
Today is the day that HorrorBid turns 5 years old. In celebration we hope you enjoy this little list we put together for all you rabid Bidites. Whether you agree or disagree we want to hear from you, after all that is what we feel makes HorrorBid one of the greatest horror te on the net!
It goes without saying that watching horror movies is a deeply personal experience, more so than any other genre. Which means that our choices will probably not be yours. But that's why we have a comment section. Let us know if you think we're just plain out of our gourd or if you agree with our list. One thing is certain, if you're viting this te you have a love for horror like no one else. So lets see what makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck.
#10. SCREAM

The opening 10 minutes of Scream is a masterful exercise in horror. Sure, they ripped off every moment from other movies, but at least they knew which moments to rip off. