Toy Fair is an annual trade show where hundreds of toy companies get together to showcase their latest innovations for buyers and press. The following is a photo recap from the Neca booth. To see the rest of our coverage, click HERE.
The Neca booth called out to me from afar with their lifesize foam figures of Deadpool, Harley Quinn, and Spider-Man. Unlike most items of that size, these were not just for display purposes. You can actually purchase each of these figures for around $1,000 each. Aside from the price, a total lack of space, and a wife I’d like to keep, I could certainly see myself a collector splurging on one of these because the quality is astounding.
Luckily, the attention to detail carries over to their much smaller scale collectibles. Their Evil Dead II Ultimate Edition 2-figure set was one of the most fun things to photograph at Toy Fair, especially due to the awesome cabin diorama that sadly does not come with the figures. The quarter scale Ninja Turtle figures look as if they were perfectly cast from molds of the original Jim Henson creations. Dr. Strange may be their most accurate Marvel figure from the Avengers lineup and the Mayor edition of Penguin from BATMAN RETURNS is simply astonishing. Other highlights included the massive Predator display, a Muhamad Ali / Superman 2-pack, and a surprise Batman / Aliens 2-pack that features a Joker Xenomorph!
I am not sure if I am supposed to have a favorite company at Toy Fair but lets just say Neca knows what they are doing. Not only are their figures high quality and reasonably priced but Randy Falk, their Director of Product Development, is absolutely killing it on Twitter (@Neca_toys). Seriously, all companies need to be as interactive and passionate about their products on social media. Check out the images below to see what he is so proud of…
It’s that wonderful, frightful, cool and creepy time of year again, when everything including the leaves on the trees are dying and our taste buds are craving sugary sweets and pies made from the guts of our jack-o-lanterns. It’s October, which means Halloween is nearly upon us! Get you costumes completed, your home haunts constructed and your candy collected for trick’r treaters, because you have to make time to watch some of the scariest movies this time of year.
In an effort to assist you in your cinematic scare-fest, we’ve come up with a list of the scariest movies to watch on Halloween… with one caveat. We have excluded virtually all “slasher” flicks. Why? Well, let’s just say we all know them, we all love them on some level, but really… don’t we all want something more in our scary movies? In honor of this horrific holiday and it’s greatest scary movie, we’ve left John Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN (1978) in tact, but you’ll be hard pressed to find any other slasher films on this list.
We ran this list last year and decided to dust off the cobwebs with the addition of some new frights!
So sit back, pull your honey close and your popcorn closer, and prepare to have the daylights scared out of you as you make your way through the scariest movies to watch on Halloween.
TRICK R TREAT (2007)
Let’s kick off the list in what’s become many Geeks favorite Halloween movies to watch – TRICK ‘R TREAT. In the tradition of Creepshow and Tales From the Crypt comes four interwoven tales set on Halloween night: a high-school principal who moonlights as a vicious serial killer, a young virgin whose quest for that special someone takes a gruesome turn, a group of teens who carries out a cruel prank with disastrous consequences, and a cantankerous old man who battles a mischievous trick-or-treating demon.
On Monday night (October 29) during a special fan screening of the cult horror classic, director Michael Dougherty announced the sequel – TRICK ‘R TREAT 2 – during the Q&A session. Check it out HERE.
THE CONJURING (2013)
Tom Stockman called James Wan’s THE CONJURING, “a thoroughly enjoyable nightmare, one that you know that you can always wake up from, and one in which, at the end, no one has permanently been damaged. It’s good scary fun.” Based on the true life story, the movie tells the tale of how world renowned paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren were called upon to help a family terrorized by a dark presence in a secluded farmhouse. Forced to confront a powerful demonic entity, the Warrens find themselves caught in the most horrifying case of their lives.
New Line Cinema’s thriller became a global box office phenomenon in early October when it topped $300 million worldwide.
The horror movie to end all horror movies, THE CABIN IN THE WOODS was wildly imaginative and intensely horrific, toying with every convention of its genre while at the same time raising their stakes exponentially. Director Drew Goddard’s instant horror classic was originally released on Friday the 13th and in his 5 star review, Travis Keune told you, “Go, run to see CABIN IN THE WOODS! You will not see another horror film this good all year. If you don’t enjoy this film, you’re demented.”
“YOU’RE NEXT is a refreshing take on the home-invasion genre and exactly what horror fans need right now; a horror film that seems inspired by the classics while simultaneously paving the way for the future.” Aubrey and Paul Davison decide to celebrate their wedding anniversary by inviting their four children and their significant others to a family reunion at their remote weekend estate. But the family reunion goes awry when their home comes under siege by a mask-wearing team of crossbow-bearing assailants. The family has no idea who’s attacking them, why they’re under attack or if the attackers are inside or outside the cavernous, creaking house. All they know for certain is that nobody is safe.
Read our review HERE. The film arrives On Blu-ray And DVD January 14 .
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974)
Tobe Hooper’s THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974) may or may not be the scariest horror movie ever made (I think it is) but it’s certainly one of the most referenced, imitated, ripped off, and influential. First-timer Tobe Hooper directed with a solid sense of composition and attention to detail and forced some amazing performances from his cast. Audiences and critics at the time responded to its high level of gore, but they were wrong. It’s actually a masterpiece of restraint that Hooper made and much of its magic lies in the fact that the audience thinks they saw a no-holds-barred gore-fest when they didn’t (the scene of the Hitchhiker slicing his own hand with a knife is the only actual bloodletting in the entire film). Still, no expense is spared portraying the sadistic cruelty and unbridled lunacy of the depraved Sawyer family, which puts THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE at the top of this list.
ALIEN (1979)
“In space, no one can hear you scream.” Ridley Scott’s 1979 masterpiece mixed science fiction and horror and started a franchise that continues even today (Prometheus). The crew of the deep space towing ship Nostromo is awakened from hyper-sleep to answer a distress signal. While investigating, they discover what turns out to be hundreds of alien eggs. One of the crew is exposed to whats inside, and brings an alien on-board. The crew is hunted and killed off until only one survivor remains. That lone survivor must take a stand against the alien or die.
THE AMITYVILLE HORROR (1979)
When newlyweds George and Kathy move into a new home, what should have been bliss became their biggest nightmare. The houses murderous past came back to haunt them. The film is based on the true story written by Jay Anson, and is a must-see for halloween horror lovers.
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (1984)
One… Two… Freddy’s coming for you! In 1984, a monster was born that would haunt the dreams of a generation. Nightmares turned into reality when this former predator found a way into the dreams of the children on Elm Street. Despite becoming a bit campy in later years, Freddy is still a Halloween legend!
AUDITION (1999)
A widower allows a friend to setup auditions for women looking for a companion, but the dainty young woman he fancies turns out to be anything but shy and fragile. Takashi Miike, Japanese master of the weird and gory, takes the viewer on an odyssey of chilling psychological terror. If you think speed dating is frightening, take a stab at this film for some freak dating. If watching a movie has never made you feel squeamish, then you’ve never seen AUDITION.
Trivia: The dog bowl of vomit fed to Asami’s (Eihi Shiina) prisoner is in fact the actual vomit of actress Eihi. Takashi Miike claims that Eihi is a method actress and insisted on doing this.
BEGOTTEN (1990)
More of an experimental art film than a traditional horror movie, the dialogue-free BEGOTTEN delivers on a level of creepiness rarely seen in such a fashion. Shot in black and white, intentionally low resolution and far from a typical linear story, filmmaker E. Elias Merhige has created a movie so thoroughly disturbing — and to some, controversial — that it’s become something of a cult classic. The only drawback is that the film is extremely hard to find. However, if one were to search YouTube for the film, one might be surprised to find the full-length film is out there for your demented viewing pleasure.
Plot: God disembowels himself with a straight razor. The spirit-like Mother Earth emerges, venturing into a bleak, barren landscape. Twitching and cowering, the Son Of Earth is set upon by faceless cannibals.
BEYOND, THE (1981)
Given that most Lucio Fulci films lack some semblance of logic and suspense, it is with pleasure that his 1981 classic THE BEYOND succeeds on all fronts. Part horror-mystery, part time-warp, part zombie movie, it provides the best example of Fulci’s talents as a great horror director. The premise — a young woman inherits a hotel on one of ‘The Seven Doors of Death’ (the original US release title in 1981) is very basic, but is actually necessary as the film is more a sequence of great horror moments leading to an eerie climax. Most unnerving sequence – the spiders crawling over, then eating, the librarian. Hat off to Quentin Tarantino, whose Rolling Thunder film company re-released THE BEYOND in a brand new print in the late ’90s, giving Fulci fans the opportunity to see THE BEYOND in the big screen.
THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (1922)
Considered by some to be the first horror film, THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI is thought by many film buffs to be the most influential of all silent films. The Grandfather of all Twist-Endings, the film is the most brilliant example of that dark and twisted film movement known as German Expressionism, THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI is a plunge into the mind of insanity that severs all ties with the rational world. Director Robert Wiene and a team of designers crafted a nightmare realm in which light, shadow and substance are abstracted, a world a demented doctor and a carnival sleepwalker perpetrate a series of ghastly murders in a small community.
