Return to a place of insanity and blood - curdling chills in this shocking eye - popping 3D sequel to one of the most surreal and gruesome
horror films ever created.
One of the best missions available as it happens is a fetch quest that pays homage to one of the greatest
horror films ever made, which I will not spoil.
Had nothing to do with counting down the greatest
horror films ever made, it's this publication's case for why Lynch should be considered a horror director.
That, to me, is probably the best way they could have gone about bringing Poltergeist back to the big screen because the original film is untouchable and in my opinion one of the most perfectly crafted
horror films ever made.
Despite all these great directors working in the genre, I'm not sure the stigma of making
horror films ever really went away.
Rosemary's Baby remains one of the best
horror films ever made.
Though modern audiences might notice that The Texas Chain Saw Massacre isn't as polished as its later imitators, that low - budget aesthetic adds to the film's grindhouse appeal and is part of why it's considered one of the most influential
horror films ever made.
Overall, SUSPIRIA ranks as my favorite 4K restoration from Kino Lorber, bringing back to the screen (this week at the Landmark Inwood in Dallas) in pristine form one of the most harrowing
horror films ever produced.
Kyle's Rating: easily one of the best
horror films ever made.
From 1962, I think it is one of the best early
horror films ever made, up there with Repulsion.
He directed The Texas Chain Saw Massacre in 1974 and it has been argued that the movie is one of the most successful and influential
horror films ever made.
As I watched a demon - possessed girl split her own tongue in half with a rusty boxcutter, and then proceed to partake in the most disgusting French kiss I've ever seen, I was so overwhelmed with disgust that I forgot I was watching a remake of one of my favorite indie
horror films ever.
Suspiria is an amazing film, easily Argento's masterwork and among the best
horror films ever made.
John Carpenter's Halloween — one of the most iconic
horror films ever made — is returning to theaters, for one night only, on Thursday, October 29th.
Dario Argento's Suspiria is one of the best
horror films ever made, a hyper - stylized thriller about a dancer who discovers her ballet school in Germany is actually a coven of evil witches.
This week in home video releases features one of the most talked - about films of last year, a trilogy from one of America's best directors, a documentary about the people who launched the careers of John Belushi and Bill Murray, the sequel to one of the best
horror films ever made, and much, much more.
This is absolutely one of the greatest
horror films ever made and a must - see for those who are into that sort of thing.
One of the greatest and funniest
horror films ever made, it has a great story and a powerful scenes with great visuals and exquisite acting, I am a big horror fan, this one is good, it is really good, although I was barging for something
One of the greatest and funniest
horror films ever made, it has a great story and a powerful scenes with great visuals and exquisite acting, I am a big horror fan, this one is good, it is really good, although I was barging for something smaller and simpler, but it turned out to be way too different than expected!
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is, without a doubt, one of the best
horror films ever made.
Maybe not the best
horror film ever, but certainly the most and ingenious one.
It changes it up and shows you behind the scenes of every cheesy cliche
horror film ever made, and it does it very well.
Knowing this, my dad would often recall the greatest
horror film he ever saw.
The Birds (1963) My favorite
horror film ever, so realistic that I never slept a wink the night I saw it as an 18 - year - old.
It's the highest grossing
horror film ever now but only # 4 of all time (not adjusted for inflation) in terms of R - rated films.
I haven't seen The Babadook either and I'm getting to the point where I'm getting tired of hearing how it's «the best
horror film ever.»
It is the fourth highest grossing supernatural
horror film ever with just about $ 160M domestic and $ 255M worldwide.
Other influences include The Shining and every Japanese
horror film ever made, to name just... some.
So I'm grateful for 1959's «Eyes Without a Face,» which critic Pauline Kael described as: «perhaps the most austerely elegant
horror film ever made.»
James Cameron's claustrophobic sequel to Alien was the first
horror film I ever saw in theaters (I was a bit sheltered) and it still gets me today.
