It’s always difficult to come out and declare the top 10 best horror movies ever made. It’s inevitable that there will be complaints. One thing to remember is that movies aren’t made or seen in a vacuum. Whether you like a movie or not can be influenced by your age and what generation you’re in.
For example, The Exorcist is a classic, but it’s not on our list, and that’s because there are plenty of other scarier and more interesting flicks out there (according to us). Some flicks are historical touchstones, certainly, but we weighed other factors too. Editors Note: after a recent revisit to The Exorcist, we may have to throw it back in the list.
Anyway, here’s our take on
The Top 10 Horror Films of All Time
10. HellraiserYou know I got soul!
A total creepout, Clive Barker’s story of the Cenobites (“demons to some, angels to others”) who visit you when you solve a mysterious puzzle box. Although we don’t know how you can see them as angels. Frank Cotton, after being ripped apart by chains, says that the Cenobites bring pain and pleasure, indivisible. Of course, he’s saying this while not wearing any skin. We’re still waiting for the pleasure.
Then there’s Doug Bradley as the lead Cenobite Pinhead. He gets all the best lines, like “No tears, please! It’s a waste of good suffering!”. Andrew Robinson (Deep Space Nine, Dirty Harry
Spawned many sequels, mostly direct to video trash. The only other one worth watching is the second one, Hellbound
9.The Evil Dead
And the maid doesn’t come till Sunday!
The Evil Dead goes pretty damn far to gross you out. There’s decapitation, dismemberment, blood pouring from open orifices, a pencil-to-ankle stabbing, Bruce Campbell being humped by his headless girlfriend’s corpse while simulataneously spewing blood into his face, and rape by a tree branch.
Evil Dead is the ultimate in what they call “spam in a cabin” flicks. It introduced the Necronomicon (book of the dead, bound in human flesh, written in blood) which itself comes alive a few times. It shows Sam Raimi’s brilliance in long tracking shots and establishing an atmosphere of claustrophobia. It also plays with genre conventions (“It won’t start!” she cries. “It won’t let us leave!” Then, the car starts.)
And it’s gross. Sometimes, that’s enough.
8. Dawn of the Dead (1978)
Look folks, we already told you, we’re out of the iPod.
Romero’s Night of the Living Dead will always be a classic (and it’s about the civil rights movement, dummy!) but Dawn will always be our personal favorite. Ken Foree is a God in this picture. And Tom Savini gets to show off his talent for gooey effects. Try not to eat anything before watching this movie. Unless, of course, you like eating human intestines.
And we still think the pie-in-the-zombie-face is pretty funny. Followed by Day of the Dead
7. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Lee Press-on Nails – They won’t break or split!
Sure, we all know Michael Meyers and Jason Vorhees were pros when it came to slashin’, but nobody had personality like Freddy Krueger. Add to that the fact that his origins and supernatural abilities are far more interesting than anything in the Friday the 13th or Halloween movies, throw in some subtextual Reagan-80s angst, and let Wes Craven put the whole thing together, and you’ve got a horror film that elevates itself above the genre.
Inspired a crapload of sequels, including Freddy vs Jason. Parts 2 and 3 are ok (yes, part 2. we said it). The rest kinda suck. (Except for Wes Craven’s New Nightmare
6. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
My Dinner With Leatherface
From the very beginning, when John Larroquette delivers the infamous monologue, and a radio broadcast tells the story of decomposed corpses and grave robberies, we get an idea of what we’re in for. It’s a truly surrealistic experience and it’s raw.
Tobe Hooper would later give us Eaten Alive
The movie is a product of the Vietnam era, examining the decay of the rural South, and the ties that bind a family together – yes, Leatherface’s family. Roger Ebert found the movie effective and scary, yet gave it 2 stars because he found it “unnecessary” and “without purpose.” Looking past the fact that sometimes scary is enough, it seems to us that Ebert disdains the horror genre enough that he doesn’t bother to probe the film for deeper meaning. Sometimes you get out what you put in.
5. Alien (1979)
“Hey, what’s going on out here?”
Alien is a beautiful thing to behold. The actors, the special effects, the sets, the slow buildup. It’s not a film for ADD types growing up on Resident Evil movies. It surprisingly borrows from Mario Bava’s Planet of the Vampires, of all things! It creates a believable future (Scott is good at this – see Blade Runner
Followed by James Cameron’s Aliens (great movie in its own right), David Fincher’s Alien 3
4. Halloween (1978)
Too much Ritalin, or not enough?