Trivia: The 1990 film EDWARD SCISSORHANDS used the aesthetics of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari in creating the look for the main character of Edward Scissorhands
CANDYMAN (1992)
A slumber party game turns into a horrible reality in this 1992 tale. A murderer with a hook hand waits to be beconned by saying his name in front of the mirror. “CANDYMAN… CANDYMAN… CANDYMAN!”
CARNIVAL OF SOULS (1962)
CARNIVAL OF SOULS is an eerie, dreamlike film from 1962 about a young girl (Candace Hilligoss) hovering between life and death after “escaping” a car accident. Sort of like a purgatory on earth. Creepy and well-paced work from director Herk Harvey (who never made another feature) who injected an incredible amount of chills throughout the movie. Some of the more powerful scenes include the unexpected glimpses of a cadaverous man (Harvey) at times when you least expect it as he “pursues” the heroine. The “possessed” organ playing scene at the church and of course the abandoned seaside pavilion and it’s “dancers of death.” An outstanding little fright flick way ahead of its time.
CAT PEOPLE (1942)
CAT PEOPLE, a 1942 horror film produced by Val Lewton and directed by Jacques Tourneur, tells the story of a young Serbian woman, Irena, who believes herself to be a descendant of a race of people who turn into cats when sexually aroused. With all the eerie cat-like reflexes, the movie is an interesting combination of the horror and early film noir. Tourneur uses shadows to set the tone and the story relies less on shock and more on mystery and suspense. Bravo awarded the film’s stalk scene the 97th spot on their “The 100 Scariest Movie Moments”
Trivia: The film was such a hit at the box office, the releases of the next two Lewton films (I Walked with a Zombie and The Leopard Man) were delayed.
THE CHANGELING (1979)
THE CHANGELING is 1980 Canadian horror film directed by Peter Medak and starring George C. Scott and Trish Van Devere (Scott’s real-life wife). The story is based upon events that writer Russell Hunter said he experienced while he was living in the Henry Treat Rogers Mansion of Denver, Colorado. This haunted house movie genrates real fear – it is everything a suspenseful horror film should be. With top notch actors, the movie contains an intelligent plot and uses no special effects or gore to obtain it’s objective.
Trivia: Spanish filmmaker Alejandro Amenábar has claimed in several interviews that this is one of his all-time favorite Horror movies, up to the point of inspiring several scenes in his films TESIS and THE OTHERS.
CHILD’S PLAY (1988)
Dolls are harmless… Right? In 1988 Chucky proved that some of the most terrifying creatures can live inside our toy box.
CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF (1961)
Hammer’s only foray into the lycanthrope legend was this powerful 1961 tale. Young Oliver Reed plays Leon who becomes a snarling vicious beast with the rise of the full moon. Here the monster evokes almost as much pity and fear as he prowls the 18th century Spanish village. The image that may truly haunt young nightmares is eight year-old Leon, sweating, his eyes open-wide and pointed teeth baring, as he strains at the bars on his bedroom window.
Trivia: Yvonne Romaine, who plays Leon’s mother, would go on to co-star with Elvis Presley in DOUBLE TROUBLE and marry lyricist Leslie Bricusse (WILLY WONKA & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY) before retiring from the movies after playing the title role in 1973’s THE LAST OF SHELIA.
DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978)
“When there’s no more room in Hell, the dead will walk the Earth,” so screamed the posters for George A Romero’s 1978 long-awaited sequel to his ground-breaking classic THE NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD. With the addition of bright crimson color, Romero combines a story of survival with a satirical jab at consumerism when a small band of survivors turn a shopping mall into a sanctuary. This laughs take nothing away the frightening scenes of an early bloodbath at a tenement building and the final fury of a full zombie assault.
Trivia: Make-up master Tom Savini has a cameo as a part of a motorcycle gang (a role he would reprise in 2005’s LAND OF THE DEAD).
DAWN OF THE DEAD (2004)
Screenwriter James Gunn and director Zack Snyder took the impossible task of remaking George Romero’s 1978 zombie masterpiece — and actually achieved making the film stand on its own. A nurse, a policeman, a young married couple, a salesman, and other survivors of a flesh-eating zombie apocalypse take refuge in a suburban shopping mall. Gone are Romero’s message of “zombies are just like consumers wandering aimlessly around the shopping malls” message of the 70s. The slow, staggering zombies have been replaced with energetic “sprinting” zombies which makes the nightmare even more terrifying. Add to that an awesome prologue of the initial outbreak and a fantastic opening credits sequence playing to Johnny Cash’s “The Man Comes Around,” and you have not only a terrific remake, but a terrific modern-day horror classic as well.
THE DESCENT (2005)
A group of friends go on a cave expedition that goes horribly wrong and one of them, already mourning over her husband’s death in a recent automobile accident, but overcome her grief and become a survivor. Few films have turned the dark into such a terrifying place as Neil Marshall’s THE DESCENT. The creatures these explorers discover in the damp depths of this cave are simplistically scary, but there’s nothing simplistic about how they’re used to make our skin crawl just before jumping out of it altogether.
Tagline: “Afraid of the dark? You will be.”
THE DEVIL’S BACKBONE (2001)
Carlos (Fernando Tielve) is a 12-year old boy who finds himself uprooted and thrown into an orphanage after his father dies in the Spanish Civil War. Carlos soon discovers there is something dark and ominous about the orphanage, which is haunted. The orphanage houses more than wayward children; it houses dark secrets that Carlos reveals in this moody, atmospheric ghost story from Guillermo del Toro, director of HELLBOY and PAN’S LABYRINTH. The film is a smoothly flowing, eerily frightening and psychological horror bouquet of stunning visual beauty. Having been written while del Toro was in college, THE DEVIL’S BACKBONE is a labor of love that took 16 years to come to life.
Trivia: The film drew influence from Carlos Gimenez’ Spanish comic book Paracuellos. The ghost’s appearance was inspired by the white-faced spirits of Japanese horror films like RINGU and JU-ON.
DREAMSCAPE (1984)
On the surface, director Joseph Ruben’s DREAMSCAPE is a science-fiction film, but at its core is one of the most frightening non-horror films ever made. While special effects were far from being mastered in 1984, the terror of the film comes more from the implications of what is represented on screen. Dennis Quaid stars as Alex Gardner, a psychic tortured by his own condition — not unlike Bill Bixby’s Dr. Bruce Banner. Alex is recruited by a fringe sector of the U.S. government to save the President, whose mind is trapped within a realm of dreams and nightmares, but discovers a sinister plot in play by another psychic. Co-starring Max von Sydow and Christopher Plummer, the cast is rivaled only by the lasting impression the imagery of the film will surely leave on viewers. If you thought seeing A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET for the first time kept you awake at nights, wait till you experience DREAMSCAPE.
Trivia: DREAMSCAPE was only the second film (after RED DAWN) to fall under the new MPAA guidelines for PG-13 ratings, which ultimately led to the film’s only nudity involving a sex scene between Dennis Quaid and Kate Capshaw being cut.
THE EXORCIST (1973)
The most popular horror film of the 1970’s THE EXORCIST spawned a whole industry of rip-off’s and sequels, but they cannot diminish the power this movie still carries. Linda Blair is exceptional as is Ellen Burstyn, Jason Miller, and Max von Sydow. And the movie is so terrifying tense, it just doesn’t let up. William Friedkin’s direction and the editing are so tight and carefully done that every startling image it presents leaves a long lasting imprint in the mind. Watching it today, there is nothing dated about THE EXORCIST, which remains an effective excursion into demonic possession almost 40 years after it was first unveiled to the public.
THE EXORCIST III (1990)
Written and directed by the author of the novel on which THE EXORCIST (1973) was based, William Peter Blatty’s THE EXORCIST III is more than just an average three-quel in your typical horror movie franchise. Considered by some to be even more frightening than the original, Blatty’s contribution to his creation’s cinematic legacy is as disturbing as it is surprisingly accomplished. George C. Scott plays Kinderman, a Georgetown police lieutenant mourning the anniversary of a friend’s death — the friend being a priest from THE EXORCIST — while a serial killer terrorizes the town and has police baffled. Brad Dourif is remarkable as The Gemini Killer, delivering a spine-tingling performance as the film’s more-than-human villain. While THE EXORCIST packs a power gut-punch with its special effects and shocking scenes, THE EXORCIST III delivers just as much fear with far less flair.
Tagline: “The horror is Legion.”
THE FLY (1986)
“Be afraid, be very afraid”. The bit of dialogue became the main ad line for David Cronenberg’s 1986 remake of the 50’s sci-fi classic. The main emphasis is on horror this time as scientist Jeff Goldbloom slowly takes on more insect traits, much to the shock of reporter/girlfriend Geena Davis. You’ll hold your breath waiting for the transporter pods to open and reveal each new monstrous mutation.
Trivia: Eric Stoltz plays the son of Goldbloom and Davis in the 1989 sequel THE FLY II which features John Getz reprising his role.
