We all either love horror films, or hate horror films. What’s that film that kept you up at night? The one that you re-watch all the time? The one that made you groan at ‘the big reveal’?

Favourite: Evil Dead (2013). It was just insane, wonderfully gory and made you wanna squirm.

Least favourite: Sharkenstein (2016). Watching this film, I gained a new appreciation for Meet The Spartans.

  • Up front warning: This is the ultimate low budget b movie campy horror film. It was written and shot in a seven days on the sets of another movie. It is not scary and is by no objective means a good movie. If you like campy low budget slashers it’s a must watch.

    Sorority House Massacre 2. Five college women spend the night in their new sorority house, the old Hokstedter place, and make the mistake of using a Ouija board. It has a great twist revealing an unlikely hero and the last line of the movie is my favorite line in all of cinema.

    Least favorite: Sorority House Massacre. Maybe the worst example of a low budget slasher flick ever made. This movie is so bad that the sequel used clips from a different movie, Slumber Party Massacre, for it’s flashbacks and backstory. While intended to be scary campy low budget slashers flicks tend to be so ridiculously badly written and acted that they become parodies of themselves and present as humorous movies. Sorority House Massacre isn’t interesting enough to reach this important self parody status and winds up being neither scary nor funny.

  • Ragnell@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Favorite: The Thing, the John Carpenter one from the 80s. It is perfect.

    Least favorite: Nightmare on Elm Street. I like other Craven stuff but could never get into this one.

      • ivanafterall@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I recently watched this for the first time and I adored it. To anybody who hasn’t seen it, it not only holds-up to modern movies, the effects frankly blow most modern movies out of the water.

        • AlternativeEmphasis@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The sound design is nuts, the scream the Thing makes is honestly one of the most distinctive sounds I have ever heard from any horror movie monster.

    • JowlesMcGee@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Hah, this was going to be my answer as well.

      One of my favorite scenes in The Thing is when McCready is sitting at his desk making an audio recording with an open door out of focus in the background. The way the shot just lingers there while the audience sits in dread of what might happen is great.

  • JowlesMcGee@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    My favorite is John Carpenter’s The Thing, with was already mentioned here by @Ragnell

    My least favorite would be Bird Box (is that a horror film, or just a thriller?). I tried watching it and was just bored the whole time. If Bird Box doesn’t count as horror, then I’d have to say Cronenberg’s The Fly. It’s not a bad movie per say, but it just didn’t work for me for whatever reason.

    • ImaginaryFox@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      When I got into my horror phase I was watching a different horror movie almost every night, and eventually came down to watching the classics. The effects of The Thing blew my mind at how well it all stood up.

  • The_Digitalfigment@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    John Carpenter’s The Thing is not just my favorite horror movie but it’s on my list of top 5 favorite movies of all time. I just love that movie to bits on so many levels. Other favorites of mine include Alien, Evil Dead 2, Creepshow, and Return of the Living Dead. Though some honorable mentions to The VVitch, Barbarian, and The Lighthouse (does The Lighthouse count as a horror? Eh. Whatever. I do really like it).

  • phantomslave@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Some that immediately pop into my head:

    Krampus. It’s mildly scary but the audio and atmosphere is phenomenal.

    Trailer Park of Terror. Just sit back, drink a couple of beers, and enjoy this B-rated movie in all it’s glory.

    Slither. Horror comedy that’s great for people who don’t like a ton of scary but don’t mind blood and gore.

    Tucker and Dale versus evil. A comedy with a unique perspective to the horror genre. A must watch!

    • Tucker and Dale vs Evil is a great movie! Very good choice. I’ve never seen Trailer Park of Terror, based on your other recommendations I’m going to have to give it a watch.

  • minnieo@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    favorite: hereditary. maybe a cliche answer but it’s genuinely the best horror movie i’ve seen in a long damn time, everything else is so generic and follows the exact same predictable formula. hereditary didn’t do that at all.

    cant say i have a particular least favorite, because almost all of them are bad and forgettable, therefore I forget them lmao. a bad but good horror movie i love is the later chucky movies like the bride or chucky and the seed of chucky, which are more comedy horror and bad in a good way

  • Calcharger@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    How would you like to feel extremely uneasy and uncomfortable?

