09-10-2007
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#1 (permalink)
| | Modern Horror Movies There's few things I love more in life than horror movies (big dick being one of them, you got me, you got me); But I must whole-heartedly confess that the recent strain of horror movies has been more than disappointing. I recently saw Rob Zombie's Halloween. I invested a lot of emotional attachment into the coming of this film! Halloween (only second to Texas Chainsaw massacre [the 1974 Hooper version] in my book ) was an amazing film for Zombie to redo; He had so much room to develop the character of Michael Myers and really make it his (vulgar, explicit, and gory). None of these happened of course. Enough of my ramblings for the moment.. QUESTION IS THIS: For those of you that enjoy horror movies, what is your opinion on the recent strain of horror movies? Also: list your favorite! | "For the record I recognize that I'm easily prey.
I got ate alive yesterday.
I got animosity building,
It's probably big as a building..
Me jumping off of the roof..
Is me just playing it safe." |
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09-10-2007
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#3 (permalink)
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hmmm..
well, i would definetly have to go with Zach Snyder's recent remake of Dawn of the Dead. i thought it was pretty fantastic. i'm blanking on the rest though! gah! i hate when that happens.
Also, the Saw series is pretty good even though it should have ended at two.
for this one i hope i don't get attacked but,
I really liked the recent remake, The Invasion. i thought it was good, but not great.
| "I feel like every time she wears a skirt, STD's go airborne." - Britney, Big Brother 12 |
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09-10-2007
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#4 (permalink)
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The 2004 version of Dawn of the Dead is cool, also i can`t wait for Resident Evil part 3 to come out in theaters.
lafever
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09-10-2007
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#5 (permalink)
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I'm a little more old school in my taste for horror movies. Well, not as old as Frankenstein vs. the Wolfman, but I love a good creepout that leaves me disturbed and questioning things. David Lynch's movies, while not horror, have the ability at moments to reeeeealllly get under my skin and hit me on a subconscious level. Sometimes his stuff is flat-out frightening. He juxtaposes complete and angelic innocence in his movies with the darkest, vilest things imaginable....
Not too much into gore, because it gets abused, especially lately (last several years). A lot of what's out now is just sadism and torture. That said, there are some great scary AND gory movies, among them the movies of Dario Argento....especially Suspiria and Deep Red (Profundo Rosso). I really liked Zach Snyder's remake of Dawn of the Dead as well, the Romero Zombie movies (and the subsequent remakes of NIGHT and DAWN) are excellent. I have not seen Land of the Dead, though, and I suspect it would be a disappointment.
I know a lot of people hate Signs, but there are moments in that movie as well that are flat-out scary, including the birthday party video where an alien is seen, the alien in the pantry, and the alien standing on the barn roof.
And, the first 3 Alien movies are near and dear.
I love John Carpenter. Halloween is what I would have to call the "perfect" horror movie. And the best thing about it....NO GORE. It's all suspense and (ultimately) terrifying payoff. So simple, but so powerful. It's NEVER been equalled. Ever. Not by its sequels, its ripoffs, its remake....and it probably never will be. His movies are beautiful to look at, the scores he composes himself are hypnotic, and he's able also to cast an atmosphere that draws you in, even though some of his movies are a disappointment.
The Friday the 13th movies and the Freddy movies do absolutely nothing for me. Jason movies are straight up low-rent crud, and the Craven movies slightly better, but gimmicky...a word I would definitely use for the Chucky movies. (Self parody would be a better word.)
Suggestive frights go so much further than showing you everything. Brutality doesn't scare. It just numbs.
As for OLD school, Alfred Hitchcock has some great thrillers that stand among the best movies of all time.
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Last edited by Willy_the_Wonka; 09-10-2007 at 02:05 AM..
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09-10-2007
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#6 (permalink)
| | Banned
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If you ask me, I hate "modern" horror, it's absolute shit. There is potential in documentary-style horror, but that's all. Other than that, we have gotten inflicted with horror movies that have a scientific explanation to them, 28 Days and Resident Evil, or horror movies that try to take a person's "free will" away, as in the Saw series and its spawn of generic ones. Rob Zombie is a shitty director. Halloween was all about gore, nothing more. Curiously, it was mentioned earlier how horror can get done, perhaps correctly, without gore, yet we have someone who relies solely on it, pathetic.
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09-10-2007
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#7 (permalink)
| | Banned
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Additionally, espeically in this decade, we have seen the extinction of the "monster." I can relate to the other post about having an affiliation for "old school" stuff. Where the fuck are the monsters, at least the ones that have no scientific explanations?
