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in your opion wat woudl be teh best scary/horror movie for a scary movie night with causins.

and wat is it about with out giving away the movie

2006-07-24 11:53:23 · 13 answers · asked by no one 2 in Entertainment & Music Movies

13 answers

"Signs" - Mel Gibson stars as a widower whose quiet farm life is disturbed by the appearance of crop circles and other indicators that we might not be alone...

"Hellraiser" - A woman is visited by her mutilated ex-lover, who needs flesh to survive.

"The Sixth Sense" - Bruce Willis is a therapist who, after losing a patient with strange abilities, resolves not to make the same mistake with his latest patient...a young boy who seems to see things that aren't there...

"The Thing" (1984) - Several men at an Antarctic research station are threatened by an alien life form...who might be one of them...

2006-07-24 12:27:50 · answer #1 · answered by ? 3 · 1 1

My top 10 favorite horror films:

1. Nosferatu (1922): F.W. Murnau's classic adaptation of Dracula was one of the leading and most influential films in the German Expressionist movment.

2. Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919): Robert Wiene's hypnotic masterpiece is a cinematic landmark of the silent era, and is the film that ushered in the German Expressionist movement, paving the way for films such as Der Golem, Nosferatu, and Metropolis.

3. The Exorcist (1973): William Friedkin's shocking chiller is a film with one sententious layer of meaning after another, addressing such broad concepts as loss of innocence (the intriguing suggestion that Regan's turmoil is punishment for her burgeoning sexuality--a theme of many slasher flicks to come), the true nature of faith, and class politics.

4. Bride of Frankenstein (1935): The wildest and most audacious of James Whale's 1930s horror movies, Bride of Frankenstein is brimming with subtle self-parody, and it offered Whale the opportunity to mock the clichés of horror films, along with amusing sideswipes at Hollywood romances, historical dramas, and even Christianity.

5. The Shining (1980): Stanley Kubrick's eerie adaptation of Stephen King's novel is at once a coolly ironic near-parody and a genuinely chilling dissection of how a family breaks down when the father cannot (or does not want to) perform his duties as provider and protector.

6. Vampyr (1931): Carl Dreyer's surreal, disjointed and dreamlike semi-silent film which offers striking imagery and a deeply compelling mood.

7. Rosemary's Baby (1968): Roman Polanski's traditional gothic horror film, which is set with suprising ease in New York City, features apocalyptic yet darkly comic paranoia about the hallowed institution of childbirth.

8. Frankenstein (1931): James Whale's Frankenstein is widely considered to be the definitive version of Mary Shelley's classic tale, and it also created much of the cinematic language of horror films.

9. I Walked With a Zombie (1943) and 10. Cat People (1942): Though the earlier Universal horror films of James Whale and Tod Browning are better known, RKO's smaller-budgeted horror pictures produced by Val Lewton have had a more lasting impact on American cinema. Directed by Jacques Tourneur, I Walked With a Zombie and Cat People are purely cinematic in building suspense through atmosphere, and each has a remarkably rich and evocative visual style.

2006-07-24 12:00:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The movie you're thinking of is LABYRINTH. Fifteen-3 hundred and sixty 5 days-previous Sarah (Jennifer Connelly) is so envious of her infant brother Toby that she hopes he will in simple terms disappear. Her dream will become fact whilst goblins kidnap the boy--yet Sarah all of surprising unearths herself horrified via the loss. So she gadgets forth to retrieve him, and unearths herself on the adventure of a life-time. to end her activity, she will have the skill to in a roundabout way might desire to attain the middle of the fantastical labyrinth the place the wicked Goblin King (David Bowie, who performs 2 songs) has imprisoned the lad. however the activity is greater handy reported than carried out, for the maze is packed with unknown creatures and innovations-bending puzzles that confuse the girl. Directed via Jim Henson and penned via Monty Python's Terry Jones, LABYRINTH is a various, fantastically designed dark myth for each age.

2016-11-02 22:23:28 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Alien
Changeling
The Shining
Scanners
The Thing (the grossest movie ever!)
Psycho
Cujo
The Omen(the original)
The Exorcist

2006-07-24 12:06:03 · answer #4 · answered by prillville 4 · 0 0

I know this is weard but it is the sining only if I watch half way through it scars the **** out of me no matter how many times i watch and how old I am even if I grown up know I still get scard because I have lots of dreams just like it that is why I am scard **** less

2006-07-24 11:57:45 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The Hills have Eyes

2006-07-24 11:57:54 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dead Bird... and I could tell you what it is about because I got so scared about half way through the movie I made my husband turn it off

2006-07-24 11:57:07 · answer #7 · answered by Lisa 3 · 0 0

The Ring is good, but I also like the classics (the birds, for example). Hitchcock was king!

2006-07-24 11:56:09 · answer #8 · answered by Love2Sew 5 · 0 0

Friday the 13th are the ultimate

2006-07-24 11:56:51 · answer #9 · answered by chavito 5 · 0 0

depends on their age.
I loved Aliens 2 ...scared the crap out of me...but I also liked "the Ring", IT, and "The Shining" good luck and have fun being scared!!!

2006-07-24 11:59:12 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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