Last week I asked you about the scariest books you’ve ever read.
This week? It’s time to talk about movies.
So, hit the comments, and let us all know: what are the scariest movies you’ve ever seen? (They don’t have to be horror, explicitly — though certainly we want some of those in there.) Why did it freak you out? Was it just one scene? The whole film? Something deeper and darker?
A film that scared me early on was The Shining, less because of it’s overt fright factor. More because of it’s slow, freaky creep. I had never seen a film like it. And even now, not many horror films are willing to just be slow and strange for their (long) duration. (If I watch it now, I sometimes think it’s a bit funny — “Oh, ha ha, look at that hilarious Blowjob Koala Man! Look, Shelley Duvall runs like an embarrassed sandpiper. Oh, Jack Nicholson, you murderous ghost-talking scamp.) If you want a film that disturbs me these days — look no further than Requiem for a Dream, whose final act is so harrowing even thinking about it gives me the shivering shits.
Let’s hear it from you.
Scary, freaky, disturbing movies.
GO.
Tsara says:
When I was a little girl I loved to stay up all night watching The Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock Presents, getting high off the heebee jeebees. The Birds scared the heck out of me back then!
And though I continue to love scary movies they just don’t really scare me anymore. Now movies like The Changeling give me a fright. I am a mom, so there are a lot of reasons for movies like that to scare me.
But the other night my son and I decided to watch Wer. Holy smokers, that was a fun ride! For whatever reason that brought back all the fun feelings of being scared that I had when I was a little girl sneaking out of bed to watch Psycho on our little black and white tv.
I had to watch an episode of Family Guy just to get rid of the feels!
When I was a little girl I’d listen to my Strawberry Shortcake record for the same reason. I just don’t think that would cut it today! tee hee!
October 20, 2014 — 10:27 AM
Natalie Maddalena says:
“The fun feelings of being scared.” I just don’t get it. I never have. Scared = fun? You are all weirdos!
October 20, 2014 — 6:25 PM
Tsara says:
Yippee!!! I love being weird!! tee hee!
Actually, Natalie, I’ve always loved being scared–unless it’s for real, and I’m being followed in a dark parking garage–which is not a fun scared! So I guess I should say I’ve always loved being scared by movies and books, and I loved it so much I couldn’t believe my little sister when she begged me not to watch those movies around her. I thought she was just kidding or crying for attention or something. I was little and couldn’t believe that she didn’t feel the way I felt, the world back then could only be filtered with my experience at the helm.
Sadly, she wasn’t kidding and had horrible nightmares for years. My mom was not impressed with me! Luckily the three of us are best friends today and always use what we learned to help our own kids not make the same mistakes.
Of course, they do anyway. Thus is life and parenting!! Giggle!
October 22, 2014 — 3:04 PM
murgatroid98 says:
Y’all might laugh at this. In the early 1960’s when I was eleven or twelve, I went with friends to see The Blob. That movie scared me so much I went to bed in the daylight for a couple of weeks. The thought of a monster I couldn’t hide from or get away from was completely terrifying.
October 20, 2014 — 10:42 AM
Natalie Maddalena says:
I saw The Blob on TV as a child, at least the first half an hour. Terrifying. Gave me nightmares for years. Mum said I should have watched to the end to see the resolution/happy ending but I never thought that would have helped and you seem to confirm that.
October 20, 2014 — 6:28 PM
marlanesque says:
I still find The Thing (1982) incredibly unsetting. Not sure if it’s the sounds or the non-CGI effects, but that is one of the finest horror movies ever made.
October 20, 2014 — 10:48 AM
portlandorange (@portlandorange) says:
I love a lot of horror movies, and it’s one of the finest I’ve ever seen. I watched it for the first time last week. I assumed I’d find the ’80s special effects cheesy and that I’d need to put some effort into keeping my disbelief suspended. But I was swept away by the plot, viscerally scared, and deeply impressed through the whole thing.
October 20, 2014 — 5:56 PM
kmcambion says:
The anime movie “Perfect Blue” is probably the most disturbing film I’ve ever seen. If you can’t stand subtitles, the dub is still great. It’s about a pop star that has someone pretending to be her, and the ending had my friend and I staring at each other repeating “what the fuck?!”.
