With today's list-chunk we close in on the one hunnies. Feels like only yesterday that we still had, like, 650 movies to go. Time: it sure does something.
Now that those brilliant insights are out of the way, let's get to these films that received three votes each.
228. Kuroneko (aka Black Cat) -- 1968, Kaneto Shindô227. Jacob's Ladder -- 1990, Adrian Lyne
226. Insidious -- 2010, James Wan
225. I Saw the TV Glow -- 2024, Jane Schoenbrun
224. Huesera: The Bone Woman -- 2022, Michelle Garza Cervera
223. House on Haunted Hill -- 1959, William Castle
222. House of Wax -- 1953, André De Toth
221. Hour of the Wolf -- 1968, Ingmar Bergman
220. Host -- 2020, Rob Savage
219. High Tension -- 2003, Alexandre Aja
218. Happy Death Day -- 2017, Christopher Landon
217. Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell -- 1968, Hajime Satô
216. Godzilla Minus One -- 2023, Takashi Yamazaki
215. Friday the 13th Part 2 -- 1981, Steve Miner
214. Dressed to Kill -- 1980, Brian De Palma
213. Drag Me to Hell -- 2009, Sam Raimi
212. Don't Be Afraid of the Dark -- 1973, John Newland
211. Dolls -- 1986, Stuart Gordon
210. Doctor Sleep -- 2019, Mike Flanagan
209. Diabolique -- 1955, Henri-Georges Clouzot
208. Dark Night of the Scarecrow -- 1981, Frank De Felitta
207. Cloverfield -- 2008, Matt Reeves
206. City of the Living Dead -- 1980, Lucio Fulci
205. Candyman -- 2021, Nia DaCosta
204. Blood Rage -- 1987, John Grissmer
203. Blood and Black Lace -- 1964, Mario Bava
202. Basket Case -- 1982, Frank Henenlotter
201. April Fool's Day -- 1986, Fred Walton
- The question that has been plaguing so many for years upon years: Exactly how many bottles of Riunite White Zinfandel on ice (so nice) deep was I when I gave Don't Be Afraid of the Dark a bad review back in the day? No one should listen to my opinions about anything!
- The other day I briefly noted some 2020 films that got lost in the pandemic abyss--well Rob Savage's Host was one a film avoided that fate, perhaps because it was one of the first (if not the first) to feel truly of the Covid moment. Sure, it pinches from some found footage faves, but it pinched 'em well and delivered some genuine scares. With its characters in lockdown and hanging out via computer screens, it nailed a "horror movies: they're just like us!" feeling that still resonates.
- A reader on Huesera: The Bone Woman: "As a childless cat lady myself, this movie spoke volumes about how motherhood is not the only lifestyle choice. And I'd join the auntie coven in a heartbeat, they look like a fun time."
- Lots of slasher flicks listed today, and yet each has a decidedly different take on the genre: Friday the 13th Part 2, Dark Night of the Scarecrow, Blood Rage, April Fool's Day, High Tension, Happy Death Day...it's great, ain't it? Whether grounded in reality or supernatural, comedic or depressingly bleak, masked or mulleted, bloody or virtually bloodless, this tiny slice o' slashers has something for just about everyone.
- Final Mom fucking loved Godzilla Minus One, let me tell you!
3 comments:
Last week, a group I'm a part of in Salem (the Horror Arts Collective) had a Basket Case event and I moderated the Q&A with Kevin VanHentenryck AND I got to drive him (and an actual basket) from Salem 3-1/2 hours to his home, and he is the nicest, kindest person you could possibly imagine. If you ever see him at a convention, be sure to stop by!
I love that! And I just love that there was a Basket Case event. And a Horror Arts Collective! Cool.
Don't Be Afraid of the Dark, aka the movie that forever instilled in me the notion that you really don't have to explain every last detail of a supernatural threat and in fact it often makes it scarier **not to** explain them. I will always heart those mysterious little goblins who terrorized Uncle Charlie from My Three Sons for the sin of Telling.
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