Tag: kill list

  • 17 Terrifying Horror Movies You’ve (Probably) Never Seen

    17 Terrifying Horror Movies You’ve (Probably) Never Seen

    Megan Fox in 'Jennifer's Body'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    Megan Fox in ‘Jennifer’s Body’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Sure, like us, you’re a big fan of horror movies.

    Halloween is your Christmas, we get it. But we bet that, also like us, there are a few scary movies you probably haven’t seen.

    Moviefone has provided a few hidden gems guaranteed to give you Halloween terrors.

    Let’s begin!

    Related Article: 35 Scariest Horror Movies of All-Time, Ranked


    17. ‘Dead of Night‘ (1946)

    Before ‘The Twilight Zone‘ or the movie ‘Magic,’ this horror anthology film gave us the definitively creepy relationship between a ventriloquist (Michael Redgrave) and his dummy. It’s the standout segment of stories told to a man who has a recurring dream of impending horror — if he can only remember what it is.

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    16. ‘Eyes Without a Face‘ (1962)

    This poetic (but shocking) French horror film — about a disfigured girl whose father tries to build her a new face from those of women he abducts — was years ahead of its time. (And yes, it did inspire the Billy Idol song of the same name.)

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    15. ‘Shivers‘ (1975)

    A scene from 1975's 'Shivers'. Photo: Cinépix Film Properties.
    A scene from 1975’s ‘Shivers’. Photo: Cinépix Film Properties.

    Horror master David Cronenberg‘s first thriller is every bit as visceral as his later films. It plays like a twisted version of ‘Invasion of the Body Snatchers,’ in which a parasite turns an entire high-rise apartment building into sex-crazed predators intent on infecting everyone they see.

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    14. ‘Suspiria‘ (1977)

    If you haven’t seen any films by Italian horror director Dario Argento, start with this operatic, blood-drenched chiller. It centers on a young ballerina who discovers her prestigious German ballet school is home to a coven of witches.

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    13. ‘Possession‘ (1981)

    Isabelle Adjani won a César (the French Oscar) and Best Actress at Cannes for her role as a woman who tells her husband (Sam Neill) she wants a divorce. Soon after, her behavior becomes increasingly erratic and violent. One of the craziest horror movies you’ll ever watch.

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    12. ‘Audition‘ (1999)

    A modern Japanese horror classic, its last 30 minutes sent people fleeing the theater. Here, a widower sets up a fake movie audition to find a new girlfriend. He chooses the quiet Asami, but he has no idea who she really is.

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    11. ‘Ravenous‘ (1999)

    Never saw this black comedy/indie cannibal western starring Guy Pearce and Robert Carlyle? You’re not alone, since critics didn’t know what to make of this horror hybrid when it first came out. But you should watch it right now. Or else.

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    10. ‘Frailty‘ (2002)

    Matthew McConaughey in 'Frailty'. Photo: Starz Entertainment.
    Matthew McConaughey in ‘Frailty’. Photo: Starz Entertainment.

    One day, the father of two young sons (Bill Paxton, who also directed this gem) reveals he’s been chosen by God to kill demons — who look just like ordinary people. One of those traumatized sons grows up to be Matthew McConaughey, a Texas cop who’s told his brother is the “God’s Hand” killer that the FBI has been hunting.

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    9. ‘Session 9‘ (2001)

    In this low-budget, deeply creepy thriller, a group of men are hired to clean the asbestos from an abandoned mental asylum. One of them begins listening to the therapy sessions on tape and, needless to say, it doesn’t end well.

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    8. ‘Them‘ (2007)

    You might have seen ‘The Strangers,’ about a terrifying home invasion, but did you know it’s a remake of this possibly even more horrifying French film?

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    7. ‘Inside‘ (2007)

    Among the new wave of French horror films is this bloody, viscerally disturbing entry about a violent woman who stalks the pregnant Sarah. Why? So she can take her unborn baby.

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    6. ‘Kandisha‘ (2008)

    A brilliant criminal defense attorney’s latest case involves a woman who claims she didn’t kill her husband. So who did? it was Kandisha, an ancient spirit who avenges abused women. David Carradine (‘Kill Bill: Vol. 2‘) and Saïd Taghmaoui (‘Wonder Woman‘) co-star in this Moroccan horror film that won several film fest awards.

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    5. ‘The House of the Devil‘ (2009)

    Tom Noonan in 'The House of the Devil'. Photo: MPI Media Group.
    Tom Noonan in ‘The House of the Devil’. Photo: MPI Media Group.

    Ti West‘s homage to ’80s horror movies is so perfectly retro, it feels like a classic you’ve just stumbled across. One night, during a full moon, college student Samantha (Jocelin Donahue) is hired to sit an unseen old woman at a creepy, isolated house. It slowly builds to one hell of a bloody ending.

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    4. ‘Jennifer’s Body‘ (2009)

    Yes, this film got terrible reviews, but like so many others on this list, it’s worth a look. Megan Fox plays a Regina George-type who’s not just ‘high school evil” but “evil evil.” She’s a demon; a literal maneater who must be stopped by nice girl BFF Amanda Seyfried.

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    3. ‘Tony‘ (2009)

    Turns out that nice quiet bloke down at the pub (Peter Ferdinando) is actually a sociopath in this British indie that’s been compared to ‘Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.’

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    2. ‘Thirst‘ (2009)

    Oldboy‘ director Park Chan-wook spins a very different kind of vampire tale in which a priest volunteers for a medical experiment that turns him into the living dead. He soon finds a companion who’s far more bloodthirsty than he could ever be.

