Evil Dead 1 & 2 (My absolute favorite horror movies)
Dead Alive (very gory)
Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (very disturbing and scary)
Ichi the killer (probably a bit too freaky)
Irriversable
3 Extremes
BasketCase (creepy to the point its funny)
Too many to list.. I LOVE horror movies!
2006-10-13 03:23:42
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answer #1
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answered by waiting2inhale2 5
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Without a Doubt the original Halloween Films.
2006-10-09 16:57:26
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answer #2
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answered by mr_acecombat 3
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The Exorcist is hands down the best horror move ever made it was based on real events!
The Exorcist (1973) is the sensational, shocking horror story about devil possession and the subsequent exorcism of the demonic spirits from a young, innocent girl (of a divorced family). The Exorcist was notable for being one of the biggest box-office successes (and one of the first 'blockbusters' in film history, predating Jaws (1975)), and surpassed The Godfather (1972) as the biggest money-maker of its time. And it remains one of the few horror films nominated for Best Picture. However, it was also one of the most opposed films for its controversial content. Roman Polanski's successful Rosemary's Baby (1968) played upon similar fears of devil possession.
The controversial nature of the film's content - exorcism (accompanied by blasphemies, obscenities and graphic physical shocks), was supposedly based upon an authentic, nearly two-month long exorcism performed in 1949 on a 14-year old boy (with pseudonym "Robbie Mannheim") in Mt. Rainier, Maryland by the Catholic Church (in the form of a fifty-two year old Jesuit priest named Fr. William S. Bowdern and Fr. Raymond Bishop). The official exorcism was reported in Thomas B. Allen's and Carl Brandt's 1993 book Possessed: The True Story of an Exorcism. [Possessed (2000) was also a pay-TV-cable Showtime movie of the same name, starring Timothy Dalton.] The film's plot was also partially inspired by a similar demonic possession case in Earling, Iowa in 1928.
2006-10-09 17:10:56
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answer #3
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answered by steamroller98439 6
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"The Rocky Horror Picture Show" ... An "erotic nightmare beyond any measure." Re-live Richard O'Brien's sinfully twisted salute to horror, sci-fi, B-movies and rock music - a "sensual daydream to treasure forever" - starring Tim Curry (in his classic gender bending performance), Barry Bostwick, and Oscar® winner Susan Sarandon. Do the "Time Warp" and sing "Hot Patootie" with Meatloaf again...and again...and again.
2006-10-09 17:04:58
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answer #4
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answered by r0bErT4u 5
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Nightmare On Elm Street 1 and 3
The Hill Has Eyes
Friday 13th
Wolf Creep
Halloween
Omen
Puppet Master , All the films are brilliant
2006-10-09 17:51:26
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Of course, the original Halloween.
2006-10-09 16:54:38
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Hide and Seek with Robert De Nero and Dakota Fanning or The exorcism of Emily Rose
2006-10-09 17:19:49
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answer #7
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answered by luvs2dance204 2
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hills have eyes, exorcists, carrie, halloween, nightmare on elm street, stay alive, silent hill, wrong turn, the shining, friday the 13th(this week is friday the 13) , the ring 1 and 2, hide and seek,The Omen, saw 1 and 2, texas chainsaw masacre, the grudge, psycho, amityville
2006-10-09 17:23:59
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answer #8
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answered by sup yo 5
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The Exorcist
2006-10-09 16:53:28
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answer #9
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answered by Fleur de Lis 7
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Nosferatu (1922) and Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari (1920). They made incredibly effective use of the special effects techology available to them in their day.
2006-10-09 17:08:48
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answer #10
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answered by ichliebekira 5
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