Fuck Janet Leigh And Her Shower: 13 Horror Scenes That Will Really Terrify You
Posted at 9:00 AM Oct 30, 2008
By G. Martin
Halloween rules. Not because of the candy or the parties or the fact that it allows full-grown men to act like preschoolers or women to dress like brazen sluts. No, Halloween rules because of the movies. This is the only time of year when Hollywood calls attention to all the bloodiest, grisliest, nastiest things in life and makes them... fun. This is also the time of year when all of the so-called experts trot out their tired, predictable lists of the films that allegedly make them wet the bed. You know them before you read them: Night Of The Living Dead, Psycho (original flavor), Jaws, Rosemary’s Baby, The Birds, blah, blah, fucking blah. Each entry is about as spine-chilling as a rerun of Full House. This year, the problem has been addressed. Strap on your Depends and get your read on.
13. The Exorcist III: No Time For Anesthetic
Director/screenwriter William Peter Blatty took complete control of what he viewed as his masterwork and came up with something only slightly more redeemable than the execrable Exorcist II: The Heretic, but there is a diamond in this pile of coal during a seemingly innocuous sequence that takes place in a hospital hallway. Nurses and various staffers move in an out of an uncomfortably long shot until out of nowhere, an avenging knight in white satin comes in to perform some unnecessary surgery. This kind of cinematic “surprise” or “Gotcha!” is often dismissed as a cheap way of getting an easy visceral reaction from people, but fear is a physical response, so what’s the fucking problem?
12. Eyes Without A Face: Plastic Surgery Gone Very, Very Wrong
The word “haunting” is abused a lot this time of year, sort of how assholes like to throw around words like “genius” or “brilliant” at pretentious parties. The imagery of this French flick stays with you like bad shrimp, but the excruciatingly hard to watch facial surgery is the section that will leave the deepest psychic scars. Weird, trippy and featuring a visage mask that makes Michael Myers’ Shatner gear seem cute in comparison, this graphic classic will haunt you, for real.
11. Saw: Here Piggy, Piggy
Although the constant flow of sequels has generated a product stream of ever-diminishing quality, the first film is a tidy morality tale with just the right blend of successful influences (Se7en, The Twilight Zone) to make it work. The best part of the original is the fact that its sick events could actually take place in “real” life. The strongest example of this idea is embodied when Jigsaw (dressed in a cloak and pig mask… WTF?) jumps out of the closet to kidnap Cary Elwes’ future cellmate, answering the perennial question of whether we're alone when we come home to an empty apartment with a resounding no.
10. Twilight Zone: The Movie: "Wanna See Something Really Scary?"
In a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind, we open on Albert Brooks and Dan Akroyd driving along a quiet highway playing TV theme song trivia as they make their way into a wondrous land of imagination. Could there be anything safer or more non-threatening? So when everyone’s second-favorite Ghostbuster asks the guy with the best white-man’s afro ever if he wants to see something scary, no one actually expects the subsequently horrifying results. The false sense of security that’s established is precisely what makes the payoff so ridiculously effective. Unfortunately, it would be another 13 years before Akroyd returned to the horror genre with his 1996 masterpiece, Celtic Pride.
9. Don’t Look Now: Little Red Riding Midget
From Freaks to Twin Peaks to the Austin Powers oeuvre, evil midgets (dwarves, if you’re nasty) have been terrorizing audiences for eons. But the most terrifying member of the Lollipop Guild has to be the deformed “Little Red Riding Hood” from this unforgiving tale of a missing child, starring a young(er) Donald Sutherland. This is a twist ending so intense, the only real-life comparison (spoiler alert!) would be if Natalee Holloway’s mom thought she spotted her daughter in a crowd, tracked her down and just when they were about to hug, “Natalee” pulled a knife on her. The ending also happens to be the midget’s shining moment, so once you’re done the with first viewing, wash the Mini-Me out of your underwear and give it another whirl to see how they put it all together.
