Personally, Last shift (2014).

Not meant movies get under my skin but that one really did.

  • shittydwarf@piefed.social
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    16 days ago

    That one scene from The Thing makes me jump every single time, it’s a masterclass in tension and making you instantly poo a little bit

    • Cricket@lemmy.zip@lemmy.zip
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      16 days ago

      Yes, the scene in the 80s version of The Thing where they’re all tied next to each other is mind-blowing (and I guess poop-inducing too). I imagine that’s the one you’re talking about.

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      Any idea on if the remake of The Thing was any good? I watched the original 80s version last year and loved it. Also, I read somewhere that Quinton Tarantino’s Hateful Eight was loosely based on The Thing, and after rewatching that I can see it.

      • shittydwarf@piefed.social
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        16 days ago

        I can’t really remember the remake. But the original was burned into my brain so I think that is a review in itself?

      • badmancrooks@lemmy.ca
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        16 days ago

        The Thing from the 2000s is a prequel. It could be mistaken for being a remake because the plot mirrors the original in a lot of ways, but it happens before the 80s version. It’s not bad, but it’s not better than the original, it doesn’t add much either, but it isn’t bad. Additionally, the 80s version is actually a remake.

      • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        Influenced by. It’s splitting hairs, I know. But the idea of a group of people trapped together that can’t trust each other is ridiculously fertile ground that I’m surprised more people haven’t farmed.

        To answer your question, the remake of The Thing was fine. Not good. Not bad. It’s fine. I wouldn’t turn it off if it were on but I wouldn’t go seeking it out.

        • Jackie's Fridge@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          The Head has entered the chat.

          If you haven’t seen this 2020 series, do not look up any info or spoilers, just watch it.

          • J-Bone@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            13 days ago

            I would also recommend watching The Head without getting any more info. It’s a solid, albeit flawed experience.

            • Jackie's Fridge@lemmy.world
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              12 days ago

              Agree - it does stumble but overall it’s a good ride. Someone also informed me that there are 2 more series - I thought it was a self-contained limited series. So back in I go

  • Dave @lemmy.ca
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    16 days ago

    Many moons ago, I half-watched ‘Alien,’ part one. I still have a sore stomach thinking about it today.

  • enbee@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 days ago

    Fire In The Sky (1993). My goofball dad took me to see this in the theater when I was under 10 and I have recently downloaded it because I want to see if it was really all that scary. I still cannot bring myself to watch it.

  • omgboom@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    16 days ago

    I think it’s just because I watched it when I was a kid and it freaked me out so bad, but Event Horizon still scares the shit out of me to this day.

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      I watched this movie going in blind without knowing it was a horror movie - and that made it all that much more if a mind fuck.

      I can’t wait for my kids to get just a little older so I can sit down with them to watch “my favorite sci fi movie” mwahahaha

        • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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          16 days ago

          Yeah I think it was a new movie that came on HBO on a Friday night at like 8:00. I remember always eagerly awaiting to see what the movie was going to be that week.

          At first I was like “Hell yeah, spaceships and mysteries! This is dope!”

          Then I was like “Oh no”

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    16 days ago

    Horror doesn’t work on me. Take that as a challenge if you like.

    That said, I give the nod to The Ring (the American remake of Ringu). Overall I thought the movie was kinda dull, but I liked how the jump scares worked and looked. I didn’t feel cheated by them, and the practical effects of making the girl look scared to death + seven days’ water logged was downright freaky. I have a behind-the-scenes shot from the intro, when the camera zooms in on her and her face morphs. You can go frame by frame on the Blu-ray and that image isn’t there, so I imagine makeup took the picture or someone else on set. You get more detail. Anyway, that image haunted me for years. I had it saved on my computer. (Still do in fact.) Now I look at it in awe, like “that’s the image that got to me.”

    The scariest movie I watched was about child abuse, but that answer feels like a cop out for a horror community. Doesn’t really matter which one. People being shitty to each other is what really gets under my skin.

      • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 days ago

        I assume you mean the behind-the-scenes image? I didn’t know how to share images here, but I see the upload image button. (Sorry, I’m still a bit new to Lemmy.)

        The Ring image

        Much smaller than I remember. But this is the original file I got. Not sure where I found it. You could get a better shot by going to the 4K Blu-ray, going to about 8 minutes in (that’s from memory, it’s the very end of the cold open when the girl goes upstairs, it’s gonna change scenes to inside the room, then the camera is going to rush the door as the girl opens it, and there is like a third of a second of transition (so like what, 8 frames?) before it cuts to the title. The scene everyone remembers is when the mother says “I saw her face” and it shows you the girl in the closet and that shot lasts a few seconds, but this one was way scarier, IMO. Like freezing the frame and just looking at it, like holy shit they did not need to go so hard on a shot most people would miss.

