers, the Francis Ford Coppola-produced mystery thriller-turned-B-monster fest which actually has a really effective ending; Eight Legged Freaks, a tongue-in-cheek David Arquette vehicle following his success with Scream, which sees the star and a group of quirky townsfolk face off with goofy giant spiders in true 50's B-movie fashion; Killer Klowns from Outer Space, my personal favorite of this genre, which is exactly what it sounds like: aliens who looks like crazy clowns land on Earth in a beach town to harvest humans in cotton candy cocoons for food. It's crazy, self-aware, silly, while also packing in a few genuine scares and some awesome 1980's effects. One of my favorite films of all time also falls in here with The Blob, the fun, poppy drive-in classic starring Steve McQueen and featuring a number of iconic scenes and a uniquely basic monster: literally a blob of slime. I definitely recommend it, it's just a fun throwback to the 50's.
    Two nostalgic television shows I find are some of the best "so-bad-it's-funny" watches are Goosebumps, and Are You Afraid of the Dark? (though the latter has some more genuinely good moments than the former). Seriously, if you or your friends have an affinity for laughing at some trash than throw on some old Goosebumps episodes and prepare to laugh till your sides hurt. While it may be long, I also recommend the 1990 miniseries Stephen King's IT. Though you've probably seen it and remember being terrified as a kid, rest assured, the boring segments are well worth powering through to see some decent child performance and the most incredible Tim Curry performance since Rocky Horror, and I mean it, Curry is having such a blast just being absolutely ham-fisted and laughable as Pennywise the Dancing Clown. His borderline cum-face as he tells little Georgie how the balloons float and his ridiculous library rant at the adult Richie have me rolling on the floor every time.
     I would also throw in watching some old 50's films like Tarantula or Them!, perhaps the homage to the genre The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra, and Troll 2 as possible alternatives. Return of the Living Dead is also a good 80's-style, pure rock n roll party type movie where nothing is subtle and it's all just a blast. Anything from Troma Entertainment, which has produced some of the most hilariously debauched and ridiculous horror movies of all time, including The Toxic Avenger, Terror Firmer, and Poultrygeist, is a great pick. If you're looking for a real trip then definitely check out the nigh-forgotten late 70's special Halloween is Grinch Night, and if you want some low-budget camp fare look at Monsters Crash the Pajama Party, whose DVD features hours of Halloween party stuff like background music, radio ads, and old unreleased shorts, so a great investment.

4. The Classics (Or Critical Darlings):
Now of course for the obligatory, can't-skip-because-it's-tradition horror genre classics. These are films that everyone seems to love or at least appreciate on some level and these are my favorites from that vast selection. I would say you have to have a Romero zombie film, so out of those, Dawn of the Dead is the one to go with, though Night of the Living Dead and Day of the Dead come close, neither have quite the same amount of striking visuals and plethora of memorable moments and lines the sequel does. The social commentary may be obvious to current viewers and bit dated (mall culture is nowhere near the heights it once was), but this doesn't drag down the movie all that much because that's just one element. The Exorcist and The Omen are, of course, terrific choices which have starkly different tones to their endings, but both are incredibly ominous films that are about as "realistic" and effective as Satan-centered movies have ever been. The Shining, another classic from the visionary Kubrick, brings with it a sense of dread and tension which has been nearly unmatched in the 30-odd years since its release. An American Werewolf in London is a terrific choice as well as it perfectly blends some oddball humor and witty dialogue with a more realistic and urban take on the werewolf legend, with groundbreaking, award-winning effects which still are talked about to this day.

    Others to choose would be the original The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, which has a documentary-style, low-budget feel that puts you right with the characters, and has a still-terrifying portrayal of madness from the Sawyer family, played by Edwin Neal, Jim Siedow, and of course, Gunnar Hansen as Leatherface, still one of the most raw looks at insanity in film history. I would also throw out John Carpenter's The Thing as a great pick, as it is still an entertaining, slow-burning thrill ride with some very impressive effects and a cast of terrific character actors led by Kurt Russell. And the score by Western legend Ennio Morricone is fantastic for a man who, to my knowledge, never experimented with synth music before. The 1976 adaptation of Carrie from Brian DePalma which saw recognition of Sissy Spacek and Piper Laurie for their breathtaking interpretations of the tormented and tragic Carrie and her domineering, horrifying devout mother Margaret, is another classic which should be considered.

5. Transition into Slashers, and more Action-Oriented Fare: 

     I would say that my top choices for this genre would be Scream and Scream 2 (Scream 3 and 4 if you are a completionist), the original A Nightmare on Elm Street, Friday the 13th (either the 2009 version, the original, or anywhere between II and VIII, depending on if you want a quality slasher or just something to laugh at), and of course Hitchcock's Psycho. Peeping Tom is a more genuinely unsettling British film that is from the same era as Hitchcock, and some 80's cheese like The Burning and Prom Night is always welcome. As for action, I would recommend The Crow and Nightbreed. The Crow is not only set in Halloween season, but also has a Gothic style that fits perfectly in with the likes of Batman and Spawn, and is an entertaining cult thriller starring the late Brandon Lee (Bruce Lee's son), which would've definitely shot him to mainstream stardom had he not tragically died in an onset accident. Nightbreed (more specifically The Director's Cut), is Clive Barker's underrated if a bit uneven attempt at making another series of films, based on his short story "Cabal." It has some of that weirdness and "root for the monsters" feel that Tim Burton films do, while also packing in Barker's trademark gross-out imagery. It honestly balances tones between dark epic fantasy, horror, and a bit of superhero film with the final battle feeling torn straight from the pages of a comic book like Hellboy or Spawn.
Plus, it has cult classic filmmaker David Cronenberg in the role of a murderous psychiatrist with a uniquely creepy and cool mask, who is the foil to the main hero.
    Despite the holiday settings, Silent Night, Deadly Night and particularly A Christmas Story director Bob Clark's raw Black Christmas are great choices for classic cult slashers as well, though I personally save those with the likes of Gremlins and Krampus for the Christmas season.
     Some more cult movies that are fantastic choices for fast-paced entertainment are Sam Raimi's classic horror-comedies The Evil Dead , Evil Dead 2 and Army of Darkness (though the earlier two are more horror, while Army is where the comedy really came out). Raimi practically invented "splatstick" (a subgenre which combines Three Stooges-esque slapstick with excessive violence and gore), which continued with Peter Jackson's early work like in Braindead/Dead-Alive (which cranks up both the vulgar humor and the gruesome violence from Evil Dead to unbelievable levels).

