Hey! I know a lot of horror movies and I decided to start a thread. My favorite horror movie is Dawn of the Dead. pretty good if you ask me. I like horror and suspense movies... Soo whats your favorite horror movie??
I don't think that was a good one, i found the way of filming it really disturbing and i don't believe it was real (they say that in the end). It didn't scare me at all, it was more funny than scary to see how that girl was taken away by a ghost:P
Yeah, that was pretty disturbing, thought it was funny how they brought in random facts about a god who used to eat whole people with it's.... Special area?
Although the Japanese horror movies are quite bizarre.
Yeah, the original film of The Ring was made in Japan and was really weird, as is The Eye.
I saw Antichrist with my dad last night. OMFG that is the ****ing scariest thing I have EVER SEEN. I was so scared I pulled an all-nighter. I don't think I will ever sleep again.
lol i told you
I still stand by my belief that The Thing is the scariest movie ever. The Thing is the reason I only get four hours of sleep on average per night.
then dont watch antichrist dude lol
what about teeth its really f***en disturbing
eh. weak sauce. wasnt really scary, just kinda like a "wtf am i watching".
I've got to agree with the second post. I was actually about to say it because I just watched it the other day. It's a crazy German independent film with a retired German surgeon, specializing in Siamese twin separation. He captures three random people with compatible DNA and sews them together rectum to mouth to create a creature with one digestive tract.
-SPOILERS-
I think what really made it an astonishing horror film was the ending. The fact that the main female character, who the antagonist specifically selected to be the middle piece in retaliation to her escape attempt, was the last one left alive in the entire house. The idea of being attached in such a way that to try to separate the bonds would mean certain death after you've already endured a horrific torture experience, and that the only other option leads to a slower death, leaves the viewer with the empty feeling of abandonment and the stark realization that situations similar to this could happen to anyone at any moment in time, and that if it were to happen to them there would be absolutely no hope of survival. In the end I believe that it is this aspect of the film that will assure it's place in the pantheon of truly poetic and inspiring horror films.