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What's the scariest movie you know?

Posted: Wednesday, June 04, 2008 4:46 PM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
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One of my co-workers wanted a good old scary movie last weekend. So she rented this.

Whoops. She managed to confuse "scary" with "gory," and was rather distraught. (Although Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, which he later had to defend to angry readers.)

The mistake started those of us in the office talking about our favorite scary films that don't load on the blood. They don't need to, after all. The most frightening thing in any movie is the monster you never see. Your own mind can invent things that are much more horrifying than anything a special-effects department can dream up. (This was proven for me in "Cloverfield" -- I liked the movie, but the monster was much scarier when it was just a roar and thumping footprints.)

I admit it, I'm a scary-movie fan. And I'm not above the occasional gore...love almost all zombie movies. I sometimes feel as if the "horror" section of the video store should be divided into two parts:"slasher" and "scary," or maybe "blood" and "no blood."

Some of my favorite films that would fit in the "scary but not gory" category would include:

"The Shining"
Yes, there's some blood, but the success of this movie is its utterly creepy feel: the snowed-in hotel, the rooms holding long-dead secrets. Oh, and Jack Nicholson's manic portrayal, and Stephen King's writing.

"John Carpenter's The Thing"
Like "The Shining," another spooky, snowy setting that lends itself perfectly to the rising dread. A classic. (NOTE: OK, yes, this movie qualifies as gory. But I don't know...I couldn't leave it off because there's so much scare that doesn't involve the gore. So sue me.)

"The Others"
I didn't expect to like this 2001 film, with Nicole Kidman as a protective yet fragile mother, as much as I did. I guessed the twist partway through, but that didn't stop me from enjoying the scares.

"The Ring" and "The Grudge"
You may have seen the American versions, but rent the original Japanese films for a double dose of scary. The plot of "The Ring, and that creepy phone call whisper, "seven days," stuck with me long after the movie ended.

"Aliens"
I know, I know, this 1986 classic is a science fiction film, not strictly horror. But I have to include it because no scene scares me more than the one where Ripley is watching what the  Marines are seeing via their helmet cameras, and slowly begins to realize they are all doomed. When this one reruns on cable, I can't stop watching.

What movies scared you, and didn't need a bucketload of blood to do it? Let's discuss in the comments.

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Seven - maybe it's not the "scariest" but no movie has ever haunted me or horrified me as much as this one!
"Last House on the Left" is hands-down the scariest movie that I have ever seen.  I still cringe when I see it in a video store.
"Something Wicked This Way Comes," is still scary to me.
Children of the Corn (the name Malachi is ruined for me), Signs, the Grudge (I hate the croaky noise)
Without a doubt, "Event Horizon" freaks me out every time.  Movies don't give me nightmares, but that one did.
For me it is Psycho  (the shower scene)
the very FIRST "Nightmare on Elm street".
It messed with something that can not be controlled your DREAMS!! very scary
I think "Poltergeist" still stands up as a pretty terrifying movie.  Practically zero gore, and some of the scariest scenes used the simplest of household objects (kitchen chair pyramid, anyone?).
The Changling.....anyone see that.  George C. Scott played in it.  Scared the crap out of me.  I still can't listen to the music from The Exorcist either.  Any movie that has 'flying' people is a NO-SEE.
Rosemary's Baby - scary classic - the Thing - the original was in black and white. - The original Body Snatchers, and mostly all Count Dracula movies - scary
Rosemary's Baby - scary classic - the Thing - the original was in black and white. - The original Body Snatchers, and mostly all Count Dracula movies - scary
'It'  - the book was so scary for me, I had to stop reading it.    The movie scared me just as much.
All men can agree on only one thing: The scariest movie ever, by far, no question...Fatal Attraction!!  "I won't be ignored!"
"Signs" - very thought provoking but scary/thriller wise. My youngest son slept on our bedroom floor for three days after we saw it in the movies. The scene where you see the alien thing in the street for the first time - Baby!! creeps me out!!
The original "Salem's Lot" with David Soul, the parts where the kids come floating up to their friends window when the fog clears out of the way. There's really no gore in it, it's just a good ol' fashioned creepy movie, & also "Burnt Offering's" with Karen Black & Oliver Reed.
Legally Blonde scared the hell out of me
I just watched this one again recently and had forgotten how it gets to you - The Exorcism of Emily Rose, there are just some really creepy parts and the fact that it is based on a true story gets me! It just has that factor that makes you think about it later, and gives you goosebumps!
The Original Amityville Horror. I was late returning to work after lunch becuase it was on and I got engrossed. That and Pet Semetary give me the willies.
I know it's not a classic or typical horror movie, but I will never watch Hannibal again.  That dinner scene where he's feeding the guy pieces of his own brain while he is still alive is way too disturbing for me.
The original Japanese version of One Missed Call.  No blood, but creepy to no end.  Oh, and The Grudge.
The Changeling with George C. Scott! So simple and so perfectly scary.  The tiny wheelchair, the ball!! The original scary child in a well movie!!!
The 1963 version of The Haunting. It is one of the best ghost movies ever made.
Scary movies . . . Halloween, Phantasam and the original Tales from the Crypt movie. In 1972, I was 14.  My sister and I went to see Tales from the Crypt at the theater, and afterwards, I couldn't sleep in my own room for 2 days . . . I slept on the floor in my sister's room!!!
Poltergeist....the scene with the chairs always gives me chills.
Movies like the first Poltergeist.
Always good to go with John Carpenter movies. "In the Mouth of Madness" is a good one. The original "Halloween" and "The Fog".