Not exact matches
This one will be hard to stomach if you actually watch it, but as one of the first
ever «found - footage»
horror movies, about a fictional documentary crew shooting a
film in the Amazon, it has been hugely influential.
All the statistics about attendees indicate that
horror films are still solid date movies» and, in an American society where an
ever - increasing percentage of young men and women are staying unmarried longer and having children later, the appeal of thrills that entertain without forcing one to think too hard is expanded to a larger market.
Recent and upcoming releases include the romance -
horror hybrid Spring; the hotly - anticipated The Look Of Silence, Oppenheimer's companion piece to The Act Of Killing; The Connection, a 70's - set true crime epic and European flipside to William Friedkin's The French Connection starring Oscar ® winning Best Actor Jean Dujardin (The Artist); The Keeping Room, from director Daniel Barber (Harry Brown), based on Julia Hart's acclaimed Black List screenplay, starring Brit Marling, Hailee Steinfeld and Sam Worthington; the multiple Cannes award winning The Tribe,
filmed entirely in Ukrainian Sign Language with a cast of deaf, non-professional actors; and a remastered re-release, in conjunction with Olive Films, of the 1981 disasterpiece Roar, the most dangerous
film ever made, starring Tippi Hedren, Melanie Griffith and a cast of 150 untrained lions, tigers and exotic animals.
Is my way of remembering the first ones, the trailblazers, the people that brought the
Horror into the biggest media it could
ever be, yes,
film.
This was one of them and it's one of the the absolute worst
horror films i have
ever watched.
Quite possibly the goriest
film ever made by a Hollywood studio, Evil Dead is a new
Horror classic, a
film that accomplishes the nearly impossible task of staying true to the original's roots while standing firmly on its own.
This
film is the most entertaining
horror movie of all time, and the craziest, most fun, most exciting, most puzzling, most jaw - dropping
horror movie
ever.
It is an artfully crafted exercise in high - octane style, bolstered by a stronger cast than most
horror films could
ever hope to assemble, but it's a bitter, sleazy little pill that leaves an ugly aftertaste.
The distinction between actors and special effects shrinks
ever further in the video game - turned -
horror film «Silent Hill: Revelation 3D,» which reduces its human players to plastic action figures in tired genre settings.
The
film doesn't shy away from the
horrors of slavery, yet the grim material is balanced with a deliciously dark sense of humour - just check out the scene with a band of white - sheeted vigilantes, acting as a precursor to the KKK, which is one of the funniest scenes Tarantino has
ever written.
Best
horror comedy I have
ever seen, it has humour, gory, action and violence, has all the ingredients to make a fantastic
film.
I told him the crucial fact he'd been missing, the actual name of the greatest
horror film he had
ever seen.
Sprinkled with little personality bits here and there (Tallahassee's mad quest for an
ever - elusive Twinkie, Columbus's crippling fear of clowns, etc.), Zombieland doesn't break any new ground in the
horror genre so much as make for a strong dose of escapist fun for knowing fans of the
films.
One of the most cruel and divisive endings to a
film ever, and a preceding two hours of excellent old school
horror.
Oren Peli's PARANORMAL ACTIVITY is one of the most profitable
films ever made — not bad for a
horror film with a $ 15,000 budget.
Ever wonder why some of your favorite lesser - known
horror movies sit idly by while other
films seem to capture all the...
Please don't consider this omission any slight on the
film which is deeply haunting and horrifying (
ever horror filmmaker in the world, please take note).
Astonishingly this thriller is one of the creepier
films, not to be placed in the
horror genre, that I have
ever seen.
While none of the
films beyond Craven's
ever really stand out of the usual grind of
horror sequels, it did give a number of up and coming directors a chance to flex their creative muscles: Chuck Russell (A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors), Renny Harlin (A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master) and Stephen Hopkins (A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child) all leapt from this series directly into big budget action cinema.
It is the mark of a great writer, and a great
film, that we should be so entertained without
ever losing sight of the
horror that undergirds the
film's thesis.