THE FOG (1979)
In an opening scene set at a campfire, grizzled old sea dog Mr Machen (John Houseman) warns his young audience to, “Beware the fog!”. That advice is taken to heart as the small California fishing town is besieged by an army of vengence-seeking ghosts in John Carpenter’s 1979 fearfest. The film marked the first teaming of mother-daughter scream queens Janet Leigh and Jamie Lee Curtis and features Carpenter’s then-wife Adrienne Barbeau as the radio station all-night disc jockey who tries to warn the populace. Steer clear of the dreary 2005 and stick to the original
Trivia: Carpenter named several characters after collaborators who worked with him on previous films such as Nick Castle, Tommy Wallace, and Dan O’Bannon
HALLOWEEN (1978)
From the opening bars of director John Carpenter’s haunting theme through the slow dissolve on a demonic Jack-O-Lantern, 1978 movie audiences knew they were in for something…special. This low, low-budget thriller changed the face of horror cinema and opened the floodgates for a score of imitators. But they don’t diminish the impact of this classic especially in the quiet moments before the big night as we see brief glimpses of the masked Michael Myers silently, patiently waiting…
Trivia: The first person to portray Meyers AKA The Shape on-screen is producer Debra Hill. That’s her tiny hands grabbing the big knife in the POV opening scenes.
HALLOWEEN III: SEASON OF THE WITCH (1982)
The original plan was to abandon the Michael Myers character from John Carpenter’s original masterpiece “Halloween” and do an original Halloween holiday-themed horror film every year. The first film in this new series was “Season of the Witch” which was about a large Halloween mask-making company that has plans to kill millions of American children with something sinister hidden in Halloween masks. The film was critically panned at the time of its release, and moviegoers rejected it as well. Michael Myers returned in 1988’s “Halloween 4:The Return of Michael Myers” and would remain the focal point of the rest of the films in the series. Years later, “Halloween III: Season of the Witch” would attain cult status as a clever and fun movie that stands on its own cheesy merits.
THE HAUNTING (1963)
SCREAM…no one will hear you! RUN…and the silent foosteps will follow, for in Hill House the dead are restless!
This 1963 film is one of the scariest movies you’ll ever see. Dr. Markway, doing research to prove the existence of ghosts, investigates Hill House, a large, eerie mansion with a lurid history of violent death and insanity. With him are the skeptical young Luke, who stands to inherit the house, the mysterious and clairvoyant Theodora and the insecure Eleanor, whose psychic abilities make her feel somehow attuned to whatever spirits inhabit the old mansion. As time goes by it becomes obvious that they have gotten more than they bargained for as the ghostly presence in the house manifests itself in horrific and deadly ways.
Trivia: Director Martin Scorsese named this his favorite horror film
HELLRAISER (1987)
Could anyone other than master horror scribe turned film director Clive Barker come up with a demonic puzzle-box that unleashes the undead masochistic monsters known as the Cenobites? This landmark 1987 shocker spawned countless sequels and established Doug Bradley as Cenobite leader Pinhead as a new horror icon. The images of him and of skinned-alive Julia would be the source of many nightmares for countless film-goers.
Trivia: Star Andrew Robinson first gained movie fame as crazed “Scorpio Killer” in the original DIRTY HARRY.
THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL (2009)
Samantha Hughes (Jocelin Donahue) is a college student making ends meet as a babysitter in the ’80s. When she takes a job that coincides with a full lunar eclipse, she begins to notice strange things about her clients and their ultimate intentions for her. Writer/director Ti West masterfully builds an extremely slow burn thriller centered around the young Samantha, but does so in a way that allows the viewer to develop interest in the character and concern for her well-being, allowing the jolting climax of the film to have that much more of an effect. West’s attention to detail and determination to re-imagine the genre with a less-is-more approach pays off where so many others have failed. THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL co-stars genre veterans Tom Noonan and Dee Wallace.
Tagline: “Talk on the Phone. Finish Your Homework. Watch TV. Die.”
IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS (1994)
From director John Carpenter comes IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS, one of the few films to truly freak me out in the theater. John Trent (Sam Neill) is an insurance investigator — the best — brought on to locate the whereabouts of a publishing house’s best seller gone missing, Sutter Cane. Certain, even cocky at first, that its all a rouse, Trent soon realizes there’s much more to this missing person case than meets the eye. As Trent begins reading Cane’s work as a way to glean clues to his whereabouts, he finds himself transposed into the writer’s fictional world of horror, or is it reality? IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS is an unsettling, enigmatic work of horror that forces the viewer to question reality, blending the Stephen King style of pop horror with the darker, less sane world of H.P. Lovecraft to produce a film unlike anything you’ve seen before.
Trivia: Hobb’s End, the questionably fictional town from IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS, refers to the subway station from which the alien space craft is excavated in the film FIVE MILLION YEARS TO EARTH (1967).
THE INNKEEPERS (2011)
Ti West is a filmmaker to watch out for, as is evident with THE INNKEEPERS, the feature-length follow-up to THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL. Again West showcases his attention to detail and his minimalist approach to horror films, but this time raises the bar on character development. The subtle, quirky comedy about two young attendants (Sara Paxton and Pat Healy) working the last weekend before a rustic hotel closes for good gradually, methodically evolves into a ghost story. The allegedly haunted hotel’s two employees are amateur ghost hunting enthusiasts, but what they eventually realize is their innocent hobby may cost them the ultimate price. The film is as much charming as it is creepy, leaving the audience with an ending that lends perfectly to interpretation. The film co-stars Kelly McGillis.
Trivia: THE INNKEEPERS is filmed at the actual Yankee Pedlar Inn, in Torrington, Connecticut, which is said to be haunted in real life.
INSIDIOUS (2010)
When Josh and Renai move into their new house, trouble finds them. Their son is trapped in a mysterious coma and they are in a race against the clock to save him before he is pulled into “The Further” forever. Makes you wan to check out your house before you move in with poltergeists, huh?
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1978)
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS from 1978 is a smart remake of the sci-fi adventure from the 1950’s. When filmy spores fall from space and take root in San Francisco, the city is beautifully transformed by spectacular and exotic flowers. But these lovely extraterrestrial blossoms have gruesome plans for their earthly admirers: to slowly clone their bodies and then dispose of the originals. A first-rate suspense thriller, INVASION is a chilling thrill ride that will get your heartbeat racing. From a clever screenplay by Academy Award nominee W.D. Richter, filmmaker Philip Kaufman directs an all-star cast that includes Donald Sutherland, Jeff Goldblum, Brooke Adams and Leonard Nimoy. It’s unsettling to see everyone taken over one by one.
Trivia: Only Philip Kaufman, W.D. Richter, and Donald Sutherland knew how the film was going to end. Veronica Cartwright was not told that Sutherland’s character had been captured and became an alien. When they filmed the ending in front of San Francisco City Hall and Sutherland pointed to her, imitating the pod scream, Cartwright’s reaction of cold fear is authentic.
JAWS (1975)
“There is a creature alive today. Who has survived millions of years of evolution… without change, without passion, and without logic. It lives to kill. A mindless eating machine. It will attack and devour anything. It is as if God Created The Devil And Gave Him JAWS!”
Daaaa-dum. Da-dum daaaa-dum. Dum dum dum dum, dum dum dum dum, DUM DUM DUM DUM. The movie that made an entire generation too afraid to go into the water. This tale of one small town sheriff trying to protect his people from a man-eating shark launched Stephen Spielberg to superstardom and, along with STAR WARS, ushered in the age of the summer blockbuster
JACOB’S LADDER (1990)
Adrian Lyne’s JACOB’S LADDER stars Tim Robins as Jacob Singer, a returning Vietnam war vet who starts to lose his mind. Mourning his dead child, a haunted Vietnam vet attempts to discover his past while suffering from a severe case of disassociation. To do so, he must decipher reality and life from his own dreams, delusion, and perception of death while he sees demons throughout the city and the people he trusts are the people he should fear.JACOB’S LADDER was one of those underrated gems in the horror genre – a film that wasn’t gory and didn’t feature a wisecracking slasher villain to make it appeal to most of the horror crowd, yet it was too surreal and disturbing to interest most mainstream audiences at the time but has developed a substantial cult following.
JEEPERS CREEPERS (2001)
“Do you think he’s dead? They never are.”
The open road can prove to be terrifying when there’s a flesh eatin’ monster on the lose. Darry and Trish find out the hard way that their freshman year of college isn’t the only thing they have to fear!
MARTYRS (2008)
Although MARTYRS (2008) is a balls-out nasty French horror film, it also has an excellent, multi-layered story. It starts as a somewhat run-of-the-mill example of the torture porn film genre – a deranged woman enters a home and kills all the members of its seemingly nice family. But as the movie progresses, it turns from a revenge story into something else – something very different. Something with more than a few shocks and surprises and the ending is complete and utter insanity! The violence is through the roof and the effects are outstanding. However, there is a payoff at the end that separates MARTYRS from the rest of your average run-of-the-mill mean-spirited horror fare, all the while perhaps becoming the meanest of the bunch. MARTYRS makes you think and for a movie like this, that’s the most horrifying thing it could possibly do. This film hits its target, for better and for worse.
