View Full Version : Last horror movie to scare you?
cheebacheeba
05-21-2019, 04:18 PM
I'm just wondering...
We're all horror veterans here.
Though sometimes you come across a movie that still makes you either scared, uneasy, or even...makes you feel irked out for just having watched it.
So lets say
*Scared
*Uncomfortable/uneasy/on edge.
Me?
I'm more about suspense and atmosphere than more visual horror these days.
Sadly, seems like these kind of film experiences are few and far between.
So I'm going to go with two selections here.
"The Conjuring".
Even though this franchise has been spun to death, with more to come...the first one for me had this one great scene. Nope. Not the clapping/basement scene though that was borderline.
I'm talking about the scene that takes place in the investigator couples house, where they have all their haunted artifacts.
Their...was it daughter?
When you first see that Annabelle has "escaped", not so much seeing the doll or anything...but the use of lighting, shadows and musical score was great...and when that large shadow just crept down the stairs - I actually felt dread.
If a movie can pull this off?
Win.
Another one is the somewhat controversial "A serbian film", which isn't strictly horror but certainly evoked the right range of emotions.
Yes it's gross. Yes it's disgusting. No I don't enjoy watching it.
In fact, I never want to watch it again.
...but I can't name many films that feel like they've shit all over my brain like this one did. All just human on human vileness. It was so just...fucked...
Because of these factors, I'll continue to recommend it as a one time watch to the uninitiated - because as I've said before, a comedy is good when you can laugh, then think back to it and smile
...this movie? Gives you a very real case of horrors version of this, I sat in somewhat stunned silence, and every time I think back to it, even now? I can just feel the grimace coming on...like smelling something bad.
Win.
You guys?
Sculpt
05-22-2019, 05:58 PM
Yeah, scary scenes are pretty much non-existent. But there were a few since Elm St. I thought the Conjuring captured a scary moment for me. That one scene was when the girl was in bed and it pulled her leg (I think this was the second time), both sisters woke up, and then they were trying to see if something was there in the corner of the room, then the parents eventually come in. The director, cinematographer and sound designer really captured the lighting, angles, cutting and music there for some real queasy scariness.
Dead Silence - another film by James Wan, had a couple of scary parts for me. The first was the ventriloquist and dummy performance on stage. I thought the whole segment was creepy with an effective build.
The other scene was actually scary for me... that was the one scene in the house, hmm... I think it was the basement, but it looked like a hospital morgue, with the jump scare of the woman. Sorry, I can't explain the scene better. I only saw it once.
Vacancy - I liked the film overall, I think Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale perform really well as a husband and wife that are anguishing into a divorce; one that she wants, and he doesn't -- sets up the film well for me. Anyway the scenes that got under my skin was the initial 'somebody banging on the their motel door' scenes. Disturbing, unexpected and just like WTF.
Elvis_Christ
05-22-2019, 08:20 PM
A Serbain Film was definitely some ugly stuff. August Underground's Mordum got under my skin a bit more because of it's rawer found footage style... it felt like you really had found some deranged killer's home movie.
I think the last film to give me a bit of a scare was Paranormal Activity. I was watching it alone in a creaky old house late on a stormy night so the atmosphere was just right. Watched it again since and it didn't have the same effect.
One that really sticks with me is catching The Exorcist on the big screen. The sound of that film in a theater is amazing and it made me feel uneasy.
Angra
05-23-2019, 12:41 AM
Hereditary
Not a single jump scare, just slow burn creepiness.
I so wish more of this kind of horror movies would be made. All it takes is creativity and knowing how to create atmosphere. Is that too hard? Is that too much to ask for?
Bloof
05-23-2019, 03:59 AM
Yep, Dead Silence, The Exorcist and Ju-on: The Grudge.
cheebacheeba
05-23-2019, 05:21 AM
I've got a couple more.
Haute tension, well...it did just that.
Creep. Not the latest one with the name, the one that was more or less a UK version of wrong turn with the antagonist living in train tunnels?
Just a very gritty, dirty feeling film with a remorseless "killer" if you can call it that.
I remember it making me uncomfortable.
hammerfan
05-23-2019, 05:53 AM
Honestly? The last movie that really scared me was The Exorcist. Paranormal Activity gave me the willies a bit, but, The Exorcist had me sleeping with the light on for months!
fudgetusk
05-24-2019, 07:49 AM
I haven't been scared by a film in many, many decades.(many)
Hang on. INLAND EMPIRE. When that woman's face appears distorted.
The entire film is like one of those joke films you see on youtube where you watch something boring for a minute and a horrid face flashes up.
Sculpt
05-25-2019, 03:07 PM
Honestly? The last movie that really scared me was The Exorcist. Paranormal Activity gave me the willies a bit, but, The Exorcist had me sleeping with the light on for months!