    Saw, the first film, is a terrific little genre thriller with a cool gimmick and a stellar cast of character actors like Cary Elwes, Danny Glover, Michael Emerson, Shawnee Smith, Tobin Bell, and Ken Leung (a few Lost alumni there). The sequels get progressively stupider but also more "satisfying" from a slasher film sense/for pure entertainment factor.

6. Try some comedies and parodies:

    For this spot of lighter fare, some of my favorites are The Simpsons: Treehouse of Horror annual specials (my personal picks from this vast selection are I, V, VI, XIII, and XIX). The parodies are amusing, the stories short enough to digest easily, and the wit of the writing staff at an all-time high. They just have so much fun with these specials and they're at this point the only reason people watch the more recent episodes.
     The Family Guy special episode "Three Kings" isn't really specifically horror but features some amusing adaptation of Stephen King works so I like it. It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia features some good Halloween episodes with "Who Got Dee Pregnant?" (extensive flashbacks to a costume party at the bar) and "The Maureen Ponderosa Wedding Massacre" (I believe their first proper Halloween episode). The character-driven dark comedy is so perfect already and it's just an excuse to watch it honestly. I'm a sucker for Sunny. And South Park; speaking of, they have some classic Halloween episodes with "Cartman's Incredible Gift," "Spookyfish," "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery," "A Nightmare on Face Time," "Pinkeye," "Hell on Earth 2006," and "Goth Kids 3: Dawn of the Posers."
    Other classic spooky sitcoms like The Addams Family and The Munsters provide some campy nostalgia, along with TV horror hostesses like Elvira and Vampira, and the Bay Area's old Creature Feature specials. Classic sitcoms like Roseanne, Family Matters, Perfect Strangers, and Home Improvement, as well as newer ones like The Office, have some decent if outlandish Halloween specials, though the Roseanne ones are the best and most grounded. The BBC provides some twisted black comedy in the form of Psychoville and The League of Gentlemen, which are great for lovers of British comedy and the blackest of morbid humor, like myself.
    Tim Burton's Beetlejuice and Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein are indisputable classics of Halloween comedy, still being screened around the season to this day, so these are the most obvious choices, and they definitely still hold up. I would say The Goonies might also be a good choice, though it hasn't aged very well at all. Gremlins I see as more of a Christmas film so I wouldn't include it myself.
    Tales from the Crypt is gorey and has some more chilling episodes, but the general camp of the series gives it enough leway to fall into this category. Continuing in the tradition of tributing EC comics, George Romero, Stephen King, and Tom Savini's Creepshow is a fun, visually striking, and star-studded homage to the classic horror comics of the 50's. Fido is an indie dark comedy satire with a talented cast and a unique concept and soundtrack. Kevin Williamson's Scream series and The Faculty are teen mystery-comedy-horror films which fall loosely in here but I like them a lot so I include them and they're a good dose of 90's nostalgia.
    Re-Animator is an ultra-gorey cult schlock fest in line with Evil Dead, Demons, and Braindead in tone. The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Little Shop of Horrors (either version), are great little cult classics with some nice music and a fun atmosphere for friends to laugh at and sing along with. The 90's films based upon The Addams Family series are terrific selections as well.


7. Black-And-White for Late at Night:

    It really isn't Halloween without taking a look at some of the all-time classics that have aged well throughout generations. The Universal Classics are the best choices: Dracula, Frankenstein, The Bride of Frankenstein, The Wolf Man, The Invisible Man, The Mummy, The Creature from the Black Lagoon, the list goes on. But those are the ones that jump to my mind the most. Despite some over-the-top acting and lack of music (most of these were at the dawn of the sound age when the sound of talking itself was a novelty) are minor complaints when compared to the iconic imagery and lines, so much so these are the instant images and tropes that jump into people's minds when they think movie monsters.

    1950's monster and alien films are excellent as well. The Thing from Another World was produced by the influential Howard Hawks, known for his then-novel use of overlapping dialogue, which provides a naturalistic sense of comraderie to the men in the film and also grounds this from being pure schlock into something more. This film is on par with the more famous remake by John Carpenter, which was so influenced by this film and the short story it itself comes from that Carpenter recreated the title screen and references it in Halloween.
    Val Lewton's excellent psycholgical thrillers Cat People and The Leopard Man are extremely important and still chilling for their use of sound design, jump scares, and psychosexual subtext, all fairly uncommon for the time. Right up there is the German classic M, starring then-unknown Peter Lorre in his greatest role as a both monstrous but ultimately strangely understandable child killer (his ending speech as the mob comes to kill him actually makes us question our thirst for vigilante justice over rehabilitation for psychopaths like him), which today is one fo the most eerie noir thrillers ever made.
    Tim Burton has some terrific black and white projects as well. Vincent, his short film from 1982, is perfect Halloween fare and is featured on The Nightmare Before Christmas DVD I believe, and also on YouTube. Franken-Weenie, both the 2012 stop-motion film and the original live-action short from 1984, are very sweet and not as weird as Vincent, and are perfect for Halloween.
    RKO's original King Kong may be more categorized as an adventure film, but there's enough frightening imagery in it and a giant monster for it to be considered horror. It's pretty brutal for 1933 and also extremely technically impressive, utilizing groundbreaking camera and stop-motion effects and a full score by Max Richter, practically unheard of at the time. Without a doubt one of the best ever and more easily palatable than the 3-hour Jackson remake from 2005, though I love that one as well. This one clocks in at the more feasible 1 hour 40 mins, long for the time but now a common runtime. RKO also had the best film version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, which raises eyebrows even today for its racy content (it was Pre-Code and therefore not subject to heavy editing), and Frederich March was nominated for an Oscar for his role. The Hyde makeup is still imitated today, portraying the animlisitic monster as almost Simian in nature.
    Toho's original Gojira, in its original Japanese cut, is a dark and foreboding disaster film, inspired by the tragic fallout of Hiroshima. The Godzilla monster can actually be taken seriously here, being portrayed as a straight-up monster and not a hero as in later films. Don't let the campy nature of later films fool you (though I love those, too), this is a melancholy and brutal film that reflects the culture of Japan in the 1950's.

