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Sankara posted:It's pretty embarrassing, given how silly the film is, but this scene in Ernest Scared Stupid haunted me for years. I think most people agree that movie is far more unsettling than you'd expect from an Ernest flick
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:14 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 10:59 |
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The scene in the Star Trek movie with the Borg where Captain Picard gets a needle shoved in his eye made me phobic of needles for a long-rear end time
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:15 |
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Sankara posted:It's pretty embarrassing, given how silly the film is, but this scene in Ernest Scared Stupid haunted me for years. The classic bed scare https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzKb7r82AI4
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:24 |
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SilvergunSuperman posted:I think most people agree that movie is far more unsettling than you'd expect from an Ernest flick Yeah? That's good. I watched it as an adult in a "face your fears" kind of thing and was shocked at how goofy it was. I built it up a lot worse in my mind. The troll is defeated using milk, for crying out loud!
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:36 |
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Sankara posted:Yeah? That's good. I watched it as an adult in a "face your fears" kind of thing and was shocked at how goofy it was. I built it up a lot worse in my mind. The troll is defeated using milk, for crying out loud!
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:41 |
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Sankara posted:Yeah? That's good. I watched it as an adult in a "face your fears" kind of thing and was shocked at how goofy it was. I did the same with the day-O Beetlejuice scene, and if anything, it made me even MORE unsettled. That said, I also did it when the crystalline entity episode of Star Trek TNG, and the terrible-by-today's-standards special effects amused the hell out of me.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 03:51 |
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It's like children brains aren't fully developed, or something!!!
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 04:05 |
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Sankara posted:It's pretty embarrassing, given how silly the film is, but this scene in Ernest Scared Stupid haunted me for years. This is EXACTLY what I'm talking about. gently caress that movie
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 04:09 |
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I'll share a movie nobody else will. In the 90s I was a little kid and I visited my grandparents. They were church-y, old world, never had much money. They said there was a horror movie ("ghost picture") they wanted to watch, they recorded it on the VCR. I was surprised, that's not really their thing, but oh, it wasn't Halloween or Jason or Chucky. It was a Made for TV movie. I thought it wouldn't be scary. It traumatized me for life. This scene lived in my head 30 years. I finally rediscovered it with some Cinema Discusso help a couple years ago. Here's the scene: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EniHFE_5ZY&t=2776s - careful of the strobe-like flashing if that bothers you. starts at 46:19 with "I went to their lecture this afternoon..." Once it cuts to the POV of the entity coming down the stairs, and the following minute, my whole life was changed. T R A U M A. I CANNOT EMPHASIS ENOUGH HOW MUCH THIS SCARED THE poo poo OUT OF ME The POV and slow camera turn, TRAUMA Her expressionless face and super strength TRAUMA Her hideous grin and ugly teeth, TRAUMA Ghosts are scary but one is beating you and it laughs as you scream for help, TRAUMA Quick cuts to the other large grotesque figures, TRAUMA Were the kids calling for goodnight or was it a demon playing a trick? TRAUMA I never even knew it was a r*** scene til I rewatched it a couple years ago. I was probably too young to even know what that was (or didn't understand a woman riding a man while he screams "Get off me!" could mean.) Looking back, there's funny little connections. I know who Jeffrey DeMunn is, the Warrens are popular. I searched for this scene for many years. I think it's still effective.....
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 04:55 |
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Hardawn posted:I remember a movie where a man pulls his blood stump if a have through his handcuff. He later is gutshot and dies in a hole to then be resurrected. I've never found the title of this movie. That was Deadpool
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 05:39 |
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I should mention The Black Hole (1980, Disney). 'Severe childhood trauma' is a little histrionic, but there's plenty to freak out the unwary, including: * A spooky deserted gothic-architecture spaceship parked by a black hole, in constant imminent danger of doom. * Cloaked spooky monk servants. * Who are later revealed to be the original crew, murdered and turned into shrunken wizened zombies underneath their mirrored fencing masks. * A megalomaniac scientist. * And his 8 foot tall blood red murder-robot with spinning slice and dice knives for hands. * That he eviscerates Norman Bates with. * Even at nine, I had a suspicion that an Indiana Jones-style ball (except its a loving asteroid) rolling right through the centre of the ship might not be plausible, but still. * Betrayal by Ernest Borgnine, of all people. * And the end, which is essentially Dante's Inferno by way of 2001 A Space Odyssey. The villain, already dead, being sucked into the black hole, only to later emerge trapped inside the body of his murder robot to view the burning landscape of hell for eternity, while simultaneously the good guys undergo the Disney version of spaghettification.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 19:25 |
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Wow, Disney made a Warhammer 40k film in 1980?