I saw The Exorcist on TV, it's prime time premiere, when I was about 8. That had me freaked out and jumpy for weeks. ::big grin::
Did you ever see Dead Silence or Vacancy?
hammerfan
05-28-2019, 03:43 AM
I saw The Exorcist on TV, it's prime time premiere, when I was about 8. That had me freaked out and jumpy for weeks. ::big grin::
Did you ever see Dead Silence or Vacancy?
Vacancy is the one with Kate Beckinsale, right? If so, yes, I've seen it. Can't remember if I've seen Dead Silence.
Sculpt
05-28-2019, 01:50 PM
"The Conjuring".
Even though this franchise has been spun to death, with more to come...the first one for me had this one great scene. Nope. Not the clapping/basement scene though that was borderline.
I'm talking about the scene that takes place in the investigator couples house, where they have all their haunted artifacts.
Their...was it daughter?
When you first see that Annabelle has "escaped", not so much seeing the doll or anything...but the use of lighting, shadows and musical score was great...and when that large shadow just crept down the stairs - I actually felt dread.
If a movie can pull this off?
Win.
I just watched Conjuring with my folks. They liked the jump scares. Which shot are you talking about? was it at 1:59 in this clip?
QNuaOVYAW1E
Sculpt
05-28-2019, 02:00 PM
Vacancy is the one with Kate Beckinsale, right? If so, yes, I've seen it. Can't remember if I've seen Dead Silence.
Yep, that's the one. I liked it. Did the pounding on the door get to you? ::big grin::
Dead Silence has the ventriloquist and doll. James Wan film. That's pretty much the only film that had a scary moment for me. Worth a watch. He had a lot of balls to actually try to do that ending. Good horror film, excellent segments, but not a great film.
cheebacheeba
05-28-2019, 05:08 PM
I just watched Conjuring with my folks. They liked the jump scares. Which shot are you talking about? was it at 1:59 in this clip?
QNuaOVYAW1E
2:05, what happens there.
BudMan
05-31-2019, 07:36 PM
That scene in "The Eye"......get goosebumps every time I watch it. Pretty sure the surround sounds adds to much of the "jump factor".
ZNMZ7y-Zl2w
MichaelMyers
07-23-2019, 09:15 AM
Dark Skies. More fact than fiction.
saucyjacky
07-24-2019, 08:47 PM
"The Conjuring," as many others have listed.
After Lorraine falls into the basement, and is sitting there alone in the dark, Bathsheba's feet suddenly come into view, suspended as though she's been hanged. The feet then begin to turn to face Lorraine, swinging toward her. Something about that terrified me in the moment.
"Hereditary."
It must have been the subversion of expectation, but hearing the mother pounding on the attic door, paired with the proceeding visual revelation that she was doing so with her head, unsettled me.
"It Follows."
I feel as though I need say nothing but 'the tall man' to explain which scene startled me whilst watching the film for the first time in cinemas.
RoaringDog
08-14-2019, 07:28 PM
Oculus
Oculus scared the crap out of me. It is the only horror film I don't want to watch again.
Hereditary was great, watched it like 3 times already.
ChronoGrl
08-15-2019, 05:32 PM
Hereditary really really unnerved me.
hammerfan
08-16-2019, 03:16 AM
Hereditary really really unnerved me.
I have this in the queue on Amazon Prime. Maybe this weekend.....
Sculpt
08-26-2019, 01:47 PM
I have this in the queue on Amazon Prime. Maybe this weekend.....
too bad it hasn't come to Netflix. I wonder if hbo has it?
ImmortalSlasher
08-26-2019, 09:10 PM
That I can remember right now and I know I reviewed them positively here. I would list.
1. Sinister.
2. It Follows.
Both have some really creepy scenes. And if you watch at night on a good sound system. Plus with some alcohol, those movies will get to you.
Bloof
08-27-2019, 09:02 AM
"It Follows" was very good. One of the few newer films I liked.
MichaelMyers
08-27-2019, 09:28 AM
The Inauguration of Donald Trump
ImmortalSlasher
08-28-2019, 12:21 AM
"It Follows" was very good. One of the few newer films I liked.
It's one of the best modern horror movies for me. So many good scenes. The tall guy, the beach scene, and many more.
Freddywise
10-08-2019, 01:39 PM
I know this is going to sound like total Edgelord bs, but I'm not really scared by horror movies. I haven't been, ever. But if I think back far enough... I think the VERY LAST thing to spook me, was when I was a child and I was watching "Are You Afraid of the Dark" on Nickelodeon and the episode "Dead Man's Float."
That creature spooked the hell out of me, but I absolutely loved it and became obsessed with it. The more something scared me, the more interested in it I became, and soon enough, it didn't scare me at all. In fact, dead looking, decaying, zombie type things are some of my favourite horror icons.
Although to be honest, I really wish a movie would come out that would spook me a little. I miss that adrenaline rush.
Dickey
11-24-2019, 09:50 PM
The last one to really scare me, where I was actually afraid to be in the house alone in broad daylight (Yea; I'm a big bad biker,too LOL) was "Rawhead Rex".
Man that thing was scary!