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2007-07-20 07:58:26 · 30 answers · asked by nikki 3 in Entertainment & Music Movies

30 answers

I have so many...I like all of the Scream movies, all of the Child's Play/ Chucky movies, all of the Friday the 13th/ Jason movies, all of the Halloween/ Michael Myer's movies, and all of the Freddy movies...I'm sure there are more, but this is off the top of my head.

( I like the older scary movies better than the new ones)

2007-07-20 08:02:58 · answer #1 · answered by .:Tina ♥ marie:. 6 · 1 3

Dracula and the Wolfman Meet Frankenstein. It is an old b&w movie of the 1930's where all three monsters meet and try to kill each other while also killing a few victims along the way. In the end all 3 are destroyed.

You see, in the beginning of horror movie making, evil was always destroyed with good always winning in the end, though there may have been a few battles lost to get to the final victory. Now many movies leave you with just seeing a bunch of blood and guts killing and you wonder if there will be a sequel to finally kill off the monster, let alone see good finally triumph over evil. In today's movies, if evil dies, everyone is sad instead of cheering the victory of the hero. I mean how many Nightmares on Elm Street does it take to kill Freddie or Saws to kill the person behind the mask? It seems in these movies that the only victory is to survive to the ending credits and very few, if any, get that far, while you are left wondering if there really was an end to the evil.

At least in the early years, the monster died and there was no hint at a sequel movie happening. In the original Dracula movies, he was only in the next one because some loyal slave/servant resurrected him according to the rules set in the original film. In the original Frankenstein series, it was a different mad scientist/doctor each time who revived the monster after it had been previously killed. That is why I like the early movies, even though they may be in b&w.

2007-07-20 08:39:36 · answer #2 · answered by Captain Cupcake 6 · 0 0

I don't recall watching any movie that was actually scary. You have the classics like Dracula that had horrible camera angels or really horrible acting damsels in distress. I do not know how the Blob scared any one. The new War of the Worlds did get points for the special effects, but if you knew the story, you knew what was going to happen. Van Helsing with Hugh Jackman was more of a mockery than a horror movie, but I did like it. With Jaws or King Kong you could tell that the monsters were fake. The Hills Have Eyes was Stupid and sort of disgusting. Basically, the stories not the movies were what was scary. Chuckie was a man killing doll which does not strike fear into my heart. Leprechaun actually did scare some people, but not me. Little men at the end of a rainbow may be tricksters, but hey you could step on them if they were real. My parents told me that the scariest movie that they ever saw was The Town the Dreaded Sundown, but I never got the chance to watch it yet. I think if there were any real horror movies, it would be the Exorcist movies, but even those were not that scary to me. If you had to ask me if I was ever scared from watching a movie at any time of my life, it would be from watching Disney movies than watching Hollywood's editing tricks.

2007-07-20 09:09:59 · answer #3 · answered by uc0nnh00ps 2 · 0 0

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

2007-07-20 08:01:50 · answer #4 · answered by Darrion & Tha Fly Gurlz 3 · 0 1

Four way tie-the first Nightmare on Elm Street, The first Halloween, Something Wickled This way Comes and Psycho (the hitchcock version)

2007-07-20 08:02:17 · answer #5 · answered by audioworld 7 · 0 0

Children of the Corn, Pet Cemetary and Nightmare on Elm Street.

2007-07-20 08:02:02 · answer #6 · answered by Manapazza 5 · 1 0

I like pretty much all horror movies!! I don't know why because I hate haunted house and I hate to be scared but I love scary movies. Doesn't make sense but that's how it is!

2007-07-20 08:41:20 · answer #7 · answered by Lyndsay P 3 · 0 1

Halloween

2007-07-20 08:22:36 · answer #8 · answered by s_berry 3 · 1 0

For sheer creepiness, "The Shining."
For humour plus horror, "Shaun of the Dead."
For the cleverest retelling of the werewolf legend, "Ginger Snaps."

2007-07-20 08:03:04 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Halloween.

2007-07-20 09:41:51 · answer #10 · answered by Steel Rain 7 · 0 0

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