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    1. ‘Kill List‘ (2012)

    A scene from 2012's 'Kill List'. Photo: Optimum Releasing.
    A scene from 2012’s ‘Kill List’. Photo: Optimum Releasing.

    Before ‘High-Rise,’ director Ben Wheatley directed this thriller in which two ex soldiers become freelance hit men for a mysterious new employer. Bloody Disgusting called it “the #1 Horror Film” of 2012. It’s definitely the creepiest.

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  • Scares All ‘Midsommar’ Long: More Great Folk Horror Films

    Scares All ‘Midsommar’ Long: More Great Folk Horror Films

    A24

    From zombies to slashers to demonic possessions, horror tends to be a seasonal genre. It’s also one where the little details make all of the difference between success and failure; some times that means tiny tweaks or exceptional style in the execution of a classic formula, and others it’s a subversion or full-on reimagining of everything audiences have come to expect. But those ideas have all existed in one form or another, for decades, and they evidence the durability of the genre itself and the sometimes overdue opportunity to breathe new life into a combination that has fallen out of fashion.

    Ari Aster’s 2018 debut “Hereditary,” for example, explores the devastating depths of a family dealing with extreme loss and its own troubled legacy, but the young filmmaker does so while touching on elements of psychological horror and demonic possession. And his follow-up, “Midsommar,” arriving this week, looks mercilessly at a grieving young woman and her estranged boyfriend as they encounter a mysterious, bohemian community while vacationing in Sweden. The new film echoes the considerable tradition of a sub-genre known as “folk horror,” where pagan traditions and ancient rites claim the souls — and bodies — of the skeptical and unwilling. In our own pagan celebration, Moviefone offers a primer on just a few of the films that may have inspired the film (and others that share its folky DNA).

    Haxan” (1922)

    Criterion

    Benjamin Christensen’s documentary-style classic was the most expensive Scandinavian silent film ever made, and certainly one of the era’s most controversial because of its depictions of torture, nudity and sexual perversion. Not only was its “nonfiction” approach groundbreaking at the time, but Christensen’s film, an anthology, provides a uniquely academic and yet incredibly visceral look at the dangers of superstition in misunderstanding disease and mental illness.

    The Virgin Spring” (1960

    Criterion

    This Swedish film famously served as inspiration for Wes Craven’s “The Last House On the Left,” but by itself Ingmar Bergman’s rape and revenge story offers plenty of complex and very powerful moments that don’t necessarily require the kind of graphic depictions of brutality that would come later.

    “Witchfinder General” (1968)

    American International Pictures

    A film that has only grown in mystique since director Michael Reeves’ death from barbiturates just a year later, this obscure title helped establish many of the tropes of British folk horror while adapting Ronald Bassett’s novel of the same name, about a 17th-Century witch hunter and his heavily fictionalized exploits during the English Civil War.

    Blood on Satan’s Claw” (1971)

    Cannon Films

    Though it sounds like one of Mario Bava’s Italian horror odysseys, this underrated gem is actually a “Witchfinder General” follow-up (they’re both from the same film production company), about an English village taken over by demonic possession.

    The Wicker Man” (1973)

    Rialto Pictures

    This film completes what has become known as the folk horror “Unholy Trinity” (along with “Witchfinder General” and “Blood on Satan’s Claw”) and is by far the most famous film of that sub-genre ever made, famously described by Cinefantastique as the “Citizen Kane” of horror films. Robin Hardy’s film follows a police sergeant investigating a girl’s disappearance who becomes ensconced in a community that has abandoned Christianity for Celtic paganism. Eep.

    Children of the Corn” (1984)

    New World Pictures

    Fritz Kiersch directed this adaptation of Stephen King’s short story of the same name, about a small Nebraska town under the control of “He Who Walks Behind The Rows” and his 15-year-old disciple Isaac (John Franklin), who leads his fellow children in a murderous revolt against their parents and other adults.

    Kill List” (2011)

    Optimum Releasing

    Ben Wheatley co-wrote and directed this incredible, mesmerizing film about an ex-military man drawn into a mysterious and deadly game involving human sacrifice and a religious ritual he unwittingly becomes a part of. Featuring shocking violence and a devastating, unexpected ending, Wheatley’s film is shrouded in terrifying ambiguity. If you haven’t seen it, stop reading and go watch it now.

    The Witch” (2015)

    A24

    Robert Eggers’ film about a 1600s English family and the plague of maladies that befalls them is, like “Kill List,” an entrancing journey into the perils of superstition and suspicion. Anya Taylor-Joy perfectly captures the restless energy of a young woman eager to explore the adult world only to be blamed for events over which she has no control — because, of course, something more sinister is afoot. Or is it?

    The Ritual” (2017)

    Netflix

    David Bruckner (“The Signal”) directed this adaptation of Adam Nevill’s novel of the same name about five college friends who encounter increasingly strange phenomenon after reuniting for a hike through the Swedish wilderness.

    Apostle

    Netflix

    This oddly overlooked chiller from “The Raid” mastermind Gareth Evans was in production at the same time as “Midsommar” and takes a more classically autumnal approach to folk horror. Dan Stevens plays a man in 1905 London who travels to a forbidden island to rescue his sister from a secretive sect. (Trust us when we say that is the tip of the iceberg.) Profoundly disturbing, “Apostle” really goes for it in ways that few horror movies do these days, and even though it was only released last year, seems ripe for rediscovery.