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 19:59 |
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SilvergunSuperman posted:I think most people agree that movie is far more unsettling than you'd expect from an Ernest flick It's the only Ernest thing I knew, he didn't make such a big impact here. I must have been about 10 when I saw it, but my little brother and cousin watched it a lot and we all had pretty much unsupervised access to horror movies. Looking back at the clips posted, it's shot like contemporary mid-budget horror movie. I remember most (if not all) of it taking place at night, the locations are all familiar, maybe a little grungy, so there's a level of realism to it. It looks like something like "Night of the Creeps". If it was more expressionistic or heightened, it might actually be less unsettling.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 20:49 |
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The Fire Gang from Labyrinth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ye0-Bc6u0x8 I don't remember when I first watched the movie, but I do know that I either forgot or repressed almost all of it except for memories of these fuckers happily dismembering themselves on screen. I actually ended up convincing myself that they were a nightmare that I had until friends invited me to watch the movie one night in college, and I proceeded to lose my goddamn mind when my childhood bad dreams suddenly began prancing across the screen.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 21:00 |
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Not a childhood thing but I had a weird real life Lynchian experience seeing Mulholland Drive that stuck with me. I have a friend who lived in one of the funky little tudor style apartments that the two women break into and find her own horribly decomposing corpse on the bed. When that movie came out my friend had since moved to a different place but I instantly recognized it from the first time I visited him there. I had walked through that same courtyard trying to figure out which place was his, I even knocked on the wrong door like in the movie and the person told me my friend was in a different apartment. Just that weird shot for shot similarity made an already tense and disturbing scene hit a lot harder. After seeing the film I felt the need to call up my friend to make sure he was ok and asked if he had seen Mullholland Drive. He had, and said it was hosed up and that scene might have even been filmed in the actual unit he used to live in. Living in LA you get used to recognizing locations in films and TV but this one was creepy as hell.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 21:09 |
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Blow posted:Barbarella. My parents took me to see it in the theater. The MPAA rating system was still new, and they didn't understand what the impact it might have on a 5 year old. Definitely the biting dolls. But I also distinctly remember Jane Fonda's boobs in that plastic armor. But not for the same reason as the dolls, so I guess the movie balances out. Poltergeist I had graduated from high school when I saw this, but it brought back a childhood trauma. That freaking clown doll. My grandma had bought me one that looked amazingly similar to the doll in the movie. I don't know why she got it for me. I guess she thought every kid needed a clown doll or something. Anyway, my mom put it in a chair right next to my bedroom door. This insured that I would have no escape once the Terror in Motley came to life and began scuttling toward me. My mom insisted that it stay there. I made sure it ended up in the closet under a blanket as often as possible. Mr Teatime posted:Darby O'Gill and the Little People Yeah, that scared the poo poo out of me. Genesplicer fucked around with this message at 22:53 on Aug 15, 2023 |
# ? Aug 15, 2023 22:29 |
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Genesplicer posted:My parents took me to see it in the theater. The MPAA rating system was still new, and they didn't understand what the impact it might have on a 5 year old. Definitely the biting dolls. But I also distinctly remember Jane Fonda's boobs in that plastic armor. But not for the same reason as the dolls, so I guess the movie balances out. Speaking of demonic dolls, The Amityville Horror had this little rocking chair doll whose eyes opened up and they were red and it haunted me for years.