8. It: John Wayne Gacy’s A Pussy
One of the strongest adaptations of Stephen King's work features the most frightening character to ever spring from his cesspool of evil, the ultimate killer clown, Pennywise. Forgetting for a second that most people now associate his name with that crappy pop-punk band, Pennywise the character was not one to laugh at. Combining every violent, child-killing, “tears of a clown” stereotype known to man, this is the harlequin of hate that John Wayne Gacy could have been if he tried a little harder (and had superpowers). Picking a particular stand-out scene is difficult in this case because every second that Tim Curry is onscreen is disturbing to the bowels, but his first emergence in the mouth of a sewer is probably the most chilling. Good thing the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were there to reclaim the drainage underground and save the day.
7. The Shining: Bath Time With Grandma
It’s happened to the best of us. You start making out with a total piece of ass and just as you’re rounding second, she up and morphs into a monstrous sea hag. Like going home with Julianne Hough but waking up with Cloris Leachman, poor Jack Nicholson gets the undead switcheroo pulled on him in the greatest of the Stephen King adaptations (naturally, King supposedly hates it).





Comments
If you want to see a really well done version of the bathtub scene in the Shining, watch the TV mini series starring that dude from Wings. It is genuinely disturbing.
And King is right to hate the Kubrick directed Shining, it sucks.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 10:33:44 AM#3 WAS unsettling, back in 1978 when Michael Meyers did it to Lorie Strode. In The Strangers, it was just imitation.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 04:49:22 PMWow, this list sucked...
Some scenes were good, but a lot of them can't compare to the classics. That french surgery one was boring and extremely fake-looking. O well..
Posted 10/30/2008 at 05:05:00 PM1408? Really?
Linda Blair crabwalking backwards down the stairs is far worse than anything on this list.
Funny parody of all those ghost hunting shows: http://fiturl.com/1gT
Posted 10/30/2008 at 05:05:37 PMYeah, this list is more like:
"Wahhh, I was born only twenty years ago, and nobody puts the movies I'VE seen on a classic scene list... wahhhhh.
Here's an exercise for you:
Go rent, buy or download 20 or 30 of the top rated horror movies of all time. Watch them.
Then recompile this list with movies other than those that you were watching when you got your first boner.
Simple.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 05:12:10 PMIt's worth noting, and maybe should have been noted in the intro, that getting out of context YouTube snippets doesn't really do the dramatic content of these scenes justice, even if it serves the purposes of having a multimedia element for the story.
Eyes Without A Face was a good examples of this. That movie is genuinely disturbing and terrifying, especially for 1960, and the buildup to that surgery scene quadruples the intensity (and the graphic intent is startling for that era).
But alas, it's a tough topic to visually demonstrate with authority. I think the larger idea is to take our word for it and then watch it as part of the whole film.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 05:20:13 PM"And King is right to hate the Kubrick directed Shining, it sucks."
Yeah, because Stephen King definitely understands the film medium...
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091499/
Posted 10/30/2008 at 06:21:57 PMI check out lists like this from time-to-time because Digg links them and they are always ALWAYS WaaaAAAAaaay off. Perhaps one or two of the scenes mentioned are worthy of inclusion in this list.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 06:38:52 PMtake alook at this blog
http://nowyoucandoit.blogspot.com
Posted 10/30/2008 at 09:07:44 PMYoompin' Yimminy, I thought I was the only person in the Western Hemisphere that knew about "Audition." And yes, I can attest that the sequence — and the whole film — are as disturbing as its position on this list would indicate.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 09:36:15 PMLAWLWLWLWLWLWLWLLWLLWLWLWLWLWLW
Posted 10/30/2008 at 09:45:23 PMStephen King is a fantastic author, but his movies well, suck
Posted 10/30/2008 at 09:46:43 PMdude, pennywise is not pop-punk.
Posted 10/30/2008 at 11:15:06 PMPerhaps if you have fan bias of Pennywise, you characterize them as something more lofty, but for the purposes of a broader pop culture piece incidentally referencing the group, pop-punk suffices pretty well.
Posted 10/31/2008 at 11:33:10 AMhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Posted 10/31/2008 at 12:09:15 PMNumber 1 totally blew.
Posted 10/31/2008 at 09:40:39 PM