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I don't get scare easily. Hollywood-halloween is very predictable these days. I just saw Dusk Till Dawn 3 (I think that's the title, it's about vampires) yesterday in the sci-fi and to tell you the truth I was in deep suspense, a little scary though. I like classics, and yes I have seen the whole final destination series which were till this day one of the scariest movies I've ever seen. Tell me some good horror movies. I swear If I don't get to see a good horror movie then I might as well visit the cementary at night! LOL

P.S: I'm going to see Saw 3! Suffering? You haven't seen anythingl! LOL

2006-10-23 15:12:43 · 27 answers · asked by Loving Life, Always, and Forever 2 in Entertainment & Music Movies

27 answers

Grudge or Grudge 2!

2006-10-23 15:14:38 · answer #1 · answered by Patrick 3 · 0 0

i'm a horror movie afficionado... i would recommend frailty, session 9, rose red, amityville horror, the exorcist (if you haven't seen it), 28 days later, and for some reason i'm pretty partial to the final destination series even though a lot of people don't like it. other good ones are darkness falls, christine, from hell, and april fool's day.


oh i also think an american haunting really sucked, and so did the grudge. but if you like the grudge, you should see the ring 1 and 2

2006-10-23 22:15:47 · answer #2 · answered by andstuffno1 3 · 0 0

Slither (really scared me)
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre The Beginning
The Grudge 2

2006-10-23 22:16:15 · answer #3 · answered by Melody-Lynn 3 · 0 0

Go see Texas Chainsaw Massacre The Begininng

But if you want an old scary movie watch the 1968 verison of The Night of the Living dead( or any movie with zombies in it

2006-10-23 22:16:28 · answer #4 · answered by nette 3 · 0 0

Natural Born Killers,American History X,Rob Zombie's movie,The Shining,It-Stephen King

2006-10-23 22:13:54 · answer #5 · answered by aries4272 4 · 0 0

An American Haunting

13 Ghosts

Silent Hill

Stay Alive

The Hills Have Eyes

Black Cadalliac

The Cave

Try those.

2006-10-23 22:20:51 · answer #6 · answered by pain_is_poetry 1 · 0 0

Texas Cahinsaw Massacre

2006-10-23 22:17:05 · answer #7 · answered by tinydancer 3 · 0 0

See the grudge 2

2006-10-23 22:15:55 · answer #8 · answered by Taylor N 1 · 0 0

You scare by different kinds of movies than most people it seems.Try Signs,Frailty,The Day After Tomorrow,The Cell,House On Haunted Hill.....

2006-10-23 22:46:23 · answer #9 · answered by babyheavenly2000 2 · 0 0

The Exorcist is the best horror movie ever made and is based on a true story heres a little history on it lol
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 film's screenplay - a horror-tinged western (and tale of good vs. evil), was faithfully based upon author William Peter Blatty's 1971 best-selling theological-horror novel of the same name. Academy-Award winning director William Friedkin (previously known for The French Connection (1971)) created a frightening, horror film masterpiece, with sensational, nauseating, horrendous special effects (360 degree head-rotation, self-mutilation/masturbation with a crucifix, the projectile spewing of green puke, a mixture of split-pea soup and oatmeal, etc.). The film also featured the terrific acting debut of 12-year old actress Linda Blair, who played the helpless girl possessed by demons. The recognizable opening instrumental tune, titled Tubular Bells (by Mike Oldfield), eventually became a #1 single on the Billboard charts - and the first big seller for Virgin Records.

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.

2006-10-23 22:43:49 · answer #10 · answered by steamroller98439 6 · 0 1

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