If you want disturbing as in the darkness of the human heart, check out “8MM”, a fairly obscure Nicholas Cage flick. When a movie starts out with investigating a snuff film and gets worse from there, you know you’re in for some crazy bullshit.
October 20, 2014 — 10:54 AM
Lauralynn Elliott says:
The last story in a movie called the Trilogy of Terror. It was called “Amelia”, and it was about this little doll with razor sharp teeth and a spear. The doll went running around chasing Karen Black. The ending was especially terrifying!
October 20, 2014 — 11:02 AM
vlazabal6981 says:
Came here to list this one. Saw it last year for the first time ever. *shudder*
October 20, 2014 — 12:31 PM
smkay70 says:
Oooh, I vaguely remember this one!
October 20, 2014 — 3:39 PM
Keith Keal says:
Oh, yes. If you haven’t, check out the short story it’s based on. ‘Prey’ by Richard Matheson.
October 20, 2014 — 3:51 PM
Jude says:
Event Horizon scared the ever-loving-bejeezus out of me. The whole movie was creepy; it was less about sudden fright and more about the creeping dreadful darkness, really.
October 20, 2014 — 11:03 AM
plugav says:
Agreed. Event Horizon is pretty much the scariest horror I’ve ever seen. Even though it takes place on the orbit of Neptune.
October 21, 2014 — 7:36 PM
J.R. McLemore says:
I really enjoyed Session 9. It’s a great cerebral horror movie that’s underrated.
October 20, 2014 — 11:04 AM
Jinxie G says:
The Ring freaked me out enough to watch it frame by frame to look for typical movie mistakes, which is funny when I grew up watching horror movies and worked in a haunted house for 3 years.
October 20, 2014 — 11:06 AM
Hayden says:
The Changeling (with George C. Scott), The Others (with Nicole Kidman), and El Orfanato / The Orphanage.
October 20, 2014 — 11:08 AM
JoelR says:
Frailty is one of my favorite disturbing movies of all time. It opens with a man confessing to an FBI agent that his father had been committing serial murder for years due to his belief that he is on a mission from God to destroy demons that are walking the earth. The father has also been bringing his two young sons along to learn the family business. The brilliance of the film is the slow burn, and the way that it leaves you questioning whether the father’s visions were really a message from God, or the ravings of a lunatic. It is a very chilling film.
October 20, 2014 — 11:08 AM
Jon Stoffel says:
Seconded. As one generally unmoved by classic horror, this movie is noteworthy for giving me the squirms.
October 28, 2014 — 4:02 AM
Marianne says:
First let me say that I don’t do horror. So, my sister took me to see Poltergeist for my 21st birthday. That entire night I lay awake in bed with all the lights on, eyes wide open, practically frozen with terror. I didn’t sleep well for DAYS, and I kept the lights on at night for a very long time. Every time I thought of the movie for months afterward I wouldn’t sleep well that night.
What scared me about that movie, aside from being particularly sensitive and not used to horror? I think it was the sense that there was no telling where the ghosts were or when they would appear, or how. The unseen threat.
October 20, 2014 — 11:24 AM
Harmony says:
When I was a kid, I watched Creepshow. That roach scene branded itself into my frontal lobe; I still find roaches terrifying. Audition is for the win. It’s a disturbing little Asian flick that left me squirming in my chair from fright and wanting to sleep in my parents bed, like I was a kid again.
October 20, 2014 — 11:24 AM
Paul B says:
I’m going with The Shining, but there’s a reason. I’ll try to keep it short and sweet.
A few friends of mine had a Halloween movie night at a friends house. The Shining was the last movie. That night a few of us slept in the living room, all sleeping quite close together, all pretty nervous.
Around 3am, I wake to hear a voice outside the living room window, saying “HELLLOOOO” in a way not dissimilar to Danny when he’s doing the voice of Tony. I go to the window and there’s no one there, absolutely no one. But I can still hear the voice. I keep walking around, trying to find the voice, but now it’s saying “Mummy! Mummy!”. Terrified, I run back to the living room, wake my friends, who say they can hear the noise too. Terrified, we didn’t sleep for the rest of the night and the voice continued to mock us with its calls of “Helloooo? Mummy!?!”
In the morning we addressed this with the owner of the house. He took us outside and showed us his cat, who started to meow rather loudly, producing noises that sounded very much like…”HELLO” and “MUMMY”.