8. Literary Classics: 

    These are some of the more high-caliber films, based upon Gothic literature and modern novels. Some of these are based upon the same materials as the Universal classics, but have their own distinct vision.
    Francis Ford Coppola, legendary Renaissance man and film director, directed one of my absolute favorites of this genre: Bram Stoker's Dracula. Considered the most faithful adaptation of the source novel, James V. Hart's screenplay takes some major deviations at times but to me, they elevate the material, not detract from it. Gary Oldman is fantastic as Dracula, being young and old, detestable and tragic, etc. His hairdo is a bit ridiculous in the early stages of the film, and Winona Ryder and Keanu Reeves are the weakest players here, but they are outshined by the rest of the stellar cast (including Anthony Hopkins, Cary Elwes, Richard E. Grant, Bill Campbell, Monica Bellucci, Sadie Frost, and musician Tom Waits), and the impressive and unique visual style, produced by Coppola's insistence on using often-forgotten techniques of early cinema instead of modern visual effects.
     The companion piece to this, the Kenneth Branagh-helmed Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is nowhere near as good or coherent, being far more Shakespearean and operatic than the material warrants (this may be the result of Branagh's own background in stage and screen), but it isn't as terrible as people often make it out to be, just not the best, so I would give it a shot. Again, far more faithful than most adaptations, while taking liberties and inspirations from other adaptations.
    The Hammer horror cycle, which shot Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing among others to horror stardom, is a great example of Gothic cinema. These were the first times many viewers were exposed to more faithful adaptations of the classic Gothic novels such as Dracula and Frankenstein, as well as in full color with more graphic sex and bloodshed. The best of these films, Horror of Dracula (as it's known in the US) and The Curse of Frankenstein, hold up wonderfully well.
    Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow is pure schlock and doesn't follow the short story at all but it's a great little Halloween piece. The Oscar-nominated stop-motion short The Sandman is loosely inspired by the short story of the same name by E.T.A. Hoffman, is chilling and provides a quick and unique horror experience with terrific visuals and sound design. The original 1953 The War of the Worlds modernizes the H.G. Wells novel and has some great special effects for the time and it's in full color, another uncommon thing for the era.
    This subgenre also includes some great musicals, including Tim Burton's excellent Sweeney Todd film and Joel Schumacher's faithful and underrated adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera, which was based on the classic French horror novel.

9. Films that center on the actual holiday:

Now for films that are more specifically geared toward the real holiday, finally. These are films that really have to do with the date and the traditions surrounding it, making them the perfect picks for a Halloween viewing session, or just capture the spirit a lot more than others.
    While it is technically more a general slasher, it is far too iconic and important a film to ignore, that really does have a feeling of Halloween spirit to it, so John Carpenter's original Halloween is a pick to obvious to not make the list. Here is James Rolfe's video on the film, coupled with his plan on how to make the viewing of it on Halloween night perfect:http://cinemassacre.com/2011/10/24/halloween-3/
    Also highly recommended is the underrated and often unfairly hated Halloween III: Season of the Witch, which was intended to be the beginning of the series as an anthology after Michael Myers' death in Halloween II. This third film has a great score by John Carpenter himself and ultimately is far more centered on the roots and spirit of the holiday than even the original, and the plot of the villain is a hell of a lot darker.

    My ultimate pick, however, for getting into the spirit of the holiday, would be Michael Dougherty's Trick r Treat, which was rushed into a limited release before going to DVD in 2007 for some reason despite being planned as a major release. It has slowly built a cult following over the years. It is just dripping with Halloween atmosphere, and functions as a black comedy/horror anthology exploring every possible aspect of the holiday. Everything from the impressive special effects, refusal to shy away from darker moments, coupled with the dark humor and commitment to authentically replicating the feel of Halloween night (hand-carved jack-o-lanterns, all unique, adorn the entire film) make this an absolute joy to watch.
    Let's not forget the dark and morbid but critically acclaimed cult hits Ginger Snaps and Donnie Darko, which have a spooky feel for the season, as well as featuring Halloween prominently in major scenes. Dark indie director Jeremy Saulnier's black comedy Murder Party is an up-and-coming favorite for fans of something a bit bloody and different. Even the frankly cheesy Goosebumps episode "The Haunted Mask" captures the spirit of the evening pretty well.

10. Childhood Specials:

Now, after celebrating the holiday in a complete way, close out the evening, or welcome the rising sun, with a nostalgic trip back to childhood. My personal picks that I can't go through the season without watching: It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown! and The Nightmare Before Christmas. The former is not always loved these days for being slow and kind of old-fashioned, but it has such a unique charm and relaxing quality and puts me right in the spirit of the season. The music, the characters and jokes, as well as the inclusion of almost everything fall related into the story (from Halloween parties and games and trick or treating to rolling in leaves and playing football) are redeeming of any minor faults in the animation, and so I say it is essential.
    The latter was actually directing by Henry Selick, who has since directed numerous beloved and twisted animated features, but is still very much Tim Burton's vision. The short poem (narrated by Christopher Lee) is also available as a special feature on the DVD and is absolutely worth a look this season. This one practically needs no introduction, as it is both a classic Halloween tale and a Christmas movie, so it capture the essence of the two best holidays perfectly.
     Disney's Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad is also a necessary fall selection. The Mr. Toad segment can be skipped optionally as it really doesn't have to do with fall or Halloween, but it too is an excellent short. But the Sleepy Hollow segment is definitely the big hook of the film, as the music and narration by Bing Crosby is timeless and mixes humor with the horror, and the look and feel of the short perfectly captures the harvest season, and the final confrontation between Ichabod and the Horesman is so fluent and beautifully animated and exciting, it makes the somewhat slow and aimless first half of the story come together perfectly.
     A newer choice is the genuinely eerie and brilliantly directed Coraline (there's Henry Selick, again), based on Neil Gaiman's chilling young adult novella, which scared kids and adults alike. Overlooked specials gaining a cult following (some ironically, some for genuine talent behind them) include The Worst Witch, Casper Saves Halloween, Fat Albert's Halloween, The Halloween Tree, and Garfield's Halloween. Tim Burton's Corpse Bride and FrankenWeenie are heartwarming and incredibly charming little movies, as are ParaNorman and Hotel Transylvania (which has its share of dumb moments, such as the final musical number, but also features incredibly lively animation).
    The TV specials I mentioned before Home Improvement, Roseanne, Family Matters, etc. also offer some 80's and 90's cheese, and cartoons like Spongebob Squarepants, The Batman, Invader ZIM, Grim Adventures, and Courage the Cowardly Dog, among others, offer some darker fare for the Halloween season.
     TV classics like The X-Files, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed, Twin Peaks, The Twilight Zone, and Tales from the Crypt are another excellent source of some short-term horror for those not looking for a whole feature. A Twin Peaks marathon would provide a genuinely creepy and mind-bending Halloween night for sure. My favorites- at least as far as straight horror- from the anthology series are: The X- Files: "Home," "Humbug," "Fire," and "Jersey Devil." The Twilight Zone: "The Masks," "Nick of Time," "To Serve Man," "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street," "Eye of the Beholder," "Printer's Devil," and "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet." (The Twilight Zone movie is another terrific choice which retells some classic episodes as well as newer stories.) Tales from the Crypt: "Three's a Crowd," "Dead Wait," "Til Death," "Dig That Cat, He's Real Gone," "Collection Completed," "The Third Pig," "Strung Along," "The New Arrival," "Split Personality," "People Who Live in Brass Hearses," "None But the Loneley Heart," "Only Skin Deep," "Death of Some Salesman," "Report from the Grave," and "Last Respects." (Not to mention the motion comics featured on the DVDs being very entertaining.)

