Scary scenes include graveyards with living dead characters, monsters and other frightening images.
Not exact matches
Yet, the film plays out with little sense of requisite suspense that made the first Psycho such a great film, and many of the
scenes,
including the murders, play out as if they were made for a psychological drama, rather than in a
scary horror flick or tense, nail - biting thriller.
Mulholland Dr. is never more disconnected than its opening 20 minutes, which introduce characters who seem to belong in different movies (some of whom never appear again) and
include one of the most purely
scary sequences in contemporary film — the self - contained «man behind Winkie's»
scene.
The movie
includes some
scary «jump»
scenes and depictions of characters in nearly continual peril.
Other strong supporting parts
include Brooks» appearance alongside Dan Aykroyd in the funny /
scary prologue to 1983's Twilight Zone: The Movie; a great turn in Steven Soderbergh's Out Of Sight as a spineless white - collar criminal in the Michael Milken vein whose mansion becomes a crime
scene; and a standout role as a bad guy in the upcoming Nicolas Winding Refn thriller Drive.
Of course there are a variety of frightening
scenes and
scary images too — many involving faces with glassy - opaque eyes, along with dolls and old tin toys (
including a clichéd cymbal monkey).