So yeah…The Shining. Freaked out by it ever since.
October 20, 2014 — 11:30 AM
jason b says:
While I haven’t seen a ton of horror movies, the movie that has disturbed me the most is Seven. That one stayed in my psyche for a very long time.
I’ll give an honorable mention to the recent movie, Under the Skin. It was slow, dark, and strange. I couldn’t look away! And the ending was perfectly apropos, fitting the creepy vibe of the whole film.
October 20, 2014 — 11:31 AM
Phil says:
A more recent movie that really did a number on me was the French horror flick INSIDE. If anyone decides to check it out, I would recommend the UNRATED version. The CGI is a little wonky in places, but the movie quite brutal and unrelenting. I consider myself a fairly hardened horror movie watcher but this scared the shit out of me. I watched it at home and it was one of the few movies I had to pause and take a break to calm myself down before finishing it. That might read as hyperbolic, but the flick really delivers.
October 20, 2014 — 11:34 AM
Tonia says:
I think it would be easier to say what doesn’t scare me. I’m the world’s biggest chicken. Seriously. I saw something on television months ago about black-eyed kids that still has me checking the windows at night. If I hear a weird noise I automatically think ‘ghost’ before anything else.
Oddly enough, I did see The Shining last January. I watched it online, (legally), with a large group of people from around the world. The bad jokes people told were scarier than the movie.
October 20, 2014 — 11:44 AM
emilywenstrom says:
Seven. Something about the psychological aspect of how the victims suffered as they died in this movie … I cannot ever watch it again.
Also, Sixth Sense. When I was a kid, that fear of the hand grabbing from under the bed was the thing that really got in my head for some reason. Once that scene happened in the movie … no. Just no.
October 20, 2014 — 11:48 AM
Lynn Reynolds says:
Yes to The Shining. And I remember that Trilogy of Terror episode with Karen Black and that vicious doll. My fave scary movie is an extremely obscure British movie called “Dead of Night.” There are other movies called “Dead of Night” but this one dates to 1945. It starred Michael Redgrave and it was about a group of people who come to a house party. One of them realizes he’s seen all the others in a dream. They start sharing stories about their nightmares and each story is creepier than the last. Love it.
Another creepy English classic is “Seance on a Wet Afternoon,” from the 1960’s. A medium’s son dies and she convinces her husband to kidnap a child that they will kill in order to create a companion for the dead son. But the husband is not a killer and lots of complications ensue and it ends with a great little supernatural twist.
More recently – the entire first season of the French TV series “Les Revenants” (The Returned) which is streaming on Netflix. Can’t wait to be freaked out by season two.
October 20, 2014 — 11:52 AM
Elyse says:
I love the Returned! Great reccomendation 🙂
October 21, 2014 — 12:58 PM
Helena Bryan says:
I’ve loved scary movies since I was a teen; guilty pleasure for me. So I’m no novice, but the one movie too scary for me to get all the way through is Susperia. It’s nightmarish in its intensity and just soooo f$%cking creepy. I dare you to watch. Others on my A list: Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte and Whatever Happened to Baby Jane.
October 20, 2014 — 12:02 PM
Sarah Bewley says:
Both INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS. I saw the first as a child, and had nightmares about it forever. Saw the remake as an adult, and could not go home for hours afterwards, I was so freaked. My boyfriend and I ended up in Albertson’s buying a plastic parakeet and a lifetime supply of parakeet food to simply get our heads in a better place.
October 20, 2014 — 12:13 PM
Melissa Lewicki says:
Did you ever see “Tarantula?” I was about 10. It was so scary. Of course, I was 10. I’m sure it would seem very cheesy now.
October 20, 2014 — 12:14 PM
lauriejevans says:
I know it’s not a horror film, but Silence of the Lambs. The dark basement scene at the end. Gah! Hate going in the basement. We bought a house that had a Silence of the Lambs type basement. I never went down there. I almost didn’t want to buy the house because of it.
October 20, 2014 — 12:29 PM
adrianjwalker says:
Eraserhead, no contest.
October 20, 2014 — 12:31 PM
Alex Washoe says:
When I was a kid I saw Roger Korman’s ‘Attack of the Crab Monsters’ on TV. The characters are trapped on an island and the giant crabs kill people and can then telepathically reproduce their voices to lure their friends. It sounds silly, but it scared the crap out of me for months.