There's also the original "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" (actually not very gory at all), "Seven", "Silence of the Lambs", and "The Descent".

And two great Korean horror films from director Joon-ho Bong - "The Host" and "Memories of a Murder". "Memories of a Murder" is one of the most chilling horror movies I've ever seen.
"Dressed to Kill" scared the devil out of me!  I couldn't sleep for days--I kept checking to make sure the doors and windows were locked!
Jaws, because sharks that size do exist. When I first saw it at the age of 11, I had to stay up all night,because I kept dreaming the bed was a raft on the ocean and the shark was underneath it.
Definately The Exorcist, but how could you forget Dee Snider's "Strangeland". I don't know that you would call that movie scary, but it's definately messed up & will have you keeping the lights on at night!
Jeepers Creepers...Awesome movie that will scare the peeeeeee out of most people.
Event Horizon was one I won't forget.  
Pet Sematary was all around creepy.The book was scarier than the movie. But the movie was pretty spooky in it's own right.
"The Uninvited" 1944 movie with Ray Milland.  My all time favorite scary movie.  It's awesome!...very, very spooky!
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0037415/
It kind of borderlines the gap but "The Serpent and the Rainbow." I developed a fear that someone would bury me alive.
Halloween.  Yes there is a bit of blood but how many other movies scare you based on a lil' ditty they play for the main character.  
The recent Untraceable - scared the heck out of me!
It would definatly be the Japanese film (Audition)I've never been so freaked out!
Hands down, The Shining. That moment when Shelly Duval is looking for her son and glances at an open door and sees ... what? what *is* that? Two men, and one's dressed up as ... what? It's been years since I've seen that one scene, and it still completely disturbs me.
Deliverance, think twice before going in woods your unfamiliar with.
What, everybody feels comfortable with Psycho, the scariest movie ever made!?  Jeez! Anybody that watches Hitchcock's classic and feels comfortable in the shower after is made of steel.  And let's not forget "The Birds", too, which is still one of my favorites of all time.
At the time, The Exorcist freaked me out because it was obvious that the devil wasn't forced out by any priest--he left voluntarily after he had accomplished the destruction he sought. In the end, faith had no real power over his evil. I think that was the scariest part of a film whose special effects now seem almost comical. Aliens is high on my list of favorites, along with newer films like Jeepers Creepers, the Blair Witch Project and Cloverfield. And back when I was a child, nothing wea scarier than the talking walls in the 1963 version of The Haunting. But I also like a monster for whom I can feel empathy--like Jeff Goldblum as The Fly.
The Zombie Diaries. A VERY creepy British zombie flick with a scary twist at the end. Another movie I though was very scary was a T.V. movie called Don't Be Afraid of the Dark
"Se7en" did it for me. I still can't stand Kevin Spacey to this day, although I was *almost* able to believe his Bobby Darin in "Beyond the Sea".
"Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn." When they put the bugs in those guys' ears, I had nightmares for years. I've never been scared by movies, except for that one.
"Wait Until Dark", with Audrey Hepburn as a blind woman and Alan Arkin in an amazing performance, makes me jump every time.

For newer films, I agree with some of yours, and would add "What Lies Beneath", with Michelle Pfeiffer and Harrison Ford.
Halloween a classic not alot of blood and guts and still has to be the best scary soundtrack.
"Enemy of the State".  The government pretty much takes everything from this guy and they can find him wherever he goes.  I don't know about you, but that is scary to me.
First of all, let me give a belated welcome back to Gael and Test Pattern.  And congratulations on Kelly, who is a real cutie (saw a pic of her on PCJM).

OK, back to the topic at hand:  I could post a book here but I’ll add a couple for now.

Carrie – It’s bad enough I was freaked out as a little kid from the prin ads that showed a bloodied and bug-eyed Sissy Spacek.  I actually saw this movie on CBS back in the late 70s and by the time I got to the ending…let’s just say I was freaked out.  

Dressed To Kill – Brian DePalma was often derided by critics for trying to emulate Alfred Hitchcock, but I have to be honest, few have come closer to doing just that.  I won’t spoil for the people who haven’t seen it, but you’ll never look at a matched pair of white shoes in quite the same way again.

Finally, I’ll throw a “monster” movie in here:  It’s Alive.  Rick Baker created a fantastic monster baby, but you wouldn’t know from watching the movie as you seldom saw it, and when you did it was presented in quick, sometimes blurry shots.  And it was all the more effective for it.
I have to agree with you on "The Thing" - that movie had me creeped out for weeks and I am a big-time horror fan.  I thought "Poltergeist," especially in its time, was wonderfully spooky with absolutely no stabbing involved.  And while I hate to admit it, because I really didn't like the movie, The Blair Witch Project totally raised my hackles (I live out in the woods, and had trouble sitting alone on my deck at night for a while after that one).  
If you are old enough to have been around to see them when Jaws and The Exorcist hit theatres, you'd have to put them on the list.    
In the vein of movies that have haunted me but aren't really horror movies (at all), "Boys Don't Cry" absolutely gave me nightmares, and at my age, that doesn't happen often.
Finally, for a campy horror flick that manages to be kinda scary and insanely funny at the same time, check out an oldie called "Motel Hell."
The original "The Haunting"


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