    Try Skinamarink

    This is absolutely an either you love it or hate it film. I can 100% understand why people hate this movie - every single shot in this movie is out of focus and not directly showing you what is happening in the scene. It requires 100% focus to decipher (or come close to) what’s going on. It made me feel like a kid in the dark, which is what this movie is about - a brother and sister stuck in their home in a forever night as some entity begins to hunt them.

    Content Warning - Child Disfigurement.

    If you’re looking for a popcorn horror movie to watch with a loved one, skip it. If you’re interested in something truly, truly experimental, give it a shot.

    Sleep Paralysis: The Movie

    • Pankakke@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Man I’m really happy you enjoyed Skinamarink. I heard the buzz about it and the fear that it instilled in some so I gave it a shot as it sounded really interesting and unfortunately I just couldn’t get into it. Perhaps I just wasn’t in the right frame of mind but I really wanted to be transported back to that fear of the unknown when you were a kid but it didn’t give me that and I really wasn’t into it enough to finish it. Happy for the filmmakers though and I look forward to what they do next.

      • Calcharger@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Yeah it’s def avante garde. If you can’t get past how it’s shot, you’re gonna hate it and I don’t blame anyone who doesn’t like it

  • Dick Justice@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My favorite will always be The Shining, which I have seen so many times. I first watched it when I was far too young and now it’s part of my personal schema.

    Least favorite, Turistas, which gave me a near panic attack from second hand claustrophobia. Never again.

  • stopthatgirl7@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Juon. Not the American remake The Grudge, the Japanese version.

    In the Japanese version, the house felt like a normal, everyday house, and that’s what made everything scarier. It was lit like a normal house, unlike the American version.

    Also, that scene were Toshio, the ghost child, is on every floor as the elevator went up literally had me backing up trying to get away, it creeped me out that much. Juon had so much subtle horror like that, along with the big scares.

    And as for least favorite, I guess the Saw movies. I never much liked the torture porn genre. I prefer being creeped out than grossed out.

    • osarusan@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Juon for me as well. Masterful visuals with a minimalistic story. Nothing convoluted. Just simple, perfect horror.

  • EmptyRadar@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m a horror geek, so my list is biased toward my interests, not what is “best”.

    Favorites:

    1. Halloween (1978)
    2. Hellraiser II: Hellbound
    3. The Shining
    4. Event Horizon
    5. The Lost Boys (this one is only vaguely horror, admittedly)

    Bonus: Nightmare on Elm Street because it’s the only one that scared me as a kid. Freddy really came into my dreams so I thought he was real for a long time.

    Least Favorite (no particular order):

    -Paranormal Activity
    -The Purge
    -Killer Klowns From Outer Space
    -Child’s Play

  • ArtieShaw@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I really like the old Dario Argento movies. They’re artsy and gross in equal measures. (And you just know that guy really wants to strangle someone.)

    Suspiria tops the list. I also liked the sequel, Inferno, which is probably underrated. The underwater apartment rooms were really disturbing.

    I wasn’t a big fan of the 2018 remake.

  • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Event Horizon, the babadook, the first couple of Cube movies and the Child’s Play series are my faves, with Bride of Chucky being my all time fav.

    Other faves include American Mary, Terrifier, Cabin in the Woods, Dead snow, and happy death day. If I’m feeling like I want something dumb I’ll go after some Full Moon movies, the evil bong and gingerdead man (first one) are great

    • ImaginaryFox@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I watched this after playing Dead Space, since heard it got lot of inspiration from it. That hell scene was mentally scarring.

      I love Cabin in the Woods too playing on all the horror film tropes.

      • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That hell scene was mentally scarring.

        The funny thing is they actually removed a lot of the hell scene, and the deleted one is pretty intense in comparison. My googlefu is not the best this morning, but I’m sure I’ve seen it on YT before

  • eponymous_anonymous@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The Ghost and the Darkness.

    I’ve seen it once. I was… 6 years old? Somewhere around there.

    Gave me nightmares for several years. There’s only one other movie that’s ever had that effect on me.

    And in terms of night terrors, I actually far prefer dreams about getting pulled out of a canvas tent into the night and getting devoured by a lion to some alternatives. You can fight back and stuff, it’s way better than those dreams about burning alive.

    So, long story short, if you lucid dream hard enough you can kick a nightmare’s ass. I’d really rather not though, it’s a lot of work, so in that sense I sincerely hope the Ghost and the Darkness is the best horror movie I ever see