October 20, 2014 — 12:34 PM
Will Belacqua says:
Okay, so the movie that has disturbed me the most was Psychic Experiment. It’s really bad, in the sense that the actors are all terrible and it’s very confusing in set up, but still… there’s a scene with these dolls that come to life and get erections and stab a pedophile to death, and it’s just… SO DISTURBING.
If I’m being completely honest, my brother and I didn’t even finish watching it after that scene. It just freaked us out too much, because it was both kind of scary and disturbingly hilarious. There was a guy fixing our AC and when he walked by and saw a brief flash of the movie, he knew immediately what it was and told us to just turn it off, because it was just too much to handle. We listened. To this day, my brother will not let me pick out movies to watch because of it, haha.
October 20, 2014 — 12:41 PM
Eric Lingen-MURDER (@FelterSkelter) says:
The final scene of Sleepaway Camp gives me the hinx. The combination of the face and the ungodly noise that comes out of the actor’s throat freaks me the fuck out no matter how many times I see it.
October 20, 2014 — 12:55 PM
radiumskull says:
I’m surprised to not see (pardon me if I missed it), the Spanish contagion-horror ‘[REC]’. It’s a found-footage horror movie too, but done very well, with the isolated point of view done right. Best scene is at the end, where the room is pitch black and the camera is on night-vision… that part creeped me the hell out to be sure, and I don’t find much that’s creepy anymore.
Another disturbing but fun one to look for is ‘Frankenstein’s Army’, where the special effects guys are running the show with as many twisted monsters as they could craft. Silly and gory, but still unsettling. Also, WW2 found-footage! 😛
October 20, 2014 — 1:22 PM
Kyra Dune says:
I’m creeped out by any movie with those weird, slinky ghosts all crawling up the walls and stuff. You know, like the ones in The Grudge. *shiver* Also, The Shining had some serious creepiness going on. And so did IT. When I was a kid it was Child’s Play. Movies with possessed dolls still freak me out a little. But I don’t know as I would say I’ve seen a movie as an adult that actually scared me.
October 20, 2014 — 1:38 PM
Laura says:
My first time commenting here! Some of my favorite spooky movies include; The Haunting of Julia with Mia Farrow– creepy tone all the way through and the final scene is so haunting; Don’t Look Now with Julie Christie & Donald Sutherland – beautiful cinematography and eery atmosphere; and of course, the original Salem’s Lot –so many spooky scenes, particularly the one when the boy vampire is hovering and scratching outside his best friend’s bedroom window!
October 20, 2014 — 2:24 PM
gekkegina says:
don’t be afraid of the dark, it’s probably the only movie that got me sleeping issues….
October 20, 2014 — 2:26 PM
smkay70 says:
That’s a good one!
October 20, 2014 — 3:43 PM
wizki says:
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978, sorry, but yes, the remake) probably continues to disturb me more than any other horror film I’ve seen to date. Those pod-people are scary because they are perfectly empty and benign, ready to take your very soul in an almost new-agey kind of way that just makes my skin crawl. Talk about a slow build, with newscasters interviewing people whose loved-ones are just “somehow wrong” and bodies being unceremoniously recycled in the wee hours. And that closing scene (during which the heroine was apparently truly terrified, as she hadn’t read the last page of the script) kills every time. A great commentary on the gradual deadening of feeling and meaning in our society that remains undiminished after almost 40 years. A highly-recommended chill-fest. Keep your family close, and look them in the eyes just to make sure. 😉
October 20, 2014 — 2:35 PM
Hawk Eppler Zindell (@EZ_Hawk) says:
Watching scary movies has always been a bit of a problem for me so I’ve never seen Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but as a kid the premise alone disturbed me so much that it DESTROYED my peace of mind for about 2 summers :).
October 20, 2014 — 3:27 PM
angelomarcos says:
I still haven’t watched the remake of The Ring. I watched the original, and thought it was pretty creepy but not too scary, then I sat down to watch the remake and spent the first ten minutes twisting myself in knots by convincing myself it’d probably be much scarier cos of the higher budget, etc.
So I switched it off again.
Not sure if that counts. Does convincing yourself a film is gonna be scary and subsequently not actually watching it count in this list? I’m guessing probably not…
😉
October 20, 2014 — 3:32 PM
Jewel says:
Alien.