    Some oddball choices on the last minute here are Bag of Bones, Idle Hands, and The Skeleton Key, just some stray observations I figured I'd throw in here.

Anyways, again sorry this is late, it depresses me I had nothing up for October this year, but this will give plenty of time to plan before next Halloween! Cheers!


(Image credits: Walyou.com, Pinterest, zombiepumpkins.com, Escape Adulthood, Doux Reviews, Comediva, Danny DoDat, Yell! Magazine, The Rhinestone Housewife)

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Krampus: The latest holiday horror film from the director of "Trick r Treat"

Krampus:
It's the modern holiday seasons: an upper middle-class family is reluctantly having their obnoxious redneck in-laws over for Christmas. Hijinks ensue, resulting in the youngest son taking back his Christmas wish for his family to better themselves. Suddenly, an intense blizzard knocks out the neighborhood's power and prevents road travel. Very quickly, the family begins to realize that a supernatural force is tampering with their lives: the Krampus, the ancient German demon who comes to punish those who do not embrace the Christmas spirit.
    I've found the legend of the Krampus fascinating for a while now. The irony of this dark and morbid story being told to children around the happiest season of the year was intriguing to me. So when I heard Michael Dougherty (director of the Halloween horror film Trick r Treat) was doing a film about a family who encounters this creature, I was hyped. Initially the trailers were very dumb, but I was confident it would be a fun little movie. And it was. Slightly disappointing, considering how great Dougherty's first effort was, but still enjoyable.
    The humor of the film blends with the horror surprisingly well, and Adam Scott, Toni Collette, Allison Tolman, David Koechner, and Conchata Ferrell were great comic relief in the film, and while initially seeming very unlikable, slowly start to grow on you as the survival portion of the film sets in. Krista Stadler, Emjay Anthony, and Stefania LaVie Owen were good supporting characters, playing the grandmother and two kids, respectively. Some reviewers complained the family was unlikable for the most part, but I found myself sympathizing them more and more as the film went on, and I believe that was Dougherty's intention. However, characters often make dumb, horror movie mistakes, but the tongue-in-cheek nature of the film makes this more understandable.
    Krampus himself takes a backseat most of this movie, which was slightly disappointing, but also built suspense to his eventual arrival. His design was pretty great in this movie, paying homage to traditional portrayals, while trying its' own thing. The special effects of the monsters in this film were fantastic, mostly practical effects, though at times the effect of the Jack-in-the-Box creature looked like a Power Rangers monster suit, and one key scene of a character falling was laughable looking and almost ruins the climax. There is, however, a short clay-mation/CG sequence that looks amazing and shows Dougherty hasn't forgotten his background in animation.
    The story at times had holes (how much of the town Krampus' snowstorm has enveloped is unclear), and the ending (as Chris Stuckmann pointed out in his review) felt a little too similar to the ending of Jeepers Creepers. The jump scares felt a little cheap, and I know from watching Trick r Treat that Dougherty can do better, and overall you can tell he wasn't having as much fun with the Christmas horror concept as with the Halloween one. In fact, the PG-13 rating seems to drag down this project with its' obviously censored dialogue ("Get away from my kids, you fudger!") and lack of blood. I'm all for "what you see is less scary that what you don't", but with a big, dumb, in-your-face monster movie like this, some gore would be a good payoff but I never got that. Trick r Treat was rated R, and therefore went all-out with the gore and was better for it. 
    The film felt longer than it was, but that's a good thing. It felt like a solid length for this type of movie. Krampus is an entertaining movie, albeit a slight let-down. Best case scenario: it encourages more viewers to check out Dougherty's Trick r Treat, which, unlike this film, was given a criminally limited theatrical run and then went straight to video and on demand for vague reasons, despite having a good budget and cast. Worst case scenario: it disappoints people and discourages them from watching ore of Dougherty's horror films, which would be a shame, as Dougherty is a talented filmmaker who should branch out and do more work outside of just writing. Give this one a watch, and then go out and buy Trick r Treat for next Halloween (or just watch it now, it doesn't matter). 7/10 stars.

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(Images: Wikipedia, comingsoon.net)

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Crimson Peak: del Toro's visual feast unfortunately lacks substance

Today, another review of a Halloween film out in October.

