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 13, 2024

SHOCKtober: 480-453



*morse code noise* This just in on the wire! Each of the following films received one vote!

480. Duel -- 1971, Steven Spielberg
479. Dream Demon -- 1988, Harley Cokeliss
478. Dracula's Daughter -- 1936, Lambert Hillyer
477. Dracula -- 1931, Tod Browning 
476. Dr. Terror's House of Horrors -- 1965, Freddie Francis
475. Dr. Jekyll & Sister Hyde -- 1971, Roy Ward Baker
474. Don't Torture a Duckling -- 1972, Lucio Fulci
473. Don't Go to Sleep -- 1982, Richard Lang
472. Doctor X -- 1932, Michael Curtiz
471. Digging Up the Marrow -- 2014, Adam Green
470. Demons 2 -- 1986, Lamberto Bava
469. Demons -- 1971, Toshio Matsumoto
468. Demon Wind -- 1990, Charles Philip Moore
467. Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight -- 1995, Ernest R. Dickerson
466. Delicatessen -- 1991, Marc Caro and Jean-Pierre Jeunet
465. Deep Blue Sea -- 1999, Renny Harlin
464. Strangeland -- 1998, John Pieplow
463. Death Walks at Midnight -- 1972, Luciano Ercoli
462. Death Spa -- 1988, Michael Fisha
461. Death Becomes Her -- 1992, Robert Zemeckis
460. Death at Love House -- 1976, E.W. Swackhamer
459. Deadstream -- 2022, Joseph Winter and Vanessa Winter
458. Deadly Eyes -- 1982, Robert Clouse
457. Dead End -- 2003, Jean-Baptiste Andrea and Fabrice Canepa
456. Dawn of the Dead -- 2004, Zack Snyder
455. Dashcam -- 2021, Rob Savage
454. Dark Water -- 2002, Hideo Nakata
453. Dark Mirror -- 1984, Richard Lang

  • Deadly Eyes rules my world! I would be perfectly happy watching those dachshunds-in-rat-costumes run up and down tunnels all day every day forever.
  • Death Spa is so much fun. Maybe you haven't seen it for a while, or maybe you've never seen it at all...no matter your current relationship with Death Spa, please consider making it a part of your SHOCKtober 2024 rotation, thank you.
  • I had never heard of Dark Mirror before someone included it on their list, and when I read the description of it they included I gasped. Made for TV? 1984? Jane Seymour as twins (one of whom is evil, natch)? How has this not been integral to my life since...1984, I guess? Do I even deserve to have a horror blog??
  • A reader on Delicatessen: "Who knew dread, cannibalism, and apocalypse could be this funny?"
  • I need to rewatch Dead End, it's been many a hot minute and in my memories at least it's a little gem. And who doesn't need more Ray Wise in their watchings?
  • It's a bit shocking that Snyder's Dawn of the Dead only got one vote. It's always had a pretty good showing--in 2020 it received seven votes and in earlier SHOCKtobers it got even more. Hmm! I'd like to see what the faves list looks like ten years from now--tastes and trends fluctuate of course, but there's just so much damn horror coming out every single minute and viewing habits / methods have drastically changed since I started doing this...how will the beloveds and classiques hold up in the future?

3 comments:

Steve K said...

Because of Criterion's Gialli offerings this month, I finally saw Don't Torture A Duckling, which, although not my favorite giallo by any means, has one of the coolest visuals: someone with grubby hands pushing stickpins into grimy waxen figurines. There's something about the way the pin squelch-pushes into the substance (because you don't know they're wax right away) that is so primally ooky -- I want some of these grimy waxen figurines.

Jay Clarke said...

Ack! Stacie and I are seemingly the only cheerleaders for Deadly Eyes.... then again if Shocktober gets just one person to feast their eyeballs on it, we have won!

Stacie Ponder said...

It'll be top of the list next time, I just know it!