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968)
We are a zombie-obsessed culture, and that all began with this film. A landmark in both horror and independent cinema, George Romero’s movie was considered shockingly violent at the time, and was also controversial for having a black man in the lead role. Almost all the rules of zombie mechanics were established here, and they endure to this day
THE OMEN (1976)
That Damien is one cute little devil! This 1976 shock classic from director Richard Donner (who would go on to helm SUPERMAN,THE MOVIE and the LETHAL WEAPON series) gave us a new horror icon in the form of a cherubic, pre-K lad. But if you push back his curly locks you’ll see the mark of the beast! Oh oh, there’s that pounding Jerry Goldsmith score (complete with latin-chanting chorus)! You’re soon going to meet an elaborate and gruesome fate! This thriller would spawn two feature sequels, a TV movie, and a 2006 big screen remake.
Trivia: Patrick Troughton (Father Brennan) was part of a long line of actors who played the lead role in the BBC-TV sci-fi classic “Doctor Who”.
PAN’S LABYRINTH (2006)
You’ll be hard-pressed as to what world is the most frightening in writer/director Guillermo del Toro’s 2006 masterwork. Is it young Ofelia’s fantasy world full of fairies and weird, horrific monsters or the reality of 1944 fascist Spain? Her cruel sadistic stepfather Captain Vidal is a more despicable creature than any she can dream up (and she’s thought up some pretty nasty beasties!).
Trivia: Doug Jones,who plays creatures Fauno and Pale Man, also plays Abe Sapien in del Toro’s HELLBOY films, and was the Silver Surfer in FANTASTIC 4: RISE OF THE SILVER SURFER.
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY (2007)
“I will show you fear in a handful of dust.“ T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
After a young, middle class couple moves into what seems like a typical suburban “starter” tract house, they become increasingly disturbed by a presence that may or may not be demonic but is certainly most active in the middle of the night. Especially when they sleep. Or try to. Even after the first screening of 2009’s PARANORMAL ACTIVITY all kinds of people from that initial audience – men and women in their 20s, 30s, and 40s – reported having problems sleeping at night, sometimes for several nights.
“One of the things I wanted to do was create something that people could say defined horror for their generation,” concludes director Oren Peli, “the way, after Psycho, people said they would never take another shower; after Jaws and Open Water that they would never again swim in the ocean; and after Blair Witch that they would never again go camping in the woods. I figured, well, sleeping at home is something you can’t really avoid. So if I can make people scared of being at home, Paranormal Activity might do something.”
So go ahead, watch it at night and by yourself… but don’t come crying to us if you have to sleep with the light on.
PHANTASM (1979)
In 1979, Don Coscarelli’s independent horror film “Phantasm” would attain cult status. Mike (A. Michael Baldwin), a young teenage boy who has just lost his parents, follows his brother to a funeral home where he witnesses a creepy funeral parlor owner known only as “The Tall Man” (played with creepy perfection by Angus Scrimm) lift a coffin on his own. Mike investigates further and uncovers a horrific world where the Tall Man sends out flying spheres that hunt down and attach themselves to the skulls of living victims, drill holes into their heads, suck out their lifeforce, and shrink the people into dwarf slaves. It is then up to Mike, his brother, and ice cream man Reggie Bannister to stop the Tall Man.
PHANTASM II (1988)
In 1988, Universal Studios gave Don Coscarelli free reign to make a big-budget sequel to his low budget indie “Phantasm.” The result is the rare sequel that builds on, and in many ways exceeds, its predecessor. Mike, just released from a psychiatric hospital (and now played by James LeGros) continues his journey along with the returning Reggie Bannister to stop The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm). A beautiful strange girl starts to appear in Mike’s dreams. Mike assumes she’s in danger from The Tall Man and he and Reggie set out to find her before The Tall Man does. Coscarelli would end up making two more “Phantasm” films–both low-budget indies, but neither one would come close to being as frightening or entertaining as the original or this wonderful studio sequel.
POLTERGEIST (1982)
In the comedy DELIRIOUS, Eddie Murphy has a mantra about haunted houses we wish all movie families would subscribe to. Watch:
EXACTLY. And do the Freelings of Tobe Hooper’s POLTERGEIST heed the warnings? Nope. House with objects moving around by themselves. House built on Indian burial ground. A psychic telling you that the terror “knows what scares you.” TRIFECTA! That’s enough to boot regular joes and the dog out of any dwelling. Add to the fact that Carol-Anne and brother Robbie sleep in a room with a gnarly tree outside the window, a poster of ALIEN on the wall and a ominous clown sitting in a chair ready to strike. What the hell? What kind of parents do these siblings have?? Oh yeah, stoners. Steven Spielberg’s script from 1980 is so full of crazy in it’s take on what an American family does behind closed doors. Only after their daughter is missing “in the house” (ala Twilight Zone episode) do the mom and dad sober up. When Jerry Goldsmith’s brilliant score combines with Zelda Rubinstein’s “Tangina” announcement – “This house is Clean” – do we realize there’s still more terrifying scenes to come.
Body count: 1 (the bird in the cage).
PONTYPOOL (2009)
Written by and adapted from Tony Burgess’ own novel, PONTYPOOL is a lesson in fearing the unknown. Director Bruce McDonald takes the audience on a journey into fear without ever leaving the inside of a radio station. When a deadly virus infects this small Ontario town, those few individuals inside the radio station must both fulfill their duties as broadcasters during such an outbreak, but must also survive themselves as they struggle to figure out how this mysterious epidemic is spreading. PONTY POOL is kind of like THE FOG, but without the ghost pirates and replace the fog with radio waves, maintaining every bit of the terror that comes with knowing death is just outside your door, but not death’s face.
Trivia: Writer Tony Burgess and director Bruce McDonald have plans for a second and third film in the series, both of which were conceived before the first.
PSYCHO (1960)
Yeah, this is the landmark 1960 flick that made millions of moviegoers change their bathing habits. But there’s more to it than that scene (and Bernard Herriman’s staccato violins). There’s a heavy sense of dread the second Janet. Leigh heads out with the stolen money. And after the murder, as Perkins rushes about, cleaning up the room. A later scene with Martin Balsam slowly climbing the main staircase of the Bates mansion is equally unnerving. What goes up must come down as Vera Miles descends into the basement in the film’s final moments. There were two feature film sequels, a made for TV prequel, and a full-fledged 1998 remake produced, but nothing can top the original
Trivia: Before the final fade out you can spot future CADDYSHACK star Ted Knight as a state trooper guarding a jail cell.
PUMPKINHEAD (1988)
The legendary Stan Winston may not have directly supervised creating the creature for PUMPKINHEAD, but he did direct this “grim fairy tale” starring Lance Henriksen. When a man’s son is accidentally killed by reckless teenagers, he asks an old witch to summon a large demon of vengeance to settle the score, but fails to appreciate the seriousness of such an act. The iconic tall and somewhat hunched frame of the demon with its elongated arms and long claws bask in the shadow of Pumpkinhead’s massive head. He may not be fast, but don’t fool yourself into thinking he’s a big, lumbering idiot. Outwitting this demon will certainly bring your painful end. A story as dark as its atmospheric lighting, PUMPKINHEAD looms in the viewer’s subconscious just as the demon looms in the foggy shadows just before taking his victims.
Trivia: Lance Henriksen is said to have gathered all the silver dollars used to pay for summoning the demon himself, acquiring them from multiple pawn shops. Allegedly, he claims most of them fell through the floorboards of the witch Haggis’ ramshackle cabin. For all we know, they are still there.
THE RING (2002)
Just try going to bed on your own after seeing Samara crawling out of the well and through the television in Gore Verbinski’s best film to date, THE RING. For the older kids, remember VHS tapes? For the minions, listen up. There’s an urban legend about a tape: the viewer will die seven days after watching it. Right before you die, you see “the ring.” Filled with disturbing images, this remake of the Japanese film of the same name, will have you thinking twice about letting sleeping ghosts lie at the bottom of a well.
Aidan Keller: What happened to the girl?
Rachel Keller: Samara?
Aidan Keller: Is that her name?
Rachel Keller: Mm-hmm.
Aidan Keller: Is she still in the dark place?
Rachel Keller: No. We set her free.
Aidan Keller: You helped her?
Rachel Keller: Yeah.
Aidan Keller: Why did you do that?
Rachel Keller: What’s wrong, honey?
Aidan Keller: You weren’t supposed to help her.
This is where the audience in the theater let out the big groan from the pit of their stomachs.
Trivia: In both the American and Japanese versions, the name of the little girl is connected to a story about death. The name “Samara” refers to a story retold by W. Somerset Maugham (Appointment in Samarra) about a man who meets Death in the marketplace and flees to the town of Samarra.
ROSEMARY’S BABY (1968)
Pregnancy can be a scary thing, and Roman Polanski took natal anxieties to the extreme with this movie, in which a woman slowly learns that she is bearing the seed of the devil. A sustained atmosphere of dread and paranoia, a closing-in sense of helplessness, and nude elderly people all make this one of the most unnerving films ever made.