Crimson Peak:
Aspiring young author Edith is the daughter of a successful businessman in Buffalo, New York. She is courted and wooed by the mysterious baronet Sir Thomas Sharpe, and his sister Lucille, and she is married to him and taken to his England estate. However, Edith can also see ghosts, and they begin to warn her of a place called "Crimson Peak". Edith tries to forget these warnings, but as her new husband and sister-in-law grow increasingly distant and suspicious, and these nightly ghost appearances grow more frightening, she realizes there may be more to this estate and her new husband.
    Guillermo del Toro, whatever one's opinion of him is, cannot be denied to have a keen visual eye. He is a master of lighting, impressive sets and costumes, and of cinematography. The look of this film evokes memories of Hammer Horror and Bram Stoker's Dracula from 1992. It even matches the idea from those films of having romance take priority over the horror aspects. However, in terms of quality, this film comes nowhere close to those. The primary color palate is green, red, and black, which is funny, considering there's a scene which talks about color blindness and its' lack of reds and greens, almost acknowledging that people with color blindness will not fully see the best part of this movie: the imagery.
    The special effects are pretty good, even if the CG is overutilized. Some of the ghosts are menacing, others feel a little silly.
    Mia Wasikowska is a decent lead, but feels a little wooden at times. Tom Hiddleston, while good to see him get away from the Loki character, starts strong but slowly his character becomes way too  predictable. Jessica Chastain is laughably over-the-top evil, and there's, again, no mystery for her character despite the film supposedly being a mystery. She's obviously a villain from the start. Charlie Hunnam, Burn Gorman, and Jim Beaver are strong supporting characters, even if they are, also, pretty cliched. Doug Jones has some roles as ghosts in the film. It's cool to see del Toro still casting his buddies in small parts when the part fits them.
    The plot starts pretty strong, and the first half was investing. But the middle tries to build slow tension, but ultimately feels like it just drags on, as it quickly becomes evident of what's going on. The climax packs in a completely cliched and predictable twist, but the final confrontation is entertaining, if not exactly scary. There's some brutal kills/attempted kills in the movie that just look like they hurt and make you cringe. Guillermo always seems to pull off those moments better than most directors, at least in the mainstream. One particular stab had one man in my theater screaming "Jesus Christ!" completely out loud in my small, and mostly empty screening.
    Crimson Peak isn't exactly what I would call a scary, or even really suspenseful movie, bu it's a solid and mostly entertaining one with some chilling imagery and excellent period sets, costumes, and vibrant colors. There's some pretty violent scenes at the beginning and the end to keep things from getting too dull and to keep the stakes high, but ultimately, this isn't as good as del Toro can be. 6/10 stars.

Edit- November 11, 2015: the ghosts in the film were accomplished using mostly practical effects, not CGI as I had thought, though they look like it.

Crimson Peak theatrical poster.jpg                                                         (Image: Wikipedia)

Goosebumps: R.L. Stine's children's series finally gets the big screen treatment

For Halloween, I figured I'd review two new horror movies I saw. Well, this isn't much of a horror film, but is a perfect fit for the Halloween season.

Goosebumps:
Shortly after moving into a small town in Delaware, teenaged Zach becomes infatuated with his next door neighbor Hannah. However, Hannah's mysterious and reclusive father doesn't want Zach around and warns him about leaving them alone. One night, Zach and his new friend Champ break into the home, thinking Hannah is in danger from her father. They discover her father is author R.L. Stine, who has every Goosebumps manuscript locked in his study. Upon opening one of the books, they discover opening them unleashes the monster from each book upon the world. Unfortunately, they unleash Slappy the Dummy, who begins opening and then destroying the manuscripts, preventing the monsters from being contained. With every monster Stine ever created wreaking havoc on the town, Zach, Hannah, Champ, and Stine must find a way to stop the monsters and recapture them before they destroy the town and move on to the rest of the world.
    Now, despite being a fan of the books and TV show as a kid and therefore having a nostalgia for it, I find them to be just ok now. The books are leagues above the TV show, which is downright hilarious most of the time. Now, this movie didn't blow my expectations out of the water or anything. It was exactly as good as I expected it to be. Jack Black was decent as Stine and had some funny moments, and Amy Ryan and Jillian Bell were good supporting actresses. Black also voices Slappy. The main three kids, played by Dylan Minnette, Odeya Rush, and Ryan Lee, were decent leads and I think kids will enjoy them. R.L. Stine has a little cameo near the end as Mr. Black (get it? Because Jack Black plays him in the movie? Yeah, nothing too clever there.)
   But about the kids, I think that's the best way to view this movie: remember that it really is made for kids. However, because of this it still can't be fully enjoyed by me. One of the worst parts was as nice as the huge monster fight at the climax was, it was way too tame. The Cabin in the Woods had a similar sequence, but because it was rated R, it could go all out with the violence and it was awesome. This movie keeps it PG and therefore the violence is comical and no one ever feels in genuine danger, and the monsters never get to do anything truly scary, and Stine's insistence about not having death in his books keeps the movie from having any balls. Also, there's a reveal in this film that provided the opportunity to really have kids face the reality of death in a mature fashion, and it almost did, and then they soil it with a forced happy ending. The ending "twist" also makes little sense at all. The scariest monsters are the zombies which are just slightly creepy, and Slappy's weird thing about him and Stine being one in the same made no sense to me and seemed like trying to force more of a relationship between the two into the movie. The best part of the movie is the credits sequence whose animation style mimics that of the Goosebumps book cover art. It was really a treat to see.
    Goosebumps captures the spirit of the original books, and is leagues better than that 90's TV show (at least in terms of quality; funny wise, it doesn't hold a candle). The cast is good, the special effects are hit-or-miss (Slappy being a real dummy was cool, but some of the CG was so-so), and the story was a clever way to work in all the monsters from the books in one place. It's definitely the perfect Halloween movie for families to go see. 6/10 stars.

Goosebumps (film) poster.jpg                                                                  (Image: Wikipedia)

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Sinister 2: I don't even know what to say

This is a long-belated review because I honestly just had to gather my thoughts.

(Spoilers for "Sinister")


