Best Horror Movies of all time?

Yay:D Glad to hear I'm not the only Blair witch fan. It's a great little film. Have you heard the DVD commentary? It's hilerious. I was kind of looking forward to BW3 (I hated BW2 with a passion) but I'm not sure if it's still going ahead after one of the crew died.
 
I haven't got the dvd yet, but it's on my list. It's the only movie where I've had one of those spooky coincidences in...I was watching it on a rainy night alone in the dark and when the lass was in the tent and you could hear those creepy horse noises outside there was an almighty thunderclap and it knocked my electricity off. I thought I'd been killed by a subliminal Blair Witch tv demon for about 2 seconRAB :D:D:D
 
The spanish Tomb's of the Blind Dead and it's sequels are very atmospheric. :cool:

For the froggies, I would check out Les Yeux sans visage (Eyes without a face).

Anything by Fulci or Argento for Italy. :)
 
lol:D

My scary Blair Witch experience -

I watched the film the first time and enjoyed it, then I watched it again the next night and noticed the bloke in the corner at the end of the film, this really spooked me because I never saw him on the first viewing, how can that happen? How could I miss it? It spooked me real good. :D:cry::D
 
Definitely The Orphanage, that's one of my all time favourite Horror films now, wonderful. REC is definitely another one to see, already mentioned.

Haute Tension, and Inside are excellent French horror films. Martyrs is coming out soon in France, suppose to be rather good.
 
Wow...lil lexie, I think you must be my horror movie soul mate! You have mentioned some of my favorite films.

I love BWP - seen it a million times. Same goes for IotBS (both versions)

If you had also said 'Rosemary's Baby' the original 'Black Christmas' and 'Session 9', I might just have spontaneously combusted!

I gave you back the map Heather!
 
Session 9 is very creepy! I liked the second half of BWP.

After I saw BWP for the first time I thought I was feeling sick at the end because I was so creeped out! turned out that was the first time I got motion sickness from a film lol!!
 
Ok, bit of a confession...I first saw BWP at the cinema on day of release and didn't enjoy it at all - felt motion sick, people around me were laughing and or were bored...there was no atmosphere in the cinema at all.

But I knew it had 'something'.

So then watched it again on a matinee performance..empty cinema bar half a dozen other people...and it totally creeped me out. And since then have watched the dvd a zillion times.

BWP, The Last Broadcast, REC etc work much better on the small screen than at the cinema IMHO...
 
Poltergeist (1982), Halloween (1978), Alien (1979), The Fly (1986), The Evil Dead (1981), Evil Dead II (1987), A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984), The Shining (1980), The Omen (1976), The Thing (1982), Hellraiser (1987) and Child's Play (1988) are all amongst my extremely long list of all-time favourite horror flicks.
 
'The Shining' is top of the list for me, followed by 'Halloween' and 'A Nightmare on Elm Street'.

I loved 'The Orphanage' and '[REC]', the final fifteen minutes of the latter were terrifying, it didn't help that when i saw it in the cinema they forgot to put the lights on after the credits, meaning that i had to make my way out of a mostly empty cinema by using the light on my phone (it felt like i'd just stepped into the film, lol).

Foreign horror movies are so much better these days, all the US seems to pump out is half arsed remakes and "teeny horrors". And don't even get me started on the shitty English language remakes of foreign films like they've done with '[REC]', the remake (called 'Quarantine') looks crap. Roll on '[REC]2'!
 
I wish people would stop saying things like, "but it's got subtitles, but it's a French film, don't let that put you off"...

Those sort of things shouldn't stop you watching a film. :p
 
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