Sentences with phrase «eerie music»

"Eerie music" refers to a type of music that sounds spooky, strange, or unsettling, creating a sense of fear or unease. Full definition
It's an one - of - a-kind installation that produces eerie music, powered by the sea waves themselves.
Gawd, folks, quit drinking the kool - aid, don't accept either the red or the blue pill and when someone suggests you open a door and there is eerie music playing from behind said door, don't open it.
Girls shares with It Follows inventively eerie music and classic literary references that double as horror - flick references, plus Babadook's focus on grief and motherhood.
Enemies will literally rip your head off while eerie music quietly plays in the background.
The boy is Jake (Asa Butterfield), who lives in bland and sunny Florida (A sudden cut from the monochrome opening title sequence, accompanied by eerie music, to a bright, deserted beach is one of the movie's funniest moments).
Life - size figures in period costumes represent the main characters, and the show is filled with eerie music and deep - voiced narrators saying things like «The devil was the Prince of Darkness, and he was everywhere.»
In particular, the ambiance of the Caves level has always stuck out to me, with the hauntingly beautiful vocal track and eerie music setting the tone perfectly in the background.
It's unnerving, skin - crawling, with a dash of eerie music that keeps your soul on edge.
The update looks like it will include some new jack - o - lantern filled levels along with some pretty eerie music to match.
Charlemagne Palestine composes eerie music to accompany stuffed animals along the stairs, while Bjarne Melgaard packs a room for kids to play with their sex toys.
Key in some eerie music.
Eerie music and beautiful dark photography, excellent acting, omission of too much splatter, all combine to create a phobic atmosphere and a paradigm in horror cinema.
The cinematography and acting were great, but take out the eerie music and 2 creepy (ish) parts and it was like watching a really long history channel documentary (which I also normally love.)
But while previews have eerie music and depictions of spooky creatures, Entertainment Weekly writer Chris Nashawaty says the film «forgets to be scary,» Variety writer Peter Debruge says there are «vacancies where the scares should be,» and Guardian writer Peter Bradshaw wrote that he is «less convinced by [director Guillermo Del Toro's] Halloweeny ghosts» than by other aspects of the film.
The costume mirrors an eerie music box that pops up throughout the movie, but even without that bit of synergy, it would be more than memorably ghoulish.
Like prior Blue Underground and Anchor Bay interviews, a seated Morricone discusses the first of his numerous collaborations with Argento, and he elaborates on the eerie music written for the seminal giallo film.
We're afraid, not because we're wrapped up in the story or the danger that the characters are in, but because Wan and company keep turning the crank on the metaphorical jack - in - the - box, as we hear the eerie music amid the dark environments and we brace ourselves for the sudden appearance of a horrific looking apparition that appears out of nowhere, accompanied by the sound of someone pounding on a piano that sounds to be about 10 times louder than the rest of the audio.
But thanks to artful cinematography, intense acting, and eerie music (we assume by Jonny Greenwood, who signed on to score the film last year), there's a deeply unsettling feel to it all the same.
The opening title sequence of Haunted Hill — a fascinating collage of disturbing images, jittery lettering, and eerie music — alone is creepier than anything in The Haunting, and for the most part Malone is able to maintain the mood.
A particular sequence that comes to mind is when Alex Mason and his crew explore a downed ship carrying a chemical weapon — superb lighting effects, eerie music, and a copious amount of dead bodies make this one of the more memorable levels.
Eerie music, with sounds of screeching violins among other sounds really sets the mood when walking up or down stairs or even whilst traveling through a confined cave in the dark, sure even with night vision a cave isn't a safe place to be if something was to confront you.
It makes me think of vampires, and vampire hunters, and spooky castles and eerie music.
The eerie music and cheesy dialogue really sell the b - movie aesthetic and it still has an alluring charm to this day.
I dislike horror games since I scare easily, and anything with jump scares, eerie music, and supernatural creatures will have me...
Hearing some eerie music, she is drawn towards the source as she moves through the house.
There is more to being scary than carefully placed jump scares and eerie music (take that, Resident Evil).
All the sound effects came so well together in the game with wild screen distortions, immense static and eerie music you experienced whilst playing the game.
It's lighting effects, eerie music and sound effects, graphics and puzzles all add the necessary to makes this one of the scariest games around.
Eerie music, the beeps of a security system that failed to detect an intruder, and the sound of a knife going into someone's belly all provoke a visceral reaction without jolting you out of the story.
Still, we were generally impressed with how well the Gold laid out the collection of effects and eerie music, providing a balanced sound across the spectrum, with no audible noise from the wireless connection, even in the quietest scenes.
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