Sinister 2:
Some time after the conclusion of the first film, the young deputy from that film is traveling the United States, trying to destroy the demonic influence of Bughuul. However, after discovering a single mother and her two boys have moved into one of the houses where Bughuul killed a family, he realizes he must protect this family from the evil forces ready to consume them.
    Now, I saw this film opening night, and, being a fan of the first film, was quite excited for it. I was growing more and more skeptical of the trailers as the date approached, but I went with my friend with an open mind. I was absolutely bedazzled by this film's ability to fuck up the mythology of a character and just general common sense in regards to character behavior. I won't go into too much detail, I am planning on making a more elaborate video review one day, because literally to explain the wrong that is this movie would require breaking down almost every single scene.
    James Ransone is a criminally underrated actor, so it was sad to see him trying so hard in this movie, and being dragged down in this mess. Shannyn Sossamon did a fair job with the material, but her and Ransone's romance was highly predictable if you've seen any movie ever. The two boys in the film are pretty bad. One is bland, the other is tongue-in-cheek pure evil, which is odd considering how normal he was at the start of the movie. Tate Ellington and John Beasley have small roles, and Lea Coco has one of the most gloriously over-the-top douchebag dad roles in cinema history. I mean, Jesus Christ, the lack of nuance is kind of an art in itself with this guy. Lucas Jade Zumann is amusing as Milo, one of the evil ghost kids in the movie. He's like a mini-Bond villain, he's so hammy.
    The scares in the movie are all cheap, pandering jump scares, and there's no real build-up or genuine sense of dread like there was in the first film. This movie's soundtrack is even subpar in comparison, using blander tracks or just recycling music from the previous film.
    The biggest problem with the movie is the Super 8 films. The concept of the kids killing their own families was already a slight stretch, but the amount of reality bending in this film is absurd. I know Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill have defended jump scares before, but their overuse in the film borderlines on self-parody.
    Speaking of overuse, Bughuul himself is way overexposed in this one, having no longer a sense of terror surrounding his sporadic appearances. Here, he's everywhere constantly. And the lighting they chose really emphasizes the ridiculousness of his attire, whereas the original kept him shrouded in shadow.
    The deaths are also far too elaborate this time around. Much like a slasher sequel, it suffers from focusing too much on having cool-looking kills, without keeping in mind realism, or actually being scary.
    There was no mystique this time around because we, as an audience, already know Bughuul exists and that the kids are killing their families. There's no longer a sense of a mystery killer. I can't even believe this was written by the same people.
    This is not, in any sense, a scary movie. However, if you enjoy some unintentionally hilarious lines and ridiculously overblown death scenes, as well as some light melodrama, this is a film for you. As bad as it is, and as much as it soils the name of the original film (a film I really enjoyed), it is an extremely entertaining movie, a movie me and my friend have quoted and referenced since it came out. Sinister 2 is a disaster of a horror film, but still can be appreciated for the silly dark comedy it turned out to be. 5/10 stars.

Sinister2Poster.jpg                                                                     (Image: Wikipedia)

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Top 25 Horror Films of the 1970s: Arguably the greatest decade for revolutionary horror cinema

Because October is right around the corner, I figured I'd begin counting down my top horror films per decade once more. I wanted to get more done last year but ran out of time. This year, I'm hoping to reach at least the 2000's.

Criteria:
Must be a film produced between 1970 and 1979
Must be a horror film, thriller, or have horror-related subject matter

As always, a little backstory...
The Seventies were a decade, much like the Sixties, of revolution. After the Manson murders in Southern California, the American public was exposed to violence never thought of before. The ensuing media circus surrounding the trial of Charles Manson and his associates prompted a new fixation on cults and serial killers. Soon, the macabre and sick exploits of Jeffrey Dahmer, Son of Sam, Ted Bundy, and John Wayne Gacy became subjects of national interest and analysis. The Vietnam War drew to a close, with many veterans returning home mentally and physically destroyed by the countless horrors they had witnessed, which only strengthened the anti-war movement which grew ever-strong in the country. The deaths of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X the previous decade had made those men martyrs in the eyes of their followers, and had spurned an even more radical counter-culture ideology that was adopted by young college and high school students.
    These events had the opposite effect on new horror cinema as past events did on old horror. When the Great Depression and World War II hit, people sought movies, especially the fantastical Golden Age horror films, to escape from their real-world troubles. However, now, in this new age of cinema, people went to the cinemas to be faced with troubling questions about the state of the world. New, young filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese, William Friedkin, George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, and Francis Ford Coppola were rising in the film-making world, breaking the rules of Hollywood and producing some critically acclaimed and high-grossing work such as The Godfather, American Graffiti, The French Connection, Duel, Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Jaws, and Star Wars, a lot of which had more violence and moral ambiguity than was allowed in most major studio fare. Jaws and Star Wars became the first films that were referred to commonly as "blockbusters," setting a new trend in Hollywood.
   On the seedier end of the independent movie scene were young, fledgling directors like Brian De Palma, George A. Romero, Wes Craven, John Carpenter, Dan O'Bannon, Tobe Hooper, and Sean S. Cunningham, These men were lovers of film who were raised (at least mostly) on a diet of Universal monster movies, Hammer horror, Hitchcock, and 50's sci-fi schlock. Taking what they loved about the classic horror genre while adding the brutality and violence so present in Seventies culture made for a potent mix that produced some of the best films ever made. By the end of the decade, Carpenter's Halloween reinvented the entire horror genre and spurned forth (arguably) its' most popular sub-genre: the slasher film...

The List:

25. Blacula (1972): This blaxploitation horror film may sound funny on paper, but is actually fairly effective. William Marshall is charismatic in the titular role, and while the plot isn't all that deep, it's pretty good for a cheaply made exploitation movie.

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24. Magic (1978): This psychological horror film further popularized the killer doll genre of movies. While it borrows much from previous "killer ventriloquist dummy" media like episodes of The Twilight Zone and the film Dead of Night, it infused a mystery element and was made by a stellar production team: director Richard Attenborough, and a cast featuring Anthony Hopkins, Ann-Margaret, Burgess Meredith, and Ed Lauter elevate this film above the general cheesy killer pupper fare.

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23. Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970): This surreal and bizarre Czech film is a twisted fairy tale chronicling a young girl named Valerie's encounters with a thief, a masked monster, and a priest, among other things. A dreamlike film that's almost reminiscent of David Lynch, it packs in some weird and unsettling imagery that sticks with the viewer, and is a great example of an exercise in surrealist horror.

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22. Deathdream (1974): Bob Clark may be best known today for directing A Christmas Story and Murder By Decree, but in the 70's, he was an independent horror film director. And a good one, at that. His films were ahead of their time, and dark and brutally violent, and, best of all, genuinely unnerving. This film was a commentary on the Vietnam War's effects on the folks back home, as well as a quasi-adaptation of the W.W. Jacobs short story "The Monkey's Paw".

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21. The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971): This Vincent Price vehicle came late in his career, but was successful enough to spawn a sequel. A classic revenge story set around the Ten Plagues of Egypt, the film sees Price once again play a disfigured genius driven mad and fueled by vengeful rage. The kills in the film push the boundaries of believability, but are unique and memorable. A campy and often neglected entry in the horror genre, it's one of Price's better films.

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20. Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979): Werner Herzog's artful remake of the 1922 classic silent film stars Klaus Kinski in the titular role. Shot in both English and German, this film continues in the trend of Herzog and Kinski's partnership, it is a vivid and beautiful film to look at, and Kinski is perfect as Nosferatu. Despite the allegations of animal cruelty and abuse on the set, which Herzog apparently neglected, the movie is still an immensely enjoyable revamp (no pun intended), and one of the few remakes that is on par with its' source material.