SESSION 9 (2001)
Writer/director Brad Anderson was inspired by the creepy visage of an abandoned mental hospital in to make the intense psychological 2001horror film SESSION 9. The film stars Peter as Gordon Fleming, a new father struggling to keep his asbestos removal company afloat. Desperate to bring in some money, the normally deliberate and careful Gordon gets the contract by promising that his company can clear out the creepy deserted building in a week’s time. Assisted by his right-hand man, Phil (David Caruso), Gordon hires a crew and, pressed by the nearly impossible deadline, gets the hazardous work underway. But each man on the crew harbors a dangerous secret, and it’s only a short time before the haunted atmosphere of the asylum — where cruel and primitive means were used to control unstable patients — begins to work its dark spell on them. SESSION 9 is deliberately slow at building tension, which is driven by both character conflicts and what may or may not be supernatural rumblings. The final scenes and lines of dialogue of SESSION 9 are utterly chilling, and will stick with you for days.
THE SHINING (1980)
THE SHINING (1980) is one of the most terrifying movies ever made because it incorporates weirdness – Jack Nicholson’s lobotomy stare from Cuckoo’s Nest, – as well as a sense of physical and psychological dread. Adapted from a Stephen King novel it tells the story of a couple (Nicholson and Shelley Duvall) and their young son (Danny Lloyd) who move to the Overlook Hotel when Jack is to serve as a caretaker. But it’s not the story that makes THE SHINING a classic; it’s the smooth transitions, the beautiful composition of symmetric screen settings, the marvel of the Steadicam which enables us to follow Danny’s tricycle floating through the Overlook’s corridors, the blood gushing from the elevator, the naked beauty who transforms into a hag. These are the images which are imprinted on the mind of the viewer even more effectively than the story itself, telling a story of their own. These are the images you think of when you talk about THE SHINING.
SILENT HOUSE (2011)
Filmmakers Chris Kentis and Laura Lau deliver a unique brand of film only a few filmmakers have attempted in the history if motion pictures. SILENT HOUSE is an effectively scary thriller that is almost entirely one character’s film and is presented as being real time. This alone makes the film that much more frightening, knowing what happens on screen is real time, every scare, every nuance, every choice and detail. Elizabeth Olsen plays Sarah, a young woman who becomes trapped inside her father’s lakeside vacation home as she struggles to survive a mysterious attacker’s relentless advances. It can be said that the most haunting house is a house not haunted, but equally dangerous… and, if its your own home, how terrifying? Olsen again proves she was the recipient of the acting genes, carrying so much of the film’s suspense on her shoulders. And the ending, well… whether you see it coming or not, its still just as unbelievably twisted.
Trivia: Much in the same vein as Alfred Hitchcock’s ROPE (1948), SILENT HOUSE was shot to appear as one continuous shot, but was actually shot in 10 minute segments and then edited to hide the cuts.
SINISTER (2012)
SINISTER is easily one of the best horror films in recent years and plays on our basic fears, more than the visual shock of blood and gore. From director Scott Derrickson (HELLRAISER: INFERNO), SINISTER is a frightening thriller from the producer of the PARANORMAL ACTIVITY films. Ethan Hawke plays a true crime novelist who discovers a box of mysterious, disturbing home movies that plunge his family into a nightmarish experience of supernatural horror.
What SINISTER does so well is to capitalize on terror in the unknown, the fear of the dark and the inherent creepiness of waiting for the inevitable to occur. Derrickson creates a canvas in many of his shots, giving the audience so much visual information to take in that its difficult to pinpoint exactly where in frame, when or how the scare will occur, but we know its coming and can’t do a damn thing about it. Making this ever more effective, Derrickson allows himself to linger on these shots, creating even more tension for a greater scare once the inevitable occurs. If you’re seeking out some fresh new horror to chew on this Halloween, you won’t find a better specimen than this.
SLITHER (2006)
Recent Hollywood up-and-comer and all-around purveyor of the weird, sick and/or twisted… writer/director James Gunn. SLITHER, his feature-film debut, is an experience summed up as hilarious, disgusting, disturbing and frightening all in one unmistakably entertaining package. Not since Peter Jackson’s DEAD ALIVE (1992) has there been a film so equally repulsive and comedic, which on a very unusual level, makes the film so damn scary. How can we laugh at such things as we see ooze out of Gunn’s imagination? It’s all in the delivery. Gunn’s sense of humor works, he understands horror and comedy, he understands the human desire for witnessing the morbid from a safe distance. SLITHER takes an old genre staple of a comet landing on Earth, carrying an alien parasite and makes it his own, sparing no expense and taking no prisoners.
Trivia: James Gunn is a hometown boy, born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri to an Irish family of lawyers who began at a very young age making movie on 8mm film.
SUSPIRIA (1977)
Director Dario Argento redefined horror in 1977 with his masterpiece SUSPIRIA, the CITIZEN KANE of Italian cinema, a Brother’s Grimm Fairy Tale of outrageously nightmarish proportions. Jessica Harper plays Suzy, an American ballet student, studying at an exclusive dance academy in the Black Forest of Germany. After one of the students and her friend are hideously murdered in the first of Argento’s breath-catching set-piece killings, Suzy discovers that the academy has a bizarre history and, as the body count rises, she gets involved in a hideous labyrinth of murder, black magic and madness.
I first saw SUSPIRIA at the 66 Drive-In in Crestwood (double-billed with HOUSE ON SKULL MOUNTAIN) when it was a new movie on my 16th birthday, the day I got my driver’s license. I didn’t even know who Dario Argento was at the time but I can still remember the thunder and lightning, the flamboyant colors, the awesome set-design, and the strong, pounding score by Goblin. Driven by a twisted internal logic, SUSPIRIA has the inherent structure of madness and is one the key horror films of the 1970s.
THE BIRDS (1963)
Well I think we can mark off Bodega Bay, California has a potential vacation spot, This was the site of an all-out avian attack in Hitchcock’s 1963 movie thrill ride. But what’s the most memorable scare? The onslaught at the birthday party or outside the restaurant? What about the quiet walk that precedes the discovery of Jessica Tandy’s unfortunate neighbor? How about the feathered flood that engulfs Tippi Hedren inside that bedroom? Or better yet, the schoolyard! The gathering in the playground is an iconic Hitchcock image in a film that had everyone watching the skies, not for flying saucers, but for nature’s full feathery fury.
Trivia: Things didn’t get any easier for actress Veronica Cartwright in her adult movie roles. She played one of the Nostromo crew members in 1979’s ALIEN.
THE HORROR OF DRACULA (1958)
Hammer’s 1958 inaugural vampire screamfest with Christopher Lee as the Count (six more would follow) and Peter Cushing as his nemesis Dr.Van Helsing (four more) gave the Bram Stoker tale a new twist (including being the first in “blood-red” color). Dracula appears to be a cultured nobleman upon his initial meeting with Jonathan Harker until we get a full close-up later of the Count after a night of feasting on the locals (crimson eyes ablaze, blood dripping from sharp fangs). Vampire flicks would never be the same.
Trivia: Valerie Gaunt, credited here as “vampire woman”, played the Baron’s doomed housemaid/mistress in the previous year’s Hammer smash that first paired Lee and Cushing, THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN.
THE INNOCENTS (1961)
Don’t watch this film alone on a dark, stormy evening. Effectively shot in black and white, THE INNOCENTS is fraught with menacing little Flora and Miles governed by Deborah Kerr in her finest performance. The opening song is enough to incite goosebumps! If you do decide to venture into this precursor to THE OTHERS, beware, Kerr’s character persists in wandering around the house at night with only a candelabra for light. Why do people always do that in scary films?? There’s nothing that creeps into your psyche like possessed youngsters and evil spirits.
Trivia: In an article in USA Today (August 22, 2011), Guillermo del Toro chose this as one of his six favorite “fright flicks.”
THE NIGHT STALKER (1971)
In 1972 producer Dan Curtis (creator of TV’s “Dark Shadows”) decided to take the vampire out of the cobwebbed castles of 1800’s Romania and drop him smack dab into modern-day Las Vegas. One man. a down-on-his-luck newspaper reporter named Carl Kolchak (Darren McGavin), knows the secret behind the string of missing ladies, but City Hall refuses to listen, mostly because it might be bad for business. Barry Atwater as Janos Skorzney is one ferocious fang-barer as he tosses the police around like ragdolls. When Kolchak finds the fiend’s lair, you’ll be shivering right along with him! This was the highest rated made-for-TV film to date (later it got a brief theatrical release) and spawned a TV movie sequel, a short-lived weekly TV series, a 2005 TV series remake starring Stuart Townsend, and a future big screen version that has Johnny Depp attached.