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      I came in here just to mention The Ring. I haven’t seen it in almost 20 years, but was talking about it with my coworker earlier today! That scene where (spoiler) the main character is talking to her son and says “it’s over, I helped her” And he says “you weren’t supposed to help her” sticks with me to this day.

      Chills.

    • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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      16 days ago

      It was Ringu that fucked me for months when I was younger.

      Any shadow that was five or six feet high just made me think of Sadako, such was the mastery of the film. It was particularly challenging at night when shadows from the trees outside my window cast very tall and slim shadows.

      It never really rattled me at the time either - the scene that royally stunned me was the reflection in the TV towards the end of the film.

      Brilliant film fair play.

  • misericordiae@literature.cafe
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    16 days ago

    The Blair Witch Project, but 1) I really hadn’t seen much horror at that point (not too long after it came out), and 2) it made me really motion sick, so I’m not sure how much that affected things. I stayed clear of the woods for a week or two afterwards, though.

    • dingleberrylover@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      The movie for me was scary but not much for a long while, especially not until the ending. The context of these strange happenings make all the difference to me. So while one could think that there might be just a lunatic out there, who does all this shit for his sadistic satisfaction (which would give give a purely human reason to everything), the ending however shifted everything and made it MUCH scarier, at least for me.

      Tap for spoiler

      When she ran into this empty scary house in the middle of the night in the middle of the woods, shortly before the climax, and she suddenly sees her missing friend apparently deliriously standing in the corner of some basement room in complete darkness for who knows how long, facing the walls, is so uncanny to me that it almost made me shit my pants. It is a great ending scene since it tops all the events with a heavy surrealistic touch, without explaining anything to the viewer, so your imagination has to fill in the gaps. Was there a real Witch after all? What happened to him? Is there something unexplainable out there?

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      The biggest thing that made Blair Witch scary was all the marketing and hype about it. They created a whole fake conspiracy theory online with fake news articles and everything that made it sound plausible. It was in the early days of the Internet so there wasn’t the instant fact checking that would happen today.

      You could probably get away with telling kids today that it was real, but wouldn’t able to generate the same hype.

  • Cricket@lemmy.zip@lemmy.zip
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    16 days ago

    I’m not a huge fan of horror (I came across this thread in my all feed), but when I was in my teens I saw some random movie on TV that scared me freaked me out for quite a long time afterward. Unfortunately I don’t even remember the name, but maybe someone here will know what it is. From what I recall, it took place in a carnival, and the “monster” was some horribly deformed guy that had eyes that were far apart on his head. He would lurk around inside carnival rides and kill women visitors.

  • Gerudo@lemmy.zip
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    16 days ago

    My tops have been mentioned, so I’ll mention movie scenes that stayed with me…

    Signs - the birthday party scene makes my skin crawl

    Poltergeist 2 - I didn’t want braces FOR YEARS from the one scene

    Hereditary - the girls death in the car is so unexpected

    Hostel - the cut Achilles gets me everytime

    Audition - needles in the eye

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      I never considered Signs a horror movie until I tried to rewatch it recently with my son. Got to that birthday party scene and he immediately noped out.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    The one that hit me hardest was Poltergeist. Saw that in the theater the night before 5th grade started and it wrecked me for two weeks. Watching it again last year, it’s still pretty freaky.

    Can’t say it was the scariest, but I think Alien is all-time best. We’re all used to the memes and jokes, but have a sit down in a dark room and really let yourself get into it.

  • Codilingus@sh.itjust.works
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    15 days ago

    I don’t know about scariest, but Ari Astor’s movies are their own category of emotional horror. Worth a watch, but I will never rewatch one lol. Heritage and Mid Sommar.

    • J-Bone@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 days ago

      If you like horror and haven’t seen Mid Sommar, you got to watch it ASAP.

      There is a reason it gets brought up so much in different contexts.

  • Semisimian@startrek.website
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    16 days ago

    Watching Alien when I was a kid gave me nightmares that lasted decades, long past the time when horror movies actively scared me. I was fully aware of all of the aspects of movie making, I was in school for film, knew everything it took to make the original film and STILL would have nightmares. It dug into my hind-brain and didn’t let up.