October 20, 2014 — 3:44 PM
wagnerel says:
Alien scared the hell out of me when I saw if for the first time (probably aging myself here to admit I was old enough to pass for 17, at least, and see it in the theater when it first came out). The tension was high in that movie, and I was constantly worried about the cat. And thing popping out of John Hurt’s stomach–urgh. Worse nightmare material. It’s probably why I never had kids.
Seriously.
But probably the scariest movie for me in terms of real heart-stopping was Night of the Living Dead. The original one. It always seemed to come on TV when my parents took us up to visit my aunt and uncle in their big old house in the Hollywood Hills. The grown ups would all go out to dinner or a party with friends, leaving the older two kids to watch the younger two, even though we were all pretty young. They’d stay out much later than their promised return time (because alcohol was involved and grown ups did stupid stuff like that back then), so I always ended up watching this movie on late night TV with my brother and two cousins. We’d huddle under a blanket and peek out as the zombies ate everyone.
Funny thing is, the special effects were cheesy, even by 1970s standards, but having it in black and white just made it creepier.
October 20, 2014 — 4:05 PM
leifthesailor says:
One that comes to mind for me was the new Evil Dead that came out a few years back. I know, the originals are classics, but I think both are good in their own right. The new one wasn’t made up with cheap thrills like some of the “crap” horror I’ve seen so much of lately. This movie was genuinely dark, and while it didn’t have the humor the original did, it had the plot elements and the gore to make it a truly freakish remake.
October 20, 2014 — 4:06 PM
Rio says:
One pretty recent one that I’ve watched is Sinister. I’m not sure what it is about it that freaked me out so much, but I barely lasted twenty minutes before I gave up and walked away. Another really good one is Oculus. Not exactly “scary,” but a real mindfuck.
October 20, 2014 — 4:57 PM
Penelope Crampton says:
Well this will date me, but——the Exorcist—slow buildup, horrifying medical tests, noises, pacing, in the middle of D.C., and the disbelief of the assistant priest, turning to full on horror at the very end…Gah! Also Texas Chainsaw Massacre–creepy feathers, bones, and cannibal family feast–(shudder)—also Alien, due to the lack of background music which made it Creepier…
October 20, 2014 — 5:17 PM
colinjkeats says:
Oh yeah The Exorcist, watched it in the theatre when it first came out. Kept my light on for days afterwards. Went a number of years later with my late teenaged daughter and it still held up.
October 20, 2014 — 7:56 PM
Robin Tidwell says:
We watch a lot of B movies, sci-fi and horror, naturally. Last night’s feature really stuck with me for some reason, even though the ending was way too abrupt and gave zero explanation. It’s a recent one, too, surprisingly: Contracted.
October 20, 2014 — 5:42 PM
portlandorange (@portlandorange) says:
The Devil’s Backbone from 2001, by Guillermo del Toro and the Almodóvar brothers. It’s a ghost story set during the Spanish Civil War, as much about courage as about fear.
Also mesmerized by these bizarre, glitchy Tumblr GIFs from the 1920s Nosferatu movie.
October 20, 2014 — 6:19 PM
writingthroughthebody says:
While maybe not very original… The Exorcist. I was 15 when it hit theaters and somehow got myself in to see it, underage. Linda Blaire’s spinning head, throaty speech, and pea soup vomit… Freaked. Me. Out. Went home, woke up in the middle of the night SCARED TO DEATH. Tried to play the radio to mask the voices in my head, but none of the stations came in. Only static. White noise. Terrifying…
October 20, 2014 — 6:23 PM
Jan O'Connell says:
Really showing my age here, but Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho was terrifying when I lied to my parents about where I was going and sneaked into the cinema pretending I was sixteen. The sound track from the shower scene has become a horror cliche over the years. And the moment in the house when we meet Anthony Perkins’ mother – I screamed out loud.
The other one that got to me (don’t laugh) was Jaws. I spent a large proportion of the movie with my head ducked down behind the seat in front of me, asking my friend to tell me when the shark scenes were over. Again, a classic sound track – great demonstration of how to build tension without showing very much at all. Since I saw that movie I’ve spent a lifetime avoiding the surf – something of a social handicap for an Aussie.
October 20, 2014 — 6:50 PM
tgotsis13 says:
I know what you mean about Jaws. I still feel anxious walking on piers or circular quays.