Trivia: BACK TO THE FUTURE director/writer team Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale sold one of their first scripts to the 1975 ” Kolchak: The Night Stalker” TV series
THE ROAD (2011)
Not many have traveled THE ROAD and lived to tell the tale! Yam Laranas’ critically acclaimed horror flick is an old-fashioned tale of teens who go for a joyride (what else?) and then vanish on an infamous and abandoned road. As investigators try to find leads to the whereabouts of the missing teens, they also unearth the road’s gruesome past that spans two decades – a history of abduction, crimes and murders. Prepare for a ghostly, freaky ride that unfolds in a slow, methodical burn. It’s one of the best films released in 2012. With THE ECHO, PATIENT X and THE ROAD on his resume, WAMG eagerly looks forward to Laranas’ next film.
THE WICKER MAN (1973)
Effectively utilizing musical numbers to create an atmosphere of tense unease, THE WICKER MAN (1973) is a film replete with religious imagery, symbolism, and detailed commentary upon the role of religion in society and its effect upon its followers. Impressively acted – particularly by Edward Woodward, Christopher Lee, Britt Eklund, and Ingrid Pitt – it is the kind of film which remains embedded in the mind long after viewing, its chilling effect making it impossible to forget. After all, isn’t that what great horror should do?
THEM (2006)
THEM (2006) is a French thriller. THEM is simple in its approach, no frills. THEM is terrifying. THEM is based on true events. Directed by David Moreau and Xavier Palud, THEM recounts what happened to Clementine and Lucas in their quaint, isolated country home. Life is good, until they wake one night to strange noises. They are not alone. Hooded strangers are terrorizing them in their own home and they feel powerless. This is inevitably how the viewer feels as well, powerless, as we watch these events occur on screen. Sometimes we see what’s coming, sometimes we don’t, at times we think we do and we are surprised. The entire time we can do nothing but witness the horror; that simple, direct, uneasy horror of feeling helpless against some faceless villain who means you harm, knowing it can all really happen… because it already has.
Trivia: According to the film’s directors, much of actress Olivia Bonamy’s performance while crawling through the narrow tunnels was a direct manifestation of fear brought on by her suffering from claustrophobia.
THE THING (1982)
“Man is the warmest place to hide.” John Carpenter’s 1982 remake of Howard Hawks’ “The Thing From Another World” is an almost perfect film. Â Scientists in the Antarctic discover an alien spacecraft buried under the ice. A shape-shifting alien gets into their camp and kills them one by one, taking the form of the person it kills. This leads to a paranoia amongst the survivors–who is the alien and who will be its next victim? Kurt Russell leads the cast of wonderful character actors which include Wilford Brimley, Keith David, Richard Masur, Richard Dysart, David Clennon, and Charles Hallahan. The film has a haunting score from Ennio Morricone and fantastic practical creature and makeup effects. A true classic.
TROLL HUNTER (2010)
Norwegian mountain Trolls are dumb. And they smell bad. And they have a low red blood cell count that causes them to either explode or turn to stone when exposed to light. Just when the “Found Footage” genre was getting stale, it got a much-needed shot in the arm in 2011 with TROLLHUNTER, a mock-documentary from Norway about a dude named Hans who hunts trolls that deftly straddled satire and thrills. Ovredal deserves credit not only for attempting something different with TROLLHUNTER, but for succeeding so brilliantly at it. Seamless digital effects and the Norwegian forest locale really makes TROLLHUNTER feel like a real life fairy tale at some points. The concept of TROLLHUNTER may seem like one joke, and it is, but it builds on the joke effectively as the get progressively larger and meaner, building to a snowy epic finale pitting Hnas against the biggest, baddest beastie of all.
A film based on a Disneyland ride! Everyone thought, “Are they high?” And Johnny Depp to boot? Well actually, that was always a good idea.
Once again the multi-faceted actor is on brink of opening another chapter in the wildly popular PIRATES franchise. Along for the ride are newcomers Penelope Cruz, Ian McShane, Astrid Berges-Frisbey, and Sam Clafin, as well as fan favorite Captain Barbossa Geoffrey Rush.
Maybe its kismet that brought Depp and Penelope Cruz together again some 10 years after they appeared together in 2001’s BLOW. A decade later the former would be a 3-time Oscar nominee, the later an Academy Award winner.
One of the Geeks has fond memories from 1995 while working at Paramount where Depp was shooting NICK OF TIME. The actor took the time to speak to the tours. Friendly right from the start!
Even with the fourth PIRATES opening this weekend and with estimates reaching as high as a $90M – $100M, there’s no stopping the biggest actor on the planet from his next role…or roles. Look for Johnny Depp in GK Films THE RUM DIARY on October 28, 2011, Warner Bros. Pictures’ release of Tim Burton’s DARK SHADOWS on May 11, 2012 (which just began shooting) and Tonto – to Armie Hammer Lone Ranger – in Jerry Bruckheimer’s THE LONE RANGER. (http://www.jbfilms.com/#/film/lone-ranger)
Oh, and don’t forget that Depp also has a small, uncredited cameo in Sony Pictures remake of 21 JUMP STREET on March 16, 2012.
Phew!
Below are a sampling of our special Johnny films. So have at it readers…what are your favorite Depp roles? THE LIBERTINE, CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY, CHOCOLAT, WHAT’S EATING GILBERT GRAPE, SWEENEY TODD: THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET? Let us know which films you would have included on our list.
ED WOOD speaks to the passionate cinema-loving man-child in all of us, who just cannot play it straight with the big guys and has to live the independent route–even if he does suck. For the first time in Johnny Depp’s career, he was able show what he’s capable of in a leading role. Depp brings this naive charisma and desperation to make motion pictures however the heck he wants to Wood, who clearly had to have had a few screws loose to make the movies he made. Since Wood also took pleasure in dressing up in womens’ clothes, particularly angora sweaters, this adds another quirky dimension to a film that most would recognize as one of burton’s very best. Depp plays those scenes with a silly modesty.
FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS
Raoul Duke
Johnny Depp transformed himself, running full throttle with little to no regard for his own personal sanity, when adapting Raoul Duke for the big screen. Clearly in tune not only with Hunter S. Thompson’s literary vision, but also the uniquely quirky one-of-a-kind imagination of director Terry Gilliam, Depp paints a wildly abstract cinematic portrait of a man made as boldly brilliant and bat-shit nuts by his unconditional love affair with controlled substances.
EDWARD SCISSORHANDS
Edward
Tim Burton and Johnny Depp are like peanut butter and jelly… on bread shaped like funny little animals! The two have colaborated on some pretty amazing projects, starting with Edward Scissorhands. Sure, Depp had been in films before, but had not played a character quite like Edward. Depp wanted to break free of his “teen idol” image, and that he did. . The character of Edward is an interesting one, filled with fantasy, innocence, and wonder. Actually, Depp had to convey a wide array of emotion when playing Edward, while only saying 169 words throughout the entire film. This began a long running collaboration with Burton that continues to amaze audiences.
BENNY AND JOON
Sam
Johnny Depp created an inspiring role as one half of an unconventional couple in BENNY & JOON by displaying his talent virtually silent. His Buster Keaton-esque performance displayed yet another aspect of his immense talent as an actor and as an unforgettable character. Just one of Mr. Depp’s many memorable and charming films we have grown to love over the years.
DONNIE BRASCO
Donnie
In 1997 Johnny got to leave the Tim Burton fantasies and veer into Scorsese/Lumet territory with DONNIE BRASCO. With this true story, Depp showed he could hold his own on screen with a cinema icon. While he shared some great scenes with his on screen wife Anne Heche, the real chemistry was between Depp and Al Pacino as the low level mob runner Lefty.
THE NINTH GATE
Dean Corso
One of favorite Depp films, it was truly black magic when Depp joined forces with director Roman Polanski for this eerie supernatural thriller. The film depicted so dark a mood, that even we feared for Depp as he went up against the evil author of The Nine Gates.
SLEEPY HOLLOW
Ichabod Crane
The role of Ichabod Crane was tailor made for Depp. What with his build and physical stature, the persona of the actor and the character seemed interchangeable. If any director and actor could bring Irving Washington’s tale to the big screen it was be the pairing of Depp and director Tim Burton.
ALICE IN WONDERLAND
The Mad Hatter
Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
Beware the Jabberwock, my son
The frumious Bandersnatch!’
Director Tim Burton could simply not pass up the opportunity to put his spin on this classic tale, originally published by Lewis Caroll in 1865. Giving The Mad Hatter a more substantial role, unlike in the original, was all part of that plan, and who better to play the role than Johnny Depp. (Fun Fact: “Mad Hatter” or “Mad as a Hatter” was a term used to describe hat makers that were affected by mercury poisoning. Mercury was used in the hat making process at one point, and caused anything from “hatters shakes” to hallucinations.) Depp plays the character with an added richness. The character is not just “mad”, he is fearless, passionate, and intense.
“I always saw the Hatter as kind of tragic,” says Depp. “He’s a victim in a lot of ways. The mercury has certainly taken its toll, but there’s a tragic element to his past in this particular version that weighs pretty heavily on the character.”
Not to say Depp is lacking of a sense of humor, one last video.
