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Favorite horror movie?
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Alright I can think of a few that strangely haven't been mentioned yet!
Barbarian - Woman checks in to an AirBnB. But beneath it lies a horrible secret. This one's pretty disturbing in subject matter, actually. But it's solidly eery.
Tremors - It's bright daylight! In a small desert town! What's so spooky about that? Vibration-sensitive, man-eating sandworms maybe. This movie is just solidly fun all around. Legendary B-movie monster film.
The Descent - Always thought caves were creepy? Want to experience claustrophobia from the safety of your own home? Wanna see how an all-woman horror film cast is done correctly? This one's a treat.
Dog Soldiers - The Scottish Highlands are gorgeous for a hike. Less appealing though if you're a squad of British soldiers doing a training exercise in a monster movie. Features reasonably smart cast of soldiers doing their best, but cleverly using the training scenario premise to take away their live ammo so they can't just shoot away their problems. Also, I remember it being very "B movie" in a good way. A well-placed cheesy joke or two had me laughing out loud without it being Marvel-grade snark, but it was still tense and exciting.
Pandorum - Guy wakes up from hypersleep on a giant ship where things have gone horribly wrong. His only other awake crewmate is uh...a bit off, maybe? This one feels VERY Deadspace. If you like "Creepy massive cathedral-like dungeon ships" flavored sci-fi horror, this one's pretty good. I'd say maybe much tamer than Event Horizon, but clearly took some inspiration there.
30 Days of Night - You know how in Alaska they get really long periods where the sun is just gone? You know how certain classic horror antagonists hate sunlight? Uh oh.
Overlord - A World War 2 horror film. I mean, WWII was full of horror but...like... unbelievable horror. No, like, pulpy mad scientist supervillains and secret experiments horror--No, like stuff that DIDN'T actually happen. It's the closest to a Wolfenstein movie as we're gonna get. (And very "Weird Wars 2" if you've played a good Savage Worlds TTRPG or two)
Resident Evil - I liked maybe two or three sequels too, before it got utterly ridiculous to farm cash, but the original is always cited as a horror classic, even among people who aren't fans of the games. (Almost entirely unrelated characters and plot.)
Wish I could upvote this more.
Barbarian was written by Zach Cregger of Whitest Kids You Know fame, it's a solid movie with unsettlingly comedic chops.
As for Pandorum, I am obsessed with that movie. Here's a FanTheory I wrote a few years ago that delves into much of intrigue hinted at in that incredible movie:
https://www.reddit.com/r/FanTheories/comments/gmlo53/pandorum_earth_took_serious_countermeasures/
Barbarian was wild. I had no idea what I was in for, my cousin just said "Check this one out" last Halloween. That movie had so many good moments. The sheer tonal whiplash once the tapemeasure gets broken out. ๐ And we were all in the living room screaming "That would TOTALLY HAPPEN TOO!"
I love when scary movies know how to manage and pace their tone. They can be scary without drowning the viewer in so much grimdark it becomes a comedy accidentally.
That's so crazy cool that of all those movies I listed, I meet a Pandorum fan! It's been ages since I've seen it, but it left an impression. I really liked your FanTheories writeup! But also I should really give it another watch with my matured brain and see what I missed the last couple times. I almost kinda like how...the plot is REALLY grim, but only when you really connect all the breadcrumbs.
The movie itself I remember being rather straightforward and exciting, (even with that Act 2 expo-dump), where the plot doesn't completely screw you up and abandon all hope unless you really start analyzing it lol.
That's why I liken it to Deadspace...That's a grim and awful world to inhabit...but wow is it still such a WILD ride that I'm willing to do it again.
With Barbarian it was just seeing the WKUKisms that I've grown accustomed to take life in a whole new genre - it was disconcertingly familiar and horrifically new at the same time!
Deadspace is a great description of Pandorum, but I'd argue that Pandorum has a far better story filled more with what people do when burdened by unwanted knowledge, rather than what people do when they are no longer themselves
Haha so I'm only familiar with WKUK by title, so I'll have to check it out. :p
I like this point a lot. A friend of mine once told me something like: horror as a genre is easily defined as "What happens to those who look?"
I loved that quote.
Forbidden knowledge is so scary. It's like reading spoilers. Just a glance, and it's in your mind. It's a part of you. How do you cope? You can't just drop it like some cursed object or outrun it like some monster.
We want to know lots of things, I know I always love to learn...but the scariest things are those you don't want to know... But how can you know what these are? You don't know what you don't know yet...
Pardon my ramble. Midnight contemplative brain kicked in. ๐
... Yeah I need to watch Pandorum again haha. Introduce some new people to it. :D
Me too hehe