Guys, any German Horror films out there?
that's too bad! I recently watched the fog myself, and really really enjoyed it. I didn't think that I would like the whole pirate thing but it was pretty cool. Maybe you'd prefer the remake?Just watched The Fog. A lot of the 80's horrors just don't do it for me...at all.
Just watched The Fog. A lot of the 80's horrors just don't do it for me...at all.
I'd recommend these from the 80's.
The Evil Dead
The Shining
The Howling
The Thing
The Fly
Hellraiser
Prince of Darkness
Pet Sematary
Poltergeist I+II
Angel Heart
Amityville II: The Possession
Pumpkinhead
The Beyond
Demons
Christine
Cujo
Nightbreed (1990)
Near Dark
Entity
Horror comedy:
Re-animator
Return of the Living Dead
An American Werewolf in London
Evil Dead II
Night of the Demons
Creepshow I+II
Fright Night
Puppet Master
The odd ones:
Altered States
Videodrome
In a Glass Cage (AKA Tras el cristal)
No love for Child's Play, From Beyond (make sure to catch the directors cut), Dolls, Phantasm 2, The Blob, Night of the Creeps, Waxwork or House? If you haven't seen any of them, judging from your good taste in 80s movies you almost certainly would like any of those.
To be honest though, I don't really know what to recommend to someone that doesn't like The Fog.
Also, hi. I used to write for a horror website and it never once occurred to me to check off-topic for a horror thread. Dread Central, in case anyone was wondering.
well plug that gap then. The R rated cut is a travesty.Well, I've seen them all, except the director's cut of From Beyond, but none of them were that much to my liking. And personally, I didn't like The Fog that much either.
Dread Central is one of my favorite horror websites BTW, especially after Bloody Disgusting started having too many spoilers in their reviews, and too much unnecessary & unrelated stuff on their website in general.
well plug that gap then. The R rated cut is a travesty.
Nightbreed – The Cabal Cut is the definitive edition of this Clive Barker monster epic, finally presented in the form in which the visionary author-director originally wanted it to be seen. At 145 minutes, it includes over 40 minutes of footage never seen before, adding layers to the story and featuring more monsters, more gore, more sex – and more Decker!
Perhaps I'll have to try to find it somewhere. What I'd really like to see is the director's cut of Nightbreed.
Too bad I wasn't around, when it was shown here at a horror movie festival. =(
God the theatrical version is terrible. I loved the book in an angsty teenage sort of way.
Hehehehe... thanks for this OP...
I'm an old, old, OLD school horror fan from the days of Shock Theater (and all the syndicated packages it spawned) featuring the original Universal Monsters and the wealth of 4:3 cropped B&W "sci-fi" films that were born out of the collective neuroses of '50s Cold War America... I'm also a huge fan of the classic Hammer films. Hell, I was a Starlog subscriber when they were launching Fangoria Magazine back in '79, and part of a letter I wrote to the editors then was actually published in Fangoria #1. So I've been a horror fan since before most of the movies being discussed here were even filmed... and things have really, really changed...
I honestly haven't followed much of what's been made since about 1988 or so, but I've an abiding love for the gendre. I'm a firm believer in the theory that the best horror films are often the least ambitious - the smallest and most obscure can be really brilliant! And I've always subscribed to the Val Lewton "less is more" school of screen horror; I loved Paranormal Activity and Blair Witch, for instance, but thought Descent was merely decent, and I can't be bothered even trying to sit through "tortue porn" like the Saw films. I'll keep an eye on this thread for some hints at some of the better contemporary films to try and catch.
Ok, it's clear this phrase no longer means anything, if it ever even did.
Fair enough.
I hope you've seen Cabin in the Woods. Stick with it through the first half which you might find a little torture porny, but it isn't torture porn at all. I mean, it isn't less is more either, but nothing about it is cheap or manipulative.
The Netflix variety is just too huge to pick anything on random... :s Any ideas?
well, it seems like there arent many horror films from germany.Guys, any German Horror films out there?
I, and most of my friends, didn't like the movie at all. It wasn't particularly funny, and IMO it failed as a fan service as well. Seems like today's horror comedies tend to annoy me more than amuse me, unlike those of the 80's.
I think it's interesting in that an awful lot of it *could* be read as a criticism of the audience that take pleasure from watching other people's torment. I liked it personally because I thought it was *smart* more than because I thought it was funny... but each to their own. You're talking to someone here who doesn't believe in guilty pleasures (I like what I like... I'm never guilty about it) who will defend the Tremors sequels and even Beyond Re-Animator, so don't think me getting enjoyment from something leads me to think less of someone that doesn't.
Cabin in the Woods was terribly advertised. They sold it as a fun throwaway horror film, when it tries to do so much more (we can debate if it succeeds). If I'd thought it was supposed to be dumb fun and I'd gone in expecting that, I would have probably hated it too. Fortunately I'd seen the earlier trailers that made the premise a lot clearer, and hadn't seen any of the TV adverts that just tried to paint it as a 'dumb teenagers in a cabin in the woods' kind of movie.
It was partly, or perhaps mostly, due to the actors. The stoner in particular annoyed the hell out of me, and the rest of the teen cast weren't that much better either. I dunno why I tend to find teens in modern movies extremely annoying. Perhaps because I'm older now? Although teens in the European or Asian movies don't bother me to such extent.
I liked the idea of the movie though, just not its execution and the cast. And I kinda wish they had chosen something other thanzombies, which have become too familiar of a foe.
I think it's because they're getting too photogenic (thus less believable) and because most people making movies still haven't figured out that the best horror movies have kids that you actually LIKE and don't want to see get killed. Cabin at least had a good excuse for it's clichéd cast.