Ah yes, another remake. The celluloid regurgitating factory known as Platinum Dunes has made the final turn – I hope – in remaking the classic characters owned by New Line Cinema. Fans could smell the fumes running high on the money making highway when you could purchase Leatherface, Jason Voorhees and Freddy Krueger on keychains and other child like trinkets. While Leatherface never really got to an iconic status due to a short run of sequels, Jason and Freddy have been fighting over the hearts of fiends for 20 plus years. Last year, Platinum Dunes released the remake of FRIDAY THE 13TH. While it fell short to expectations, there is not a lot you can do with the character of Jason that hasn’t been done already. Freddy on the other hand could have an interesting story to tell. That is why, I was somewhat excited for this remake.
I have been hooked on this damn train since there were talks about an Elm Street prequel that would explore the back-story – the one you don’t see in the original NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET – of Fred Krueger and why the parents burned him alive. I always felt that the back-story alone would make a great film and could be an interesting direction. The closest that some might say it got was with EXORCIST III where the film was it’s own thing but connected to the EXORCIST universe towards the finale.
Sadly, we just get the same old stuff we have seen in the previous Platinum Dunes remakes of these horror icons. Glossy, over-saturated scenes. Vapid teenagers that evoke no emotion from the audience and, lets not forget, lens flares. I swear to god, after the remakes of FRIDAY THE 13TH, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE one would think that the damn lens flares would get a cast credit. I wonder if Michael Bay demands this…
…Ok, I’m getting off topic. If you haven’t seen the original NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET it breaks down like this:
Teenagers are having nightmares of the same man who threatens and stalks them in their sleep state. After a death of one of the teens, they realize that there might be something rotten in Denmark and this guy that they are all dreaming about might be behind it. If you get cut in your dream, you get cut for real. Get it? Good.
Samuel Bayer is making his feature directorial debut here after making music videos (are you really surprised?) for years. However, what Sammy has a looser grip on than his Platinum Dunes buddy Marcus Nispel (the guy that directed the TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE & FRIDAY THE 13TH remake) is story, tension, intrigue. Basically, the things that make a movie. Visually, the film is tiresome because we have seen it all before. The actors who play the teenagers and the parents are given one dimensional characters that show no personal traits. This makes the audience really only care for Freddy. He is the only interesting character and the whole movie becomes a guessing game on how they are going to remake iconic scenes or how the filmmakers will approach something differently. The problem with this is that the movie carries on as if it is a mystery if Freddy was an innocent man or not so when the reveal happens, it falls flat.
However, most horror fans and fans of the series probably expected some of this. So, the main question is…How is Jackie Earle Haley as Freddy Krueger? I’ll be the first to tell you that I couldn’t think of another actor on the radar to play the character. I thought he was a perfect choice and so did a lot of other people – partially due to his performance in LITTLE CHILDREN. It is with regret that I tell you that Haley doesn’t really make this character his own. In fact, the whole logic – and this is not at fault of Haley – of Freddy’s drive to haunt the teens in their dreams isn’t consistent throughout the whole film. Haley’s Krueger delivers some cheeky one-liners, but instead of it being creepy, most of them got a laugh from the audience I saw it with.
Albeit from a couple of decent scenes, stay away from this one – at least until it shows up on cable. Because the scariest thing about NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2010 is that if you dose off during this comatose inducing film, that when you wake up, your wallet will be lighter than it was before you entered the theater.
You just can’t keep a good serial killer down, especially when he only exists in our imaginations. Freddy Krueger returns once again this Friday, April 30, but this time without Robert Englund. Jackie Earle Haley slips into the scar makeup and knife-fingered glove this time around, hoping to give new life to an old favorite. Haley has already proven himself is short time to be one of this generation’s great character actors, with a knack for the dark and creepy side of the craft. In light of the new NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET film, We Are Movie Geeks has compiled our Top Ten List of the Best Creepy Character Actors.
Honorable Mention: RONDO HATTON
Of all the actors on this list, none has had a more tragic personal story as Rondo Hatton. As a young man Hatton was diagnosed with a rare pituitary disorder known as acromegalia (the studios claimed this was due to exposure to mustard gas in the first world war, but that was untrue), which resulted in the enlarging of his forehead, mouth, jaw, fingers, and feet. Casting directors exploited Hatton’s brutish appearance and he was given silent bit parts as background goons in several films. His breakout role was that of the mute henchman in the 1944 Sherlock Holmes film THE PEARL OF DEATH. This lead to key villain roles in SPIDER WOMAN STRIKES BACK and HOUSE OF HORRORS (both 1946). His final film THE BRUTE MAN (1946), about a handsome athlete accidentally scarred and turned into a monster, was almost the story of Hatton’s life. The disease which had enlarged his features also enlarged his heart and Hatton died soon after filming. His career was brief, but his story has always attracted the interest of horror movie buffs and his cult following is legion (a villain in the 1989 Disney film THE ROCKETEER was visually based on Hatton). Michael Berryman, who starred in THE HILLS HAVE EYES (1977 version) is another actor whose horror career was launched because of a health-related disfigurement.
10. GRAVE ZABRISKIE
Grace Zabriskie’s big bug eyes have become synonymous with creepiness and done their worst in scaring the ever-lovin’ crap out of me. The character actress has made the most out of all those juicy bit parts including her roles in CHILD’S PLAY 2, Gus Van Sant’s DRUGSTORE COWBOY, and THE GRUDGE. But it’s been David Lynch that’s cast her and those bulging eyes in many of his films. As the eerie psychic in David Lynch’s TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME, the crazy murderer Juana in WILD AT HEART (a role specifically written for her), and as the screwdriver brandishing woman in INLAND EMPIRE. Definitely check out the last film what she does with the tool will make your skin crawl. To date, the only role where Zabriskie wasn’t spooky was in Michael Bay’s ARMAGEDDON playing the spunky wife, Dottie, of an amateur astronomer who discovers the killer asteroid on a collision course with Earth. After being asked by to go fetch his military phone book, she zaps a look and yells “Excuse me? Am I wearing a sign that says Karl’s slave”? Yeah, not chilling, but even Zabriskie and her eyes deserve a break from the creep-fest once in a while.
09. PETER STORMARE
One of the best things Swedish actor Peter Stormare has going for him is that he has the look of a creepy, not quite sane psychopath. Combine this with his extraordinary talent as an actor and you’ve got a guy designed to fill roles meant to make your skin crawl. The Coen Bros gave America our first real taste of Stormare in their Oscar-winning opus FARGO, where Stormare played the silently menacing hitman with a penchant for pancakes and no qualms about committing bloody violence. Few performances have offered a character so creepy with so few words. He’d return to work under the Coen Bros in an equally creepy but comedic role as a Nihilist in THE BIG LEBOWSKI in 1998 and follow that as the only reason to consider seeing 8MM in 1999, playing the sleazy porno-directing creepozoid Dino Velvet. Amongst his lesser known roles to remember is his portrayal of the questionably sane, drug-addicted, drunken Santa-suit wearing Slovo in 13 MOONS. Stormare is probably best known for his tour-de-force performance as Satan, the fallen angel dressed in a white suit that torments Keanu Reeves in CONSTANTINE, urging him to cross over to the dark side. Stormare was perfect for this role and played it to perfection, offering what could possibly be considered the creepiest version of Lucifer ever captured on film.
08. CRISPIN GLOVER
Crispin Glover started his creepy resume like any normal kid… a pilot that never got picked up and a small role on THE FACTS OF LIFE. He gained some serious creepy, weird cred when he landed the role of George McFly in a little trilogy known as BACK TO THE FUTURE, maybe you’ve heard of it? His roles in such films as WILD AT HEART, THE DOORS as Andy Warhol, WHAT’S EATING GILBERT GRAPE, THE WIZARD OF GORE, and CHARLIE’S ANGELS have really helped out his creepy screen persona. Glover’s slim, pale appearance adds to the appeal of his body language, which screams stay away from me I’m a weirdo! These characteristics of Crispin Glover are most clearly defined in the remake of WILLARD, in which Glover plays an odd loner who can communicate with a hoard of rats, exacting revenge on those who have done him wrong. Having a connection with rats is more than enough for you to earn a disturbed status. Crispin Glover has also lent his uniquely disturbing voice to a animated films, such as the monstrous Grendel in BEOWULF. Recently, he took on the roles of The Knave of Hearts in Tim Burton’s ALICE IN WONDERLAND and Phil in HOT TUB TIME MACHINE. I honestly cannot picture a more delightfully creepy actor that I would prefer in a villainous role!
07. PAUL NASCHY
Paul Naschy (born Jacinto Molina)was the undisputed king of Spanish horror cinema and throughout his 40-year career played Dracula, the Mummy, Mr. Hyde, Fu Manchu, and the Hunchback. But to his legions of fans worldwide, Naschy is best known as El Hombre Lobo aka Waldemar Daninsky, the werewolf character he played twelve times between 1968 and 2004 (though these were not connected to each other plot-wise. Each was a free-standing story with different origins for his lycanthropy). The Hombre Lobo films were low-budget, cliched, and poorly-dubbed, but for the dedicated horror fan they are immensely entertaining especially the first, FRANKENSTEIN’S BLOODY TERROR (and no, theres no Frankenstein in it!). Paul Naschy died this past November but will be remembered as one of the most prolific and dedicated actors in horror history.