Little Michael Meyers puts on a mask and kills his sister in the shocking opening, leading in to his escape from an asylum years later. His doctor, Dr. Loomis, played by Donald Pleasence in a role that we think surpasses his turn as Blofeld, tracks him to his old town Haddenfield, Illinois. Michael begins his murder spree as Loomis and the cops try to track him down.
Meyers, as Loomis suggests, is the manifestation of evil. “That was the boogeyman!” exclaims poor Laurie Strode (star turn by Jamie Lee Curtis). Loomis’ response: “As a matter of fact, it was.”
Halloween encompasses all those things we were scared of as children. We’re supposed to be Laurie Strode, but we feel like little Tommy Doyle. Carpenter keeps the flick low on gore but high on the suspense. He peels away the layers of suburban utopia and shows us the unseen secrets underneath. The movie reveals Carpenter’s Hitchcock inspiration in the way he sets up the movie’s tableau (Sam Loomis was, of course, a character from Psycho
Halloween is a superior exercise and can’t be dismissed. Forget all sequels past number 4. (yes, we even like Halloween III). Carpenter inserts a few shots of 1953′s The Thing from Another World
3.The Thing
This one’s a terminal, doc. Just go ahead and call it.
“I know I’m human. And if you were all these things, then you’d just attack me right now, so some of you are still human. This thing doesn’t want to show itself, it wants to hide inside an imitation. It’ll fight if it has to, but it’s vulnerable out in the open. If it takes us over, then it has no more enemies, nobody left to kill it. And then it’s won.”
The Thing is raw horror and paranoia. It’s also heavy on testosterone. No females for miles around, just a group of American researchers in Antarctica who happen to come across a defrosted alien. A very pissed off defrosted alien.
This “thing” is the nastiest creature you’ve ever seen. It can transform itself into anyting – a perfect copy. Too bad that it has to digest you first, and boy, can that get ugly.
Uh, Stan… you may want to put some makeup on that.
Yes, The Thing is icky alright. We have not seen anything like it before and probably won’t again. Big props to Kurt Russell who is amazing in this film. And the ending is fabulous. The only thing that gets us is the violence done to the poor dogs. You can have an alien creature grow teeth in its chest and chew a guys arms off, but killing poor pooches makes us shudder every time. Poor little guys! (Read Bill’s review of The Thing here).
2. Videodrome (1983)
Please let this one be Casablanca!
Before he made Videodrome, David Cronenberg gave us the cult classics Shivers, The Brood
Videodrome is his masterpiece. Just so you know, we ain’t knockin anything he’s done since. They’re all excellent. (Eastern Promises
But there’s something about Videodrome. It has its finger on the pulse of the digital age. It’s not so much sex and violence, but about sex and violence. It’s also about media, television, and the new reality. It’s a new way of seeing (Barry Convex’s glasses). It’s Marshall McLuhan, it’s evolution (new flesh), it’s body horror, it’s video as the new religion. Way, way ahead of its time.
1. The Shining
Are you guys paying hourly rates?
Jack Nicholson gives one of his greatest (and most well known) performances as Jack Torrence. Nicholson shows us the mental breakdown of a man; Kubrick shows us the disintegration the family unit.
We also get commentary on the proceedings through the eyes of the Overlook Hotel itself. The Overlook’s appearance and personality is just brilliant. We think it counts as a major character. As Jack loses his mind you can almost hear the hotel whispering to him (before the old residents really get to him).
Waiting for an invitation to arrive
Goin’ to a party where no one’s still alive
We know poor Scatman Cruthers is flying from sunny Miami to his doom. We see it coming. But it doesn’t lessen the impact. We feel sorry for him. We worry about poor Danny, even though his alter-ego Tony freaks us out. Ditto Lloyd the bartender and crazed waiter Delbert Grady. The scene where he casually tells Jack how he had to “correct” his wife and daughters is creepy to the extreme.
Love the scene when Danny is riding his tricycle down the hallways before he encounters the girls. Shelley Duvall does a great job playing the constantly-on-edge mom. Watch the scene where she discovers what Jack’s been typing. Check out the Gold room. Room 237. The long tracking shots. The radio messages over the howling wind. The ocean of blood flowing through the corridor. The bizarre capper with Jack in an old photo from 1921. The score with Wendy Carlos, Ray Noble, Al Bowlly, Penderecki.
Watch it if you haven’t seen it. And watch it again if you have.
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