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09-10-2007
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#8 (permalink)
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personally I think maybe one or two "modern" films cut it for me... I have to say my favorite is Mimic (not the cheap #3,4,5,...89, etc. But the first one) And like sexy front was saying, Mimic has monster(S) :)
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09-10-2007
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#9 (permalink)
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I grew up LOVING monster movies. Hey, I was a little geek, what can I say.
And yes, I dug all the Frankenstein/Dracula/Mummy/Wolfman/Black Lagoon stuff, as well as the big monsters.....I still love Japanese Kaiju (giant monsters), but even those have varying degrees of success. The original Gojira was a dark and somber movie before American distributors got hold of it and edited Raymond Burr in, and War of the Gargantuas was pretty damn freaky! In FACT...there is a GREAT Japanese movie from 1963, directed by Ishiro Honda, the director responsible for most Toho scifi and horror before 1974. It's called Matango, but American distributors ruined it and renamed it Attack of the Mushroom People. Very dark, brooding, atmospheric, eerie movie, about some castawyas trying to survive and giving in to the temptation of eating the islands only food source, a weird mushroom that consumes body, mind and soul. Sounds ridiculous, but it's fascinating.
And J.J. Abrams, the guy responsible for LOST and Alias, is coming out with a monster movie on...January 18, 2008? Here is the trailer, and it is intriguing. His reasoning for doing this movie, apart from a love of monster movies, is that the US needs a good iconic kickass monster, like Japan's Godzilla. What's strange is its marketing. Just this hand-held video trailer, at a party in NYC, and everything goes to hell in a heartbeat. There are sites all over the internet speculating about this movie, which has not even been named yet.
Some say it's another American Godzilla movie, but it is not. Roland Emmerich ruined any potential for an American Godzilla with that ridiculous piece of crap ten years ago.
Oh....I would still love to see H.P. Lovecraft's brandf of eerieness made flesh. If at all possible. The idea of Cthulhu, for some reason, has a great, primally terrifying mystique to it.
One other thing...Ghost Stories. There's a severe lack of good ghost stories, the ones that make your skin crawl from the suspense and creepiness. I get a similar charge from the UFO genre, but again, you can count the number of good scary UFO movies on one hand. These two seemingly different genres have in similar this: they both, if done right, happen in our everyday world and challenge our notions of reality and our belief structure. Again, though...rare.
Mimic was GREAT! Made by the same directer of Pan's Labyrinth, Guillermo Del Toro.
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09-10-2007
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#12 (permalink)
| | Banned
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I don't watch them often, because they suck so bad.....
...but Rob Zombies "Devils Rejects" was the shit. It was a good, horrible story, and that made it an awesome horror movie.
I didn't know teh new Halloween was his, perhaps I will check it out. I guess I need ot see house of a thousand corpses too.
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09-10-2007
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#13 (permalink)
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I find contemporary horror movies pretty disappointing. I love 60's, 70's, and 80's drive-in and exploitation films, and I'd much rather watch the originals than some remake. I also really like European horror movies, Fulci and Argento and Rollin, all those cats. I guess my favorite of all time is Suspiria, | Too big to allow to fail |
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09-10-2007
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#14 (permalink)
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Saw was the best one I've seen in years. I still laugh watching Nightmare on Elm Street. I completely agree that it should have ended at II. We have gotten so visual though. Part of what made Saw so good was not the blatant show of gore and violence. Sure it had it, but often times it is better to let the viewer create his own vision of what just happened (Think Hitchcock, Psycho, and the famous shower scene). Quote:
Originally Posted by prince_will hmmm..
well, i would definetly have to go with Zach Snyder's recent remake of Dawn of the Dead. i thought it was pretty fantastic. i'm blanking on the rest though! gah! i hate when that happens.
Also, the Saw series is pretty good even though it should have ended at two.
for this one i hope i don't get attacked but,
I really liked the recent remake, The Invasion. i thought it was good, but not great. | |
So long and thanks for all the fish.
Don't PM me, I won't reply.
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09-10-2007
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#15 (permalink)
| | No, Lady! Please don't open that door!
Stephen King said that if he couldn't scare you, he'd go for the gross out. Unfortunately, most of today's movies skip the scare and go straight for the gross out.
Suspense makes for great horror but we have no Hitchcockian suspensemeisters around at the moment so we're stuck with remakes and sequels.
Psycho still rules.
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