06. BARBARA STEELE
Exotic British actress Barbara Steele, with her large sinister eyes and unusual beauty, would have made this list even if she had appeared in nothing but her first starring role; Italian director Mario Bava’s BLACK SUNDAY in 1960. Steele was an international sensation as a seductress from beyond the grave and had a face that could embody both innocence and evil at the same time (even with spike-punctures in it!). Barbara Steele was lured to Hollywood where she was perfectly cast as Vincent Price’s vengeful wife in Roger Corman’s THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM (1961), but she did not enjoy making films in the U.S. Ms Steele fled the set of the Elvis Presley vehicle FLAMING STAR (she was replaced with Barbara Eden) and went back to Europe where she starred in a string of wonderful Gothic horror films such as THE GHOST (1963), CASTLE OF BLOOD (1964), NIGHTMARE CASTLE (1965), and THE SHE BEAST (1966). Directors Frederico Fellini, Louis Malle, Jonathan Demme, and David Cronenberg have all attempted to tap Steele’s strange allure by casting her in their movies but BLACK SUNDAY remains her showcase.
05. CHRISTOPHER WALKEN
While its true that Mr. Walken is clearly a reoccurring favorite of the Movie Geeks, what would a collection of the best “creepy” actors be without him? Christopher Walken’s middle name might as well be “creepy” as he’s practically built his career on his uncanny ability to play characters of the darker, spine-chillingly frightful nature. He’s played the dangerously volatile mob boss Vincenzo Ciccotti (TRUE ROMANCE), always delivering the fear factor that keeps people in line. He’s played a disgruntled war vet in PULP FICTION, a alien abductee in COMMUNION, a troubled dude that sees the future in THE DEAD ZONE, the bitter archangel Gabriel (THE PROPHECY), and even a vampire who believes he’s beaten his craving for blood in THE ADDICTION. The number and types of roles Walken has played are countless, but one thing is almost always certain… with a few equally commendable exceptions, Walken always adds in his own unique style of creepiness into every role that crosses his path.
04. CHRISTOPHER LEE
That baritone voice of his tends to cause a pronounced trail of goosebumps running down one’s arm and a sound that many a movie geek would recognize anywhere. While Christopher Lee may be Count Dooku of STAR WARS and Saruman of THE LORD OF THE RINGS to today’s generation of young film goers, once upon a time he was Count Dracula in DRACULA (1958) of the classic Hammer Horror Films and Bond assassin Scaramanga in THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN (1974). The sexual seductiveness of these two roles went hand in hand with how macabre these violent characters really were. Lee was equally villainous as Count de Rochfort in THE THREE MUSKETEERS (1973) and THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (1974) and director Tim Burton embraced Lee’s creepiness five times with parts in SLEEPY HOLLOW, CORPSE BRIDE, CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY, SWEENEY TODD, and as the recently as ALICE IN WONDERLAND in the brief Jabberwocky role. Lee was never more ghoulish as when he played Lord Summerisle in the 1973 British horror film, THE WICKER MAN, a role and film that’s always made the skin crawl and has developed a cult following. A British produced sequel, THE WICKER TREE, is set to be released late this year. Sir Christopher Lee is one of those classic thespians who effortlessly transitions between leading man parts and traditional character actor roles. It’s in those secondary, scarier roles that Lee will be remembered most.
03. BRAD DOURIF
Most notable for his voice than his intense stare and chameleon-like creepiness, Brad Dourif, the only person on this list to have been nominated for an Academy Award, broke onto the scene in 1975’s ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, the movie for which he god the nod. 35 years and over 100 films later, Dourif is mostly known for the man who gave the voice to the serial killer in a Good Guy doll, Chucky, his voice. Four sequels to CHILD’S PLAY later, and Dourif’s voice is as iconic to the Chucky character as Robert Englund is to Freddy Krueger or even, dare I say, Boris Karloff is to Frankenstein’s Monster. Dourif has never allowed himself a moment’s break, turning in fine performances in films like THE EXORCIST III, BODY PARTS, and ALIEN: RESURRECTION. He even found time in his career for the small screen with an ongoing role on HBO’s “Deadwood.” Even with stunning performance as Grima Wormtongue in THE LORD OF THE RINGS: TWO TOWERS and RETURN OF THE KING, Dourif has always gone back to dance with the genre that brought him, and gave a tremendous performance in both of Rob Zombie’s HALLOWEEN films. As engaging and unforgettable an actor as Dourif is, though, it will always be Chucky’s voice fans hear whenever he speaks. So much so, in fact, that no one could possibly step in should a remake ever be put together.
02. BORIS KARLOFF
This list would not be close to complete without including the original Frankenstein! Karloff was born William Henry Pratt (now we know why Spencer from THE HILLS is so frightening… they share a last name!), but changed it into the name he made famous, Boris Karloff. He played is famous Frankenstein in FRANKENSTEIN, THE BRIDE OF KRANKENSTEIN and SON OF FRANKENSTEIN. Karloff is still widely known as one of the original masters of horror, playing Imhotep in THE MUMMY, Dr. Neimann in HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, a mad scientist in FRANKENSTEIN 1970, and Gaffney in the 1932 film SCARFACE where he was gunned down in an alley. Even without the makeup, Karloff could be quite creepy, such as his roles in THE BODY SNATCHER and CORRIDORS OF BLOOD. Karloff was all over the horror scale throughout his life, until his death in 1969. He was so innovative that he actually earned 2 stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for his work in film, and the other for his work in television.
01. VINCENT PRICE
King of the Grand Guignol. Merchant of Menace. The True Master of Horror. Whatever the unofficial title, there is no denying the force Vincent Price is in the world of horror. Should the film Gods ever deem a Mount Rushmore of horror icons ever created, there is no way it could possibly be put together without Price’s face firmly chiseled, probably right alongside our #2 on this list, Boris Karloff. With nearly 200 films to his credit between 1938 and 1993, Price quickly became the go-to man for menacing roles and roles of deranged men out for vengeance on those who had wronged him. Films like HOUSE OF USHER (along with 10, other films based on works by Edgar Allen Poe), WITCHFINDER GENERAL, and THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES would have surely come and gone without much notation in film history were it not for the eerie yet ominous visage of the leading man in each of them. With a voice just as memorable as his appearance, it became quite clear when Michael Jackson came to record his song “Thriller” Price had to deliver the rap midway through. Vincent Price’s legacy on the horror genre as well as the industry as a whole is irrefutable, and there are few who question who was truly the master of horror.
I would seriously be more excited, probably almost ecstatic, for the NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET remake if Platinum Dunes’ last outing, FRIDAY THE 13TH, had been any damn good. Both are remakes of classic, ’80s, horror staples that spawned massive franchises, and both have promising trailers. Alas, FRIDAY THE 13TH was boring, goofy, and scored an absolute zero on the fun-o-meter. Let’s see if NIGHTMARE can succeed where it failed.
Today, courtesy of Omelete, we have three, new stills from the new remake. One of them even offers us a pretty good glimpse at Freddy’s new look, of which we’ve only seen via the soon-to-be-released action figure.
Check ’em out right here:
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET hits theaters on April 30th, 2010.
There has to be a Top 10 list devoted to this idea some day of a character’s look being kept under wraps by a studio only to have it blown by either a toy company, a newspaper, or a video game. I remember in ’98 when our first glimpse of the US version of Godzilla came from a black and white, grainy shot in USA Today. Now, thanks to the toy company NECA, and to Shock Till You Drop who brought it to our attention, we have our first, full-on look at Freddy Krueger’s new facial features.
Check it out right here:
Prior beliefs that the only, real difference between this Freddy and the classic Freddy is in the look of the face are confirmed here. This new look isn’t as over the top as Robert Englund’s look, and, to be honest, it’s a little more frightening. Can’t wait for New Line to actually come out with an official shot of Jackie Earle Haley in all his Freddy Krueger glory.
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET remake comes out on April 30th, 2010.
Yesterday we revealed the first “photo” of Freddy, well now we have the first poster from ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ which you can see above. You can get more of an idea what the face will look like as opposed to the image that we posted yesterday.
The first photo of Jackie Earle Haley as Freddy Krueger in ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’, although you cant see much, has hit the web. You do get the really creepy funny feeling in yours stomach looking at it and I am excited as hell(no pun intended) to see this film! Jackie Earle Haley is amazing and I think will do Robert Englund justice.
What do you guys think? I know there isn’t much there but how do you think JEH will fare?
JoBlo scored some set photos from one of the first shoots of the ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ remake. You cant see a full on view of Jackie Earl Haley but at least we can see him wearing the hat and shirt in this profile shot:
and from further away:
From everything the mystery man named “moneyshot” could tell, this was a flashback scene so it seems more and more like this is going to be a full on legit origin story. I am freaking excited for this reboot because I absolutely love Jackie Earl Haley. There are a few more set photos up on their site, all of which are of the actual set and do not contain Mr Krueger.