October 20, 2014 — 7:20 PM
jen says:
Ack. Jaws. When I saw it at the age of 12 with a massively overactive imagination, I was even convinced the blue carpet in my room would suddenly turn into shark infested water. I still get freaked out by going any deeper than paddling depth in the actual sea!
October 21, 2014 — 9:39 AM
colinjkeats says:
Haunting of Hill House, the original one with I believe Julie Harris. You never actually see anything, it is all done so you are not sure if it is psychological or not. No blood, no gore, just genuine shivers. Another one more recent is the Orphanage.
October 20, 2014 — 7:55 PM
WAILing GHOULish (@whirlingnerdish) says:
One movie that really scared me/messed with my head, and one of my favorite horror movies ever, is IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS. It’s a John Carpenter film about a man from a publishing house that goes looking for a famous horror novelist (an obvious Stephen King stand-in) that winds up visiting the place depicted in most of the author’s novels. And terrible things start to happen.
And I loved it so so so very much.
Also, I know it’s a cliche, but the first Nightmare on Elm Street. The music still gives me Goosebumps. When Nancy looks over and sees Tina in the hallway. Brrr.
October 20, 2014 — 8:49 PM
Andrew J McKiernan says:
The first time I saw The Exorcist, I was about 13yrs old. I saw it on TV, late at night, sitting in a church, in the dark and all alone with the Minister’s daughter. True story. Scared the shit out of me and the Minister’s daughter thought it was hilarious.
October 20, 2014 — 9:11 PM
SMertz74 says:
Of the more recent movies, I have to say, I loved Woman In Black. They used old fashioned scare tactics that run chills up your spin and make you jump, without a lot of fake blood or body parts running rampant. The final scene, if viewed on a large screen, where the woman in black seems to look right at you, freaked me out at the movie theater and I’m not easily scared.
October 20, 2014 — 9:12 PM
Maniacal Ghoulagher (@eatyourlipstick) says:
I LOVE The Shining and still watch it every year – as hilarious as Shelly Duvall’s snort-crying is, the buildup of Jack’s madness still gets me. Oh and the twins. And the bathroom despot. Brrrrr.
The Grudge killed me – the erratic movements, people doing ALL THE RIGHT THINGS in horror movies like going home and going to bed and NOT investigating anything and that not working … and then slow, stuttery doom crawling down the stairs and climbing on your chest to stare you in the face.
October 20, 2014 — 9:19 PM
brdubard says:
The Shining, of course, is terrifying. But the movie that scared me the most the first time I saw it was Jaws. I wouldn’t go beyond knee-deep in the ocean for years.
October 20, 2014 — 9:29 PM
jensalittleloopy says:
Night of the Comet. I’m good until the scene where the people (person, chick, people, I dunno? I’ve blocked it out) is/are driving on the highway and they get pulled over by a cop and they are all, “Yay! Help is here!” BAM. ZOMBIE COP MELTY FACE. If I don’t turn that movie off before that scene, nightmares for weeks. I started reading horror when I was about 10, and watching horror movies soon after that, and this one…I can’t even tell you how it ended. Still can’t watch anything zombie related.
The Shining gets me too, but as long as I cover my eyes when the twins are flooding the hallway with blood, I’m good. Is it weird that I know what that orange smell smells like?
The Changeling. Haunted antique wheelchair. Nopenopenope. Also George C. Scott was extra creepy in that movie.
Here’s one. When I was a kid (like 7 or 8, so this would be early 80s), there was a movie about a house haunted by poltergeists or something. The only thing I remember clearly is that someone opened the refrigerator and there was a hand on a plate sitting in a pool of blood. What movie was that?!?! Find me that movie and you will be my hero for life.
October 20, 2014 — 9:29 PM
Chris McLaughlin says:
The Hills Have Eyes (of COURSE the original!)
Still scares the crap outta me.
October 20, 2014 — 9:53 PM
Chris McLaughlin says:
Oh and The Exorcist is right up there…and Trilogy of Terror with the little doll was HORRIFYING. (‘Kay, I’m done)
October 20, 2014 — 9:56 PM
kjayinstereo says:
1977’s The Sentinel. Unsettling all the way through, but when that third act hits…
Gave me nightmares AND made me afraid to go up stairs for weeks.
October 20, 2014 — 9:57 PM