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In Reply to: Most effective Horror movie?? posted by Mr.Mc on June 26, 2001 at 16:53:41:
I'd have to say:Night of the Living Dead -- when I saw it 30 years ago I couldn't stand the ride home in the dark. I was a lad of 16 then, but still creeped out.
Eraserhead -- a nightmare come true.
Reanimator -- after HP Lovecrafts story. Gee, you make some juice that brings things back to life, only they bleed from the mouth and become homicidal. What's that you say? Your father just died?
Hellraiser -- This one was so creepy that I had to turn it off partway through and take a break back in the land of the living. I love the imagery of hell being an infinite maze, and not a very nice one, at that.
Follow Ups:
Good choice. I saw "Hellraiser" on a Saturday night in a theater in Times Square, long before Times Square became a northern suburb of Orlando. Audiences in those theaters considered it a God - given right to talk (or more accurately, yell) back to the screen. As the movie began there was the expected audience commentary. However, as the film progressed the audience got quieter and quieter until they were finally silent. I think even the densest knucklehead in the theater could sense that "Hellraiser" was something out of the ordinary, a truly disturbing movie with some appalling yet original ideas and imagery. I certainly left the theater thinking "the guy who thought up this stuff is really sick."
who makes Stephen King read like Mr. Rogers.Pick up "Books of Blood" if you haven't already. I think there are three of them.
Creepy isn't the word for it. Not sure there is a word for it.
Though ol' Clive stopped being as sick once he came out of the closet. I think a lot of repressed emotions got into his writing. Pity. Maybe he could start repressing something else, like a fondness for sheep or something.
It is by far, his most visual, intricate book. It always reminds my why I took all those drugs in my younger life. Not the most scary, but has some his most eery villans written.I agree with you, Barker makes Stephen King look like a Boy Scout. Although, King wrote a great forward to one of his early books, it went something like "I've seen the future of horror, and that future is Clive Barker."
"Books of Blood" is great, but "Damnation Game" ripped my skull open and rammed it's fingers in.
If they ever made a movie out of this book, and did a decent job of recreating the events and creatures, it would be creepy. I read a lot of Sci-Fi and Fantasy, and I really liked this book. The question that kept popping into my head was: "What kind of a sick mind could conceive of this stuff?"
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