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To Be Respected...
This is a thread Idea I got from STE's thread "Respected Horror Movies?"
What Im asking for is out of all the Horror movies that have come out in the last 5-10 years will be most respected in say the year 2025.... Discuss! |
I can definatly see Dead and Breakfast and Shaun of the Dead being highly respected for being a breath of fresh into into the dying genre. Also, Saw, partially for the same reason, and partially for re-popularising "torture". Without Saw, there'd be no Hostel, no Wolf Creek.
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I agree with you alot on Dead And Breakfast, absolutly amazing independent film, and i deffinatly think it will be remembered. The whole Saw series will also be remembered, Its turning into the next biggest franchise. |
Kairo
Three...Extremes Identity Dark Water American Psycho Shadow of the Vampire |
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I actually havent bothered to see Rejects yet. To be honest, it doesnt interest me much. Sure, Ill see it eventually...but Im not in a rush. |
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I honestly and fully believe that in 10 or 20 years that Kairo will be viewed as the cinematic masterpiece it is
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I haven't been as eagerly awaiting it, since I've already got a copy
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I would say The Devil's Rejects also, because to me, that film is the strongest indication that horror is getting back on track after what the Scream trilogy managed to do to the horror genre....lol....I also think American Psycho is a good choice, based on Christian Bale's excellent performance. |
Don't have anything that hasn't been said already, except for maybe,sorta,kinda...Tesis('96).
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Original Japanese films that Hollywood seem so keen to jump on and remake: Ringu, Dark Water etc. ought to be remembered in years to come.
I've not seen Final Destination mentioned thus far. I felt that quite a defining movie and certainly one that I'll go back to in years to come ("bus!"). 6th Sense: definitely memorable, especially for the twist. 28 Days Later: great British film-making. Dog Soldiers: ditto. |
The Sixth Sense popped in my head too but it's not horror.
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i loved the movie identity - but hardly anyone knows it. i think a number of the J-Horror films - in general will always be respected - if nothing else but a force that rejuvinated the horror film industry and took it in a much needed direction away from the slasher film. so on that note : the 6th Sense ... which was also incredibly influential. (and i think it falls into the horror bin - after all - it's a ghost story) |
I must admit, I was wondering whether it could count as a horror.
It certainly has a couple of horror moments but what would you class it as? Supernatural thriller? What are the boundaries or criteria that define a film as being in the horror genre? |
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I think it's categorized as a drama thriller. It did have infulence on the horror genre and there's ghost and a number of scare scenes, so I guess there's no problem with calling it horror. |
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Just because there's ghost,vampires ect. in a film doesn't automatically make it horror. Ex:Van Helsing- it had Frankenstein,the wolfman,Dracula, vampires and Mr. Hyde but it's an action movie. Although there might be a couple, I can't vividly remember one scare. |
You're right: IMDb lists primary genres as Drama / Thriller. It also lists:
Hanged Family Therapeutic Alliance Child Psychologist Stuttering Able To See The Dead Spiral Staircase Twist In The End Mother Son Relationship Urination Scene Blockbuster Paranormal Misfit Supernatural Poison Extrasensory Perception Ghost Fear Hanged Child Death Single Mother Wine Cellar Zoloft Psychological Drama Hitchcockian Sixth Sense Writer Director Realization School Play Compassion Hero Human Relationship Love Redemption Tragedy Able To Hear The Dead Blood Bully Bus Ride Child Chilled Air Church Enlightenment Funeral Hidden Camera Kid Loving Misunderstanding Sanctuary School Secret Solemn Soul Spiritual Spirit Suspense Switch Teacher Toy VCR Tape Vomiting Christ Allegory Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy Philadelphia Pennsylvania Psychiatrist Pennsylvania Child In Peril Conspiracy Director Cameo Filicide Flashback Sequence Murderess Road Accident Sex With The Dead No mention of horror :confused: |
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i got into this with someone before .. cant remember who .. its my personal filing mentality ... i pop anything fantastical or supernatural into the horror bucket. (otherwise i cant find shit in my collection) you'll find that a lot of horror guides do the same thing though .. they are even more rediculous .. including stuff even i wouldnt consider. |
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Already been done with the slashers and zombies, and probably the "psychological horrors" in Scary Movie. Don't you just love it when a Haute Tension, Blair Witch or Irreversible comes along these days to sort people's heads out? |
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That makes sense, I guess horror doesn't just have to be something that solely attempts to scare you. It's like other genres that have films that lean in certain directions...Drama comedy,romantic comedy,dramactic thriller ect. Don't see why horror can't be the same. |
you'll find that horror doesnt exist too well on its own ..
its usually grouped in with sci-fi, exploitation, and fantasy as the lines often get blurred. i prefer to think of them as Genre films .. |
I guess it's like that because of the word horror. Drama,Comedy and other genres have broad descriptioins while on the other hand people hear the word horror and assume it's gotta be something completely scary.
I've only had this conversation about the horror genre, you never hear a dicussion about whether a film is or isn't qualified(for lack of a better word) for any other particular genre. |
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My votes are as follows: Hostel High Tension American Psycho A Tale Of Two Sisters The Devil's Rejects In The Mouth Of Madness Scream(Yes Scream) Se7en Everyone hates Scream on these boards, but without it, there would be no horror coming to your cinemas today. It's a very sadistic film, that just happens to be ironic, which is the only way a horror film could have been made in the mid 90's. Go back and look at the horror releases that actually made it to theaters between '90 and '95, and you'll see what I mean. |
i never hated Scream .. i thought it was a treat for horror fans ..
i didnt thing Mouth of Madness was very good though .. certainly not influential in the least.. |
I thought In the Mouth of Madness did Lovecraft like it should be done. nothing too special other than that, but I liked it.
I didn't like Dead & Breakfast. there was too much humor, terrible music, etc. but I did like Shaun of the Dead quite a bit. it was a bit more tasteful, the humor was actually funny, and the scares were actually pretty good. I guess I would put Audition in there, besides most of the ones already mentioned. |
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actually, just about everyone enjoyed scream.
To whoever said dog soldiers... That movie should be remembered, because that's probably the best werewolf film out there, but i9 don't think many people (besides horror fans) have even heard of it. |
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