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19. Phantasm (1979): This bizarre and eerie supernatural thriller was a locally financed indie film that wound up spawning a string of sequels, and cementing Angus Scrimm's Tall Man character as an icon of the horror genre. With some nightmarish visuals, unconventional structure, and an imposing boogeyman figure as the villain, Phantasm is one of the more underrated 70's horror films.

A woman screams and covers her eyes, which are then superimposed over her hands

18. The Brood (1979): David Cronenberg's body horror film serves as a metaphor for feminine empowerment gone awry and as an interesting look at messy divorces, and asks an interesting question: if we could actually manifest those negative emotions we feel towards others, could it wind up controlling us? The shocking and cringe-inducing imagery and nasty special effects paired with those messages part of what Cronenberg does so well: make us think, and make us squirm, often at the same time.

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17. Alice, Sweet Alice (1976): Featuring Brooke Shields in her film debut, this slasher film is a cut above the rest. This mostly owes to the exceptionally creepy and haunting mask worn by the killer, a translucent mask highlighted with drag queen-esque makeup. The film was released three times under three different titles: as Communion at the Chicago International Film Festival in 1976, theatrically in 1978 under this title, and a third time in 1981 as Holy Terror to capitalize on Brooke Shields' growing popularity. While borrowing from many previous films, most notably the raincoat motif from Don't Look Now, this movie stands on its' own as one of the more genuinely scary of the slasher films, and one that predates Halloween. And speaking of Don't Look Now...

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16. Don't Look Now (1973): A startling thriller about psychic powers, serial killers, and ghost girls, the film, much like many 70's horror films, took elements that made old horror films so great, updated them for modern adult audiences, and were being made by some bigger names in the film industry. This one stars Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie, two major stars, and was directed by the acclaimed Nicolas Roeg. This movie has some visually striking images, and one of the best (and most unexpected) twist endings ever.

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15. Black Christmas (1974): Bob Clark shows up again on this list with his dark precursor to A Christmas Story. A brutal and dreamlike film with a mysterious killer, it set a trend for slasher films, and reportedly this was one of the films that inspired John Carpenter's Halloween, as the planned sequel for this film would have taken place on that holiday. The camera angles, opening shot, and violent kills set the stage for Halloween, though this film is even darker, bloodier and more vulgar than that film was. The film has future stars like Olivia Hussey, Andrea Martin, Margot Kidder, and John Saxon, and 2001 star Keir Dullea. The unsolved identity of the killer makes the film unsettling as it leaves so many doors open, and the killer's weird, gender-neutral voice is chilling and sticks in your head.

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14. The Hills Have Eyes (1977): Wes Craven's second major horror movie was stars future E.T. star Dee Wallace and is a brutal and unapologetic film that chronicles one family's struggle for survival against an inbred family of feral cannibals. Michael Berryman (the man on the poster) was shot to B-movie stardom for his unique physical appearance and imposing performance. The film was successful enough to spawn a sequel and a remake and its' sequel. The movie also further popularized the 70's sub-genre of middle-America family vs. group of deranged killers, and also popularized the feral cannibal sub-genre.

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13. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978): This remake of the 1950's classic by Philip Kaufman stars Donald Sutherland, Leonard Nimoy, Brooke Adams,Veronica Cartwright, and Jeff Goldblum. Managing to be just as memorable as the original in its' own way, with surreal, 70's acid-trip imagery and a harrowing twist ending, this movie also has a much more graphic and nasty pod people transformation process and the logic behind the transformations is actually an improvement over the original, which had a plot hole in that area. While not as iconic or important as the original, this reimagining is definitely one of the best remakes of all time.

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12. The Wicker Man (1973): This dark occult mystery film pits a devoutly Christian police detective against an underground pagan cult. Christopher Lee's performance as the villain Lord Summersisle is one of his more underrated, and the cast, featuring Edward Woodward, Ingrid Pitt, Diane Cilento, and Britt Ekland. It has some great suspense, an interesting soundtrack, a compelling mystery that slowly spirals into a much larger conspiracy, and has a fantastic and horrific ending reveal. The hilarious 2006 remake starring Nicolas Cage is only entertaining on an ironic level, and can't hold a candle to the original.

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11. Eraserhead (1977): David Lynch's first feature is one of the most nightmarish and stomach-churning movies ever made. The bizarre and uniquely nasty imagery, industrial location and soundtrack, dreamlike narrative, and creepy and odd characters set the standard for Lynch films: symbolic and weird movies that creep under your skin.

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10. The Last House on the Left (1972): A brutal and sickening revenge thriller, produced by Sean S. Cunningham and directed by Wes Craven in his debut film, the movie serves a warning about the consequences of revenge. Reflecting the horrific side of the Love Generations showcased by the Manson murders, this grindhouse exploitation film features some of the most brutal violence seen at the time. The violence was enough to get it banned in several countries and cause a lot of controversy upon release. But it is this violence that assaults the viewer and makes them ponder the consequences of it in the real world. Many people mistake this movie for glorifying or sexualizing violence, when it is doing the exact opposite, it is a warning against violence, unlike the 2009 remake, which ends on a slightly happy note and glorifies the revenge sequence at the end of the film as justified.

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9. Suspiria (1977): Dario Argento's stylish Italian giallo movie is one of the most beautiful and colorful horror films to look at. Part of his "Three Mothers" trilogy, this movie is famous for its' beautiful cinematography, vivid color palates, and almost fairy tale-esque plot. The score by prog-rock band Goblin is excellent, and set a trend for prog-rock and synth bands composing scores for horror and sci-fi films during the 1980's.

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8. Carrie (1976): Based on Stephen King's bestselling 1974 novel, Brian DePalma's masterful adaptation darkened the ending and provided some great cinematography and suspenseful sequences. The climactic dance scene is taut and has the viewer on the edge of their seat, until the moment when all hell breaks loose and Carrie has her brutal revenge on all those who wronged her (and some who didn't). Sissy Spacek and Piper Laurie both had Oscar-nominated performances, Spacek for her role as the timid and emotionally troubled teenage girl, and Laurie as her psychotic and domineering Christian mother. Nancy Allen and John Travolta also appear in the film, another case of future A-listers appearing in smaller projects. The relationship between Carrie and her mother is tragic, symbiotic, and cringe-worthy to watch, and is the dramatic backbone of the movie. The first Stephen King movie adaptation was also based on his first novel, and kick-started a string of over 100 adaptations of his various works.

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7. The Omen (1976): Richard Donner and David Seltzer's Satanic thriller has a moody and atmospheric score, great lead performances by Gregory Peck, Lee Remick, and David Warner, and one of the best "creepy kid" performances by Harvey Spencer Stephens. The mystery surrounding the boy continues to unravel in unexpected ways, and the film masterfully builds to a crescendo where our leads desperately try to stop the horrible force that is Damien. However, unlike The Exorcist, The Omen leaves an a much more ominous and foreboding ending, with no comforting happy ending to be had.

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6. Alien (1979): Dan O'Bannon's script and Ridley Scott's eye of visuals combine to create the greatest of the sci-fi horror movies. H.R. Giger's phallic and iconic creature design and disturbing art style contribute to much of the film's look. The lead performances by Sigourney Weaver, John Hurt, Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, and Henry Dean Stanton are phenomenal, particularly Weaver's turn as Ellen Ripley, one of the most bad-ass female leads of all time. The effective use of long tracking shots, false scares, and long periods of suspense and build-up make Alien just as much a Gothic horror/slasher film as it is a sci-fi thriller. And although it borrows a lot from the 1950's film It! The Terror from Beyond Space, it also contributed enough original visuals and scares (chest-burster scene) to be its' own film.

A large egg-shaped object that is cracked and emits a yellowish light hovers in mid-air against a black background and above a waffle-like floor. The title "ALIEN" appears in block letters above the egg, and just below it in smaller type appears the tagline "in space no one can hear you scream".

5. Dawn of the Dead (1978): George A. Romero's follow-up to his 1968 Night of the Living Dead is is color and cranks up the gore and returns to his social commentary. Instead of being about race relations, it's about mall culture turning Americans into zombies. The leads, including Ken Foree, are great and the set-pieces, especially the final sequence where the survivors must face off against both a biker gang and a horde of incoming zombies is spectacular. It surpasses the original in every conceivable way, and although it has a happier ending (the original cut of the film had a much more somber end), it is a darker film than its' predecessor. It also has one of the best lines/taglines in horror history: "When there's no more room in Hell, the dead walk the Earth."

 Painted theatrical release that includes various credits, an ominous zombie looking over the horizon, and the words "Dawn of the Dead" in military print below.

4. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974): Made on a shoe-string budget with a cast of unknowns (mostly Texas natives), Tobe Hooper's grimy and nasty grindhouse film introduced the world to slasher icon Leatherface and his family of deranged cannibals. A film that remains discomforting today due to its' improvised, documentary-style feel and savage violence (most of which is off-screen and implied, leaving it to the viewers' imagination), it also inspired many modern filmmakers, including Peter Jackson, and was a forerunner of the slasher genre. Gunnar Hansen remains the best Leatherface, mostly due to his convincing portrayal that doesn't make him totally sympathetic like the remake tries, but also reminds us that he, too, is human and has good traits (cares for his family's well-being), but also constantly reminds us that he is a force to be reckoned with. His mask seems more authentic than the remake's as well, further creating this weird blurring-the-lines effect where one can't be sure what they are seeing is staged or not. The other actors, including Ed Neal, are so good at portraying demented killers that one could almost be convinced Hooper just cast real crazy people in his movie.

A white film poster of a man holding a large chainsaw, with a screaming woman fastened to a wall behind him. The writing on the poster says, "Who will survive and what will be left of them?"; "America's most bizarre and brutal crimes!"; "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre"; "What happened is true. Now the motion picture that's just as real. "

3. Jaws (1975): Steven Spielberg's innovative blockbuster film faced numerous production problems, resulting in a malfunctioning mechanical shark on set. Due to this, the shark was used more sparingly than Spielberg had hoped, but this led to the team mostly using POV shots of the shark, and because the shark only appeared on screen briefly once in a while, it built up incredible suspense to when it would next appear. With John Williams' iconic and slow-building main theme scoring the film and some great performances by Roy Scheider, Richard Dreyfuss, and Robert Shaw (especially Shaw, who plays the memorable Quint, who gives a chilling monologue about shark eyes), this adventure-thriller based on Peter Benchley's novel remains one of the top 20 films ever made.

Movie poster shows a woman in the ocean swimming to the right. Below her is a large shark, and only its head and open mouth with teeth can be seen. Within the image is the film's title and above it in a surrounding black background is the phrase "The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No. 1 best seller." The bottom of the image details the starring actors and lists credits and the MPAA rating.

2. The Exorcist (1973): William Friedkin's adaptation of William Peter Blatty's demonic possession horror novel (which in turn was based of a reportedly true story) caused mass waves of controversy upon release. Christian groups claimed it was possessed by Lucifer himself, while most of the general public ran screaming from the theater upon seeing it. The special effects by Dick Smith were revolutionary and still look convincing today. The vulgar language, disgusting imagery, and frightening voice of Mercedes McCambridge as possessed Reagan are what make the film so memorable and terrifying to this day. It was the first horror film nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, and it is led by a stellar cast, featuring Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair (doing a great performance for a child actress), Jason Miller, Lee J. Cobb, and Max Von Sydow (playing a character decades older than he actually was). The main theme from the album Tubular Bells is up there with John Carpenter's Halloween score as one of the eeriest and most ear-wormy movie themes of all time.

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1. Halloween (1978): John Carpenter's classic slasher film introduced the world to the first of the modern boogeymen (Michael Myers) and really defined the tropes of the slasher genre. It was followed by a slew of copycat films, and shot Jamie Lee Curtis (daughter of Janet Leigh) to stardom and set her "scream queen" status. The musical score, pacing, POV and tracking shots, and performances by Curtis, Donald Pleasance, and stuntman Nick Castle. The lack of gore demonstrates a great amount of restraint on Carpenter's part, and the shoestring budget was made back a hundred-fold by box office revenue and a consistent word-of-mouth campaign. It is undoubtedly the most influential of the 1970's horror films and the best slasher movie of all time.

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Runner-ups: Vampire Circus, Martin, The Vampire Lovers, Daughters of Darkness, Straw Dogs, I Spit on Your Grave, House (1977), Piranha!, Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires, Tourist Trap.