ITT: Iconic horror movie scenes
ITT: Iconic horror movie scenes
the movie that saved the horror genre, so kino
The one part of the movie I didn't care for was the scene at the pool. It goes from just mindlessly walking toward its target to suddenly using problem-solving skills and planning. Sort of broke the mystique of it.
Plus I don't know why they thought the pool would work. How it should've ended is by showing the boyfriend sitting in his house talking with his parents or something and you can see someone walking towards him in the far far background out the back window steadily coming closer, implying that the girl possibly died and it's now following him again.
another classic example of a movie unable to stick to its own premise
looks like that Laci Green cunt The Amazing Atheist would make videos about 10 years ago
Tall Man is a twin
thought that was worth sharing
but he dead now
what's so scary about a lanklet about to make love to some midge
That scene spooked me good
my god
oh my god, an average sized male
that's the kino behind the scene. A tall guy with some eye-shadow turned out to be the best 'jump' scare of the hole genre
Is that the lizard scene from Jacob’s Ladder?
Yeah
is that tony hawk?
Is that tony hawk?
is that tony hawk?
5'11" vs. 6'2"
Remember creating a website and putting this on the front page. Complete with the ghost car pasta
Is that Tony Hawk?
loved that movie.
>tall guys are creepy
what did they mean by this?
Why did the incorporeal being that only the afflicted can sense need to move around physical objects? Wouldn't he just pass through? Does that mean this malevolent force can be stopped/trapped? >In before autismo
They think they are alive.
It Follows is like a Frankenstein of shit creepypastas. It genuinely feels like the monster was born from a reddit thread where people listed off "scary ideas for a horror monster"
Horror movies are bad because I scare too easily and get nightmares when I watch them.
quentin tarantino publicly brought up tge inconsistencies of the movie
the director knows he fucked up
Huh, cool. I understand it's a work of fiction, however it's nice when that same work sticks with established in-universe rules, helps keep viewers engaged.
the other part was when it transforms into the child to squeeze through some narrow hole and the thing sort of screeches at them for a jumpscare
the whole time it just stoically walked towards them and in that one isntance it goes all haunted house
Why didn't the incel just fuck a hooker?
I LOST COUNT OF SHEEEEEP
Source? Google search only mentions art
It Comes
IMAGINE
Real talk
Is JLC a tranny?
There was a thread last night on it but it really can't be understated just how effective this intro was. Do you think you could survive?
He quite literally does do that
thanks
It’s a shame that this movie is the closest to come to the ultimate zombie movie imo. Rabies+Ebola but they needed to increase the infection time a bit, there’s no virus that can infect someone, let alone cross their BBP that fast. I do love how they are alive and starve, and don’t necessarily eat flesh, just beat the shit and vomit all over people to spread the infection. As long as you weren’t in ground zero I think you could survive, as they’d die of dehydration within the week. The real situation I don’t think any of us would survive would be the Dawn of the Dead remake, those are ultimate fuck you zombies.
I don't care what anyone says, that's sexy as fuck, unironically
I'd say the quick infection rate whilst the most unrealistic part is partially what makes the virus really visceral and scary.
The vomiting blood + convulsion and quick turn before you have time to even think about it is frightening.
What the fuck
I just watched this. I found it extremely problematic when it was implied he should have saved his wife. She's a strong independent queen
This is one of scariest movie scenes ever in my opinion
is that tony hawk?
Tony Hawk died?
that's actually really pathetic
nothing really scary about it, it's mostly filmed like (and is) an action scene.
>survive the apocalypse
>infected die out
>be one of the first to go back to England
>get killed because the US army is in charge of security and their idea of keeping people safe isn't to make everyone shelter in their locked rooms while you sweep the place clean, but rather to bunch them together into one dark room so that just ONE infected can get them all
It was a planned genocide to make Britain into Airstrip One, right?
>nothing really scary about it
Found the faggot who's never had to be the fastest runner.
do zoomies really find this scary?
Maybe scary isn't quite the right word to describe it. The opening scene just fills me with dread.
Like the other user said, if you were in that situation, could you survive? The whole situation just makes me feel anxious.
>incorporeal
It wasn't, though. It was just invisible.
Based
only two creepy films ever made
the very second they go past his wife getting snatched by the zombie, it's no longer a horror scene - everything past that up until he escapes in the boat is basically a fast paced action flick.
that's still not a horror scene, you're not supposed to have enough time to apprehend "could I do this?"
the problem with the movie is that in breaking several horror conventions, the zombies aren't that threatening. you can outrun them, you can even survive getting beat up by them, it's just a matter of not getting infected.
What movie you fucking fag
What movie
Stop right now
>it's no longer a horror scene - everything past that up until he escapes in the boat is basically a fast paced action flick.
You don't think the infected surrounding and slowly catching up to him in the background constitutes horror?
>that's still not a horror scene, you're not supposed to have enough time to apprehend "could I do this?"
So you watch movies brainlessly without ever asking questions or considering the events of what you're seeing
I agree that 28 Weeks is pretty shitty as a horror film when you consider the complete package. Those first 10 or so minutes are genuine horror though.