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# ? Aug 15, 2023 23:16 |
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Keef getting his eyeballs ripped out in Invader Zim hosed me up pretty bad. The organ harvesting I was okay with, not so much the eye trauma.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 00:20 |
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Torquemada posted:I should mention The Black Hole (1980, Disney). 'Severe childhood trauma' is a little histrionic, but there's plenty to freak out the unwary, including:
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 00:23 |
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IBroughttheFunk posted:The Fire Gang from Labyrinth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ye0-Bc6u0x8 I never liked this scene because I couldn't make out a single drat thing they said.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 01:50 |
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redshirt posted:Speaking of demonic dolls, The Amityville Horror had this little rocking chair doll whose eyes opened up and they were red and it haunted me for years. When the daughter tells the mom that she scared Jody and went out the window is what gives me the fuckin’ heebie-jeebies to this day. You even hear Jody grunting before seeing the eyes and… gently caress.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 02:39 |
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Oh did anyone see the Tommyknockers miniseries on ABC? Featured a sheriff getting killed by her doll collection coming to life and pushing heavy stuff off a ledge so it hit her in the head and knocked her prone, whereupon the dolls could finish her off.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 02:45 |
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Ralph Hurley posted:Not a childhood thing but I had a weird real life Lynchian experience seeing Mulholland Drive that stuck with me. I have a friend who lived in one of the funky little tudor style apartments that the two women break into and find her own horribly decomposing corpse on the bed. When that movie came out my friend had since moved to a different place but I instantly recognized it from the first time I visited him there. I had walked through that same courtyard trying to figure out which place was his, I even knocked on the wrong door like in the movie and the person told me my friend was in a different apartment. Just that weird shot for shot similarity made an already tense and disturbing scene hit a lot harder. After seeing the film I felt the need to call up my friend to make sure he was ok and asked if he had seen Mullholland Drive. He had, and said it was hosed up and that scene might have even been filmed in the actual unit he used to live in. Living in LA you get used to recognizing locations in films and TV but this one was creepy as hell. For TV, two episodes of The Twilight Zone stand out: the one in which a woman is revealed to be a department store mannequin who has overstayed her chance to live among humans, and the one in which the test pilots violated some law of the universe and are slowly and traumatically unwritten from existence. I really, really didn't like the theme of unnatural existential destruction as a kid.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 03:18 |
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You Are A Elf posted:When the daughter tells the mom that she scared Jody and went out the window is what gives me the fuckin’ heebie-jeebies to this day. You even hear Jody grunting before seeing the eyes and… gently caress. I read the book the movie was based on well before I saw it, that scene scared the poo poo out of me reading it, the movie part wasn't as impactful.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 04:11 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4qfSrN27qo thunderbirds really hosed me up as a kid. quite a few episodes where i couldn't sleep afterwards, i think because of how the threat in thunderbirds is some kind of impersonal natural disaster that can't be reasoned with, like they;re trapped in a pit in the ground and there's water coming in, or the giant building-city is on fire, or thunderbird 3 in trapped on a collision course with the sun
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 14:27 |
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Thunderbirds fuckin rules. Of all the Gerry Anderson shows that poo poo absolutely holds up
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 14:33 |
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I've been watching UFO it rules
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 15:04 |
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This one got knocked loose from the file room of my brain, but Arcane’s transformation after drinking the formula in Swamp Thing was goddamn nightmare fuel. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71Nmq8VOKnY Those bladders and blood erupting from them, along with the cocoon was terrifying. Then emerges a Dollar Tree knockoff Rocksteady wrapped in duct tape
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 20:38 |
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Dokapon Findom posted:For anyone who maybe doesn't fully get the point of the thread or perhaps didn't have these experiences, this is the "real" answer I never got scared from horror movies, laughed at Jaws and even Watership Down didn’t bother me that much, but Plague Dogs kicked me in the nuts with steel-toed boots, emotionally. I watch it every few years when I feel the need to wallow in overwhelming sadness.
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 21:29 |
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brave little toaster if you know you know
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# ? Aug 16, 2023 22:50 |
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The McPherson Tape got aired on TV and was promoted as 'real home recording' and I was a very literal child (I mean I took things literally but yeh I guess also I was literally a kid lol). It set off a multi-year long alien fear that wasn't able to fully subside until the X-Files was off the air (that whole storyline with Mulder's sister, NOPE, NOT OK) Greys can gently caress right off, my biggest irrational fear is looking out a ground floor window and seeing one of those fuckers staring back at me. StrangersInTheNight fucked around with this message at 23:11 on Aug 16, 2023 |
# ? Aug 16, 2023 23:09 |
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My dad hired Trainspotting as a kid, and while my parents had no qualms about me watching fantasy violence, something as grounded as that was off limits. Honestly, I think that's a reasonable policy depending on the kid. Anyway, I wondered through during the scene where Begbie glassed a stranger and then blamed the rest of the bar for it. My dad just said "there's people like that in real life, you know." Thanks, Dad.
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# ? Aug 17, 2023 13:10 |
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Someone already posted the Deep Red trailer...that loving doll! As a kid, the previews & commercials for horror movies always hit me hard. When I got older and finally got to see the movies, they were (almost) never as scary as what my weird brain created. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7SOqkb_CM0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GY1oeoVD_zI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsfxVtFScPg My wife and kids think it's hilarious that I STILL have nightmares about the It's Alive baby monster. Also, gently caress that doll from Trilogy of Terror! This was a TV MOVIE!!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nra7OmV1IzE JeffLeonard fucked around with this message at 13:26 on Aug 17, 2023 |
# ? Aug 17, 2023 13:24 |
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Disco Pope posted:My dad hired Trainspotting as a kid, and while my parents had no qualms about me watching fantasy violence, something as grounded as that was off limits. Honestly, I think that's a reasonable policy depending on the kid. What about the baby on the ceiling? Even being late teens/early 20s when I saw it, that creeped me right the gently caress out. Love the movie, though.
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# ? Aug 17, 2023 13:34 |
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Zamboni Rodeo posted:What about the baby on the ceiling? Even being late teens/early 20s when I saw it, that creeped me right the gently caress out. He kicked me out the room fairly early once a sex scene started (his normal thing was to shout "boobies!" to defuse the tension and then usually the scene would be over once we stopped laughing, but Trainspotting was obviously a bit grittier), so I only saw the Begbie scene when wondering back through. He trusted me to know Aliens couldn't happen (for example), but I was close to 13 then and heroin and street-violence probably wasn't a conversation he wanted to have right then. My mum worked in bars for a while, so Friday or Saturday night would often involve a takeaway and a film my dad wanted to hire. The only time I really backfired was when my brother was traumatised by Tales From The Crypt:Demon Knight really badly and I had to vow to keep it a secret or our film nights would be through. My brother was always typically braver than me, though, if something wasn't real, he didn't care, even from a very young age. He later admitted being scared of Data from Star Trek, but said he didn't want to cause fuss.
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# ? Aug 17, 2023 13:48 |
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For a couple days in the early 90s my dad watched the muti-part TV doc "The Men Who Killed Kennedy" and after the first night I'd come to dread when he'd tune in to the subsequent parts (I'd still be able to hear a lot of it even if I was in another room). My five year-old self was disturbed by the very idea that someone could kill the President, and the whole air of mystery and conspiracy mongering was deeply unsettling. Oh, and loving slow-mo blow-ups of the Zapruder film so you can see grainy blurry footage of JFK's brains getting blown out his head right in front of his wife, all underlined by a deep sinister synthesizer chord on the soundtrack straight out of Unsolved Mysteries, just in case the footage wasn't creepy enough. Looking it up on Wikipedia, turns out this docuseries has quite a history of having controversial material added and removed over the years. This particular airing sounds like it was in its least salacious form.
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# ? Aug 17, 2023 14:55 |
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Disco Pope posted:My dad hired Trainspotting as a kid, and while my parents had no qualms about me watching fantasy violence, something as grounded as that was off limits. Honestly, I think that's a reasonable policy depending on the kid. That's an important lesson that's pretty hard to impart IRL because the second part is "so learn to recognize them and be somewhere else when they show up"
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# ? Feb 26, 2024 16:29 |
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nice obelisk idiot posted:For TV, two episodes of The Twilight Zone stand out: the one in which a woman is revealed to be a department store mannequin who has overstayed her chance to live among humans, and the one in which the test pilots violated some law of the universe and are slowly and traumatically unwritten from existence. I really, really didn't like the theme of unnatural existential destruction as a kid. Twilight Zone Season One is hardcore. My favorite is "Third From The Sun"
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# ? Feb 26, 2024 16:38 |
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temple posted:Also Return of the Living Dead 3. Such a weird mix of horny and existential horror. Even though it was a goofy dark comedy, the original Return of the Living Dead was traumatizing when I saw it in my early teens. The cadaver and the taxidermied animals waking up and feeling pain, Frank and Freddy getting sicker and sweatier and more panicked after being exposed to the zombie gas, the unkillable zombies who won't die unless you incinerate them and even then the smoke will drift around and create more zombies. I definitely had an "aha" moment later on when I read that Dan O'Bannon wrote Alien. The sense of panic and despair. The gratuitous female nudity. The forbidden pods containing some horrible thing that, if disturbed, will take over your body and use it for its own purposes while you writhe in agony.
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# ? Mar 2, 2024 01:20 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 10:59 |
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Dick Jones posted:Even though it was a goofy dark comedy, the original Return of the Living Dead was traumatizing when I saw it in my early teens. The cadaver and the taxidermied animals waking up and feeling pain, Frank and Freddy getting sicker and sweatier and more panicked after being exposed to the zombie gas, the unkillable zombies who won't die unless you incinerate them and even then the smoke will drift around and create more zombies. The 3rd film bothered me a lot more than the first, since it featured a young couple where one of them dies and the other brings her back. Only, of course, she isn't exactly herself anymore thanks to the Trioxin. I was about the same age as the main characters when I saw it, and in a serious relationship, so all that was pretty hard-hitting. quote:I definitely had an "aha" moment later on when I read that Dan O'Bannon wrote Alien. The sense of panic and despair. The gratuitous female nudity. The forbidden pods containing some horrible thing that, if disturbed, will take over your body and use it for its own purposes while you writhe in agony.
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# ? Mar 2, 2024 04:59 |