Agreed.
On a side note, has anyone seen Trier's Epidemic, P2, and Idle Hands? They are available on the European Netflix right now.
P2 is all sorts of god awful; the only redeeming factor about it is seeing Rachel Nichols in a low-cut dress for most of the film.
Idle Hands is not horror at all, but it's fun in a really stupid way.
Watched The Grudge on Netflix last night.
One remake that really freaked me out.
dat bed scene man
From what I've seen of the first few rows of Netflix I would recommend any of the following as being worthy of a watch if you haven't seen them:
Tucker & Dale vs Evil
Stake Land
Re-Animator
The Evil Dead
Slither
Hellraiser
Let The Right One In
Black Death
An American Werewolf in London
The Stuff
The Faculty
Demon Knight
Prince of Darkness
Session 9
Creature from the Black Lagoon
House
Audition
Nosferatu
Tremors 2
The Fog
Candyman
Jeepers Creepers
bolded come highly recommended by me, the rest strongly recommended.
The first six minutes of the Maniac remake are available.
I wasn't really crazy about this when it was announced, but I'm starting to warm up to the movie. Elijah Wood really seems to work in the role, which I guess shouldn't be too surprising. He was really effective as Kevin in Sin City. The first person POV works quite well, adding a real sense of unease to things. Oh, and I dig the opening theme. Does anyone know when this will see a US release?
I'd recommend these from the 80's.
*snip*
No love for Child's Play, From Beyond (make sure to catch the directors cut), Dolls, Phantasm 2, The Blob, Night of the Creeps, Waxwork or House? If you haven't seen any of them, judging from your good taste in 80s movies you almost certainly would like any of those.
To be honest though, I don't really know what to recommend to someone that doesn't like The Fog.
Also, hi. I used to write for a horror website and it never once occurred to me to check off-topic for a horror thread. Dread Central, in case anyone was wondering.
The first six minutes of the Maniac remake are available.
I wasn't really crazy about this when it was announced, but I'm starting to warm up to the movie. Elijah Wood really seems to work in the role, which I guess shouldn't be too surprising. He was really effective as Kevin in Sin City. The first person POV works quite well, adding a real sense of unease to things. Oh, and I dig the opening theme. Does anyone know when this will see a US release?
The first six minutes of the Maniac remake are available.
I wasn't really crazy about this when it was announced, but I'm starting to warm up to the movie. Elijah Wood really seems to work in the role, which I guess shouldn't be too surprising. He was really effective as Kevin in Sin City. The first person POV works quite well, adding a real sense of unease to things. Oh, and I dig the opening theme. Does anyone know when this will see a US release?
Mmm looks and sounds great.
So what other horror movies are coming out in 2013 that people should be hyped for or interested in?
An English Civil War-set film that stars Michael Smiley (Kill List), Peter Ferdinando (Tony), Reece Shearsmith (The League of Gentlemen), Julian Barratt (The Mighty Boosh), Richard Glover (Sightseers) and Ryan Pope (Ideal). A Field In England follows a small group of deserters fleeing from a raging battle through an overgrown field. As they are captured by O'Neil, an alchemist, they are forced to aid him in his search to find a hidden treasure that he believes is buried in the field.
Crossing a vast mushroom circle, which provides their first meal, the group quickly descend into a chaos of arguments, fighting and paranoia, and, as it becomes clear that the treasure might be something other than gold, they slowly become victim to the terrifying energies trapped inside the field.
SOLDKill List director-
Guys, by all measures I should be completely into the walking dead show. I watched like 3 episodes when it came out and then called it a day.
I'm really loving the adventure game, though. It's almost too stressful and intense. Should I catch up on the two seasons on Netflix or maybe buy the digital comics on my tablet?
Which is better? Should I hit up the comics then supplement with the show?
Is there any way to buy digital copies of the old EC comics?
Is Locke & Key worth picking up?
Edit: Decided to ring in the New Year with a bang. I bought both.
Is Locke & Key worth picking up?
Kill List director Ben Wheatley has a new one coming out, entitled A Field in England:
While it isn't as bad as the Platinum Dunes outing, it's still not very good. The biggest failing is the film being set in the modern day. If it had taken place in the 1990s, I think it would have worked better. The logistics of Leatherface still doing his thing would make sense. Plus the two instances of modern technology, the most ridiculous use of an iPhone in cinematic history and useless GPS usage, would have been eliminated. But beyond the story concerns, the film simply tries too hard. Shots are recreated, sets painstakingly resemble their original counterparts, and lots of references to Hooper's film are made. It comes off as the most expensive fan film never uploaded to YouTube.
I agree that the attempts to humanize leatherface a bit are misguided in the Platinum Dunes version but I disagree that it is a bad movie. I actually think it's one of the most intense and unrelenting horror movies I've seen. It just has a crushing atmosphere about it. It also looks great and is fairly well acted. Not to mention some good gore and scares. There are a few story beat issues but for the most part, I really love the PD remake. And for the record, I love the original too.Because Texas Chainsaw 3D came out today, I decided to watch one of the Chainsaw flicks last night. My initial impulse was to watch the original, since TC3D is a direct sequel. But, I thought that wouldn't be fair. So I watched the Platinum Dunes remake. I hadn't watched it since it hit theaters, so I was curious if my opinion had changed any.
It didn't.
The Platinum Dunes version is still loud, dumb and ugly. The changes made to the story don't work and only served to slow down and over complicate the storyline. The original is brilliant because of how raw and straightforward it is. The remake is bloated and ridiculous at every turn. But beyond this, the films largest failing is how it handled the family. It eschewed the meat and tried to play a sympathy card for Leatherface. It was, and remains, a really bad film.