Most hated character from a horror movie?
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From any horror movie, What Character do you hate the most? Why?
Julia Cotton, is there anyone this bitch didn't flip on? |
I hated hated HATED Nancy's mom in Nightmare on Elm Street.
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Probably Otis in HENRY:PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER. Absolutely loathsome and a great turn by the late Tom Towles who was nice and funny as well when we met him.
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Any character that opens their mouth in a RobZombie movie besides Sid Haig.
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Mary Knowles from House of 1000 Corpses, and the nanny from The Omen
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The mother in Dream Warriors was no better. |
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For these reasons, I feel like watching horror may actually make me a much better parent someday....should I ever have children that is! I'll listen better when they're telling me some outlandish story of monsters living in the closet or under the bed. As for my most hated character that would be "Evil" from New Year's Evil-1980. |
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I'll go with both Frank and Julie Cotton. Quote:
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Probably the mayor from Jaws... He's about a 9.7 out of 10 on my "stupid scale".
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it's a cliche but i can't even sit through "friday the 13th 3" because of shelly. i am not really a huge fan of that series as it is but that guy is so punch-able and i just can't stand him.
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I hated ruth in the girl next door... what a bitch
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Most religious zealots in movies are over-the-top annoying, but Mrs. Carmondy from The Mist especially.
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http://www.motherjones.com/files/danny_big.jpg
The Shining could have been a perfect film; if only the kid got the ax at the end. |
The man you love to hate
Sometimes the villain is the one who makes the film. Back around 1915, the studios billed Erich von Stroheim as "The man you love to hate." He mostly played sadistic German officers back then.
I guess Alan Rickman's performance in Die Hard made critics sit up and say "This guy is good as playing bad." actually, the one I most disliked in that movie was...can't remember his name. The one who tipped the bad guys off to who "Roy" really was. I guess he was supposed to be hateable. What do they do for a casting call when they want to cast a part like Pete Pettigrew in Harry Potter, or the Secretery of Defense in Independence Day? "Wanted, actor to play a snivelling little rat-faced git." |
In Zack Snyder's remake of Dawn of the Dead I couldn't stand Glen because I felt like he was basically a straw doll used to try and convince the audience that all gay men are as creepy and useless as he was. I also didn't like the fact that his background was ripped off from the character Mary Henry from Carnival of Souls being an atheist who worked as a church organ player like she was.
I also couldn't stand Job and Sarah from Children of the Corn. Their parents were brutally murdered along with all the other adults in Gatlin and instead of being traumatized and hiding in fear they're busy playing games and making fun of the psychotic cult leader, not caring if they get caught.::roll eyes:: |
some critics hate little kids
When The Sixth Sense came out, the review that appeared in the New York Times was not very informative, except that you could figure out that the main reason the critic hated the movie is that he hated movies that feature cute little kids.
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I personally don't hate "cute little kids", just child characters played by terrible actors like Job and Sarah from Children of the Corn. I think kids in horror movies are kind of needed because they help create extra tension in fear of the child's safety.
The kid who played Danny in The Shining was pretty decent in my opinion. He was even able to do a creepy voice for "Tony" and have a seizure which I thought was impressive considering that the young actor didn't even realize that he was in a horror movie. Oh and I can't stand jerk heroes in horror movis or action movies. Like Ving Rhames's character in the remake of Dawn of the Dead (of course I still don't hate him as much as I do Glen). |
does this character exist?
I wonder if there are any horror movies where the hero hears scary noises coming from the basement, and, instead of going down into the basement, sprints out the front door, which is what any intelligent person would do.
That reminds me. When I saw The silence of the lambs in the theater, when Jodi Foster goes into the killer's house, there was a sort of silent scream from the audience: "Don't go in there!" Then, when she follows him down into the basement, it was kind of a silent whimper: "Don't go down there!" After she blew the guy away, I thought "I guess FBI training works." I wonder if there is a kind of hand gun you don't have to cock, so the victim isn't warned by hearing a click. |
Ever see that one Geico commercial? "When you're in a horror movie, you make bad choices. It's what you do!"
Black guy: "Let's hide in the attic!" Brunette girl: "No in the basement!" Blonde girl: "Why can't we just get in the RUNNING car?" White guy: "Are you crazy?! Let's hide behind the chainsaws!" Yeah... horror movies wouldn't be what they are without the main characters making bad choices that any sane person would avoid throughout the entire movie. ::big grin:: |
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I loved how the masked killer was rolling his eyes at the idiot teenagers. You think Jason, Freddy, Michael, or Leatherface ever did that? ::stick out tongue:: |
stupid actions in movies
My friend Don has a list of stupid things people do in movies. Like, a guy is chasing a guy on foot, and the guy he's chasing gets into a car and drives away, and the guy on foot keeps chasing the car. As Don said "After all, people are catching cars all the time."
Then there's the guy being chased down the road by a car, and instead of running off the road into the woods where the car can't go, he just keeps going straight down the center of the road. |
That guy in TEXAS CHAINSAW 2 who kept spitting. Disgusting fool.
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I'm going to go ahead and admit it I DON'T like Freddy Krueger. I don't care how funny or witty he is when killing idiot teenagers, I just can't get over the fact that he's a child serial killer and possibly a pedophile.
Give me Chucky from Child's Play or the little guy from Leprechaun any day over Freddy. Those two are both just as funny and clever as Freddy and the victims they kill are usually jerks who are pretty much asking for it. |
he's the villain
Of course you don't like Freddy Krueger! He's the villain. What, did you think he was the hero?
I remember reading the book The Dead Zone. In the first chapter, Stephen King oh-so-subtly hints to us that Greg Stillson might be a bad person by having him kick a dog to death. I don't think that was in the movie. My friend Victor can do that line from the movie, with good voice: "Gentlemen, the missiles are flyin'! Halleluja!" |
nightmare on elm st.
It sort of makes you wonder how the town's police chief got to be married to that woman. What could the back story be?
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But even I have to draw the line at some of the evil things they can do. |
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In the original movies from the 1980's it never stated that he was a pedophile but he was in fact a child killer and that was the reason why the parents of elm street burned him alive. In fact I'm pretty positive that the creepy little children who appear in the nightmares are meant to be some of his younger victims. And I guess the reason that the movies never actually showed him killing young children was because like any slasher movie it's only amusing when he's killing annoying teenage stereotypes (played by 20 year old actors of course) |
I thought in the remake he just cut the kids rather than abused them. I didn't really get that.
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But I dunno I mean I'm not really a big fan of these movies and I haven't watched them in years so I might be remembering some of the facts wrong. ::confused:: |
it doesn't even apply
I don't think it applies to The Dead Zone, but have you ever noticed that usually in American movies, the bad guy has much better manners than the good guy? Especially if the bad guy is European. I guess American men think it's not manly to be polite.
Let's shed a tear for the late Herbert Lom *sniff*, who died in 2017. I thought his performance as the doctor in Dead Zone was one of the best things in the movie. Lately, for some reason, my cable has been repeatedly showing the Herbert Lom version of Phantom of the Opera. If you want to see a delightful Lom performance, watch "The Ladykillers." (the original one.) I hope Herbert Lom's last days were lightened by residuals from all those Pink Panther movies, the way Alec Guinness's was from the money from Star Wars. |
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But sometimes you get American movies where the villain is your typical impolite Yank. Especially if he's military or gangster. |
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I guess that way of thinking is still expressed in our movies and yet the majority of our movies and TV shows are focused on the lives and adventures of rich white families living in nice big houses. Ironic isn't it? ::big grin:: |
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