FINAL GIRL explores the slasher flicks of the '70s and '80s...and all the other horror movies I feel like talking about, too. This is life on the EDGE, so beware yon spoilers!

Oct 21, 2024

SHOCKtober: 256-229


Move over (in Heaven), Del Rubio triplets, we've got to make room for more SHOCKtober triplets! (But don't move over too far, we will need your services when Winter arrives because honestly the SHOCKtober triplets aren't much for caroling.) Each of the following films received three votes!

256. Them! -- 1954, Gordon Douglas
255. The Watcher in the Woods -- 1980, John Hough and Vincent McEveety
254. The Sixth Sense -- 1999, M. Night Shyamalan
253. The Seventh Victim -- 1943, Mark Robson
252. The Old Dark House -- 1932, James Whale
251. The Night Stalker -- 1972, John Llewellyn Moxey
250. The Night House -- 2020, David Bruckner
249. The Mist -- 2007, Frank Darabont
248. The Menu -- 2022, Mark Mylod
247. The Innkeepers -- 2011, Ti West
246. The Host -- 2006, Bong Joon Ho
245. The Funhouse -- 1981, Tobe Hooper
244. The Empty Man -- 2020, David Prior
243. The Devils -- 1971, Ken Russell
242. The Amityville Horror -- 1979, Stuart Rosenberg
241. Society -- 1989, Brian Yuzna
240. Slumber Party Massacre II -- 1987, Deborah Brock 
239. Skinamarink -- 2022, Kyle Edward Ball
238. Rebecca -- 1940 Alfred Hitchcock
237. Ravenous -- 1999, Antonia Bird
236. Peeping Tom -- 1960, Michael Powell
235. Orphan -- 2009, Jaume Collet-Serra
234. Nosferatu the Vampyre -- 1979, Werner Herzog
233. Motel Hell -- 1980, Kevin Connor
232. Men -- 2022, Alex Garland
231. Martin -- 1977, George A. Romero 
230. Malignant -- 2021, James Wan
229. Little Shop of Horrors -- 1986, Frank Oz

  • A reader on Nosferatu the Vampyre: "It’s not all that good, actually, but Kinski is the best Dracula—terrifying, revolting, and pathetic all at once." (A bold stance! One that gives me an idea...)
  • Skinamarink is one of the more divisive horror movies in...uh, ever. I've read many a comment about how it is so evocative for some viewers, incredibly unsettling if not downright terrifying. But if it doesn't tap into that part of your nervous system for whatever reason, you are like me--that is, currently on the lam after angrily burning down the movie theatre you saw Skinamarink in. (I hope the police aren't reading this!) I really wished it worked for me. Maybe I'll try again in a few years.
  • Why oh why is The Watcher in the Woods so very unavailable? Is it in the Disney vault or some shit...? You would think that a movie featuring Bette Davis and Kyle Richards would be showing on a 24-hour loop everyday forever. I haven't seen it in a hot...couple of decades and I'm all steamed up that it's nowhere to be found.
  • The Night House is so good and has some really scary bits, but the real reason you should watch is because Rebecca Hall is such an incredible actress. She does this monologue in a bar and...just watch The Night House!
  • I love to see so many goldie oldies listed throughout SHOCKtober. The Old Dark House is creeping up on 100 and it's still so much damn fun. The Seventh Victim is a wee bit younger and it's still so damn bleak. Rebecca is their middle sibling and it's still so damn perfect.
  • Margot Kidder and James Brolin in The Amityville Horror: one of horror's most babealicious couples of all time. Of course there are other things to love in that film, including but not limited to the giant, purple, demonic pig and the completely over-the-top sound effects of the screeching tires/puking nun combo, which I will never ever grow tired of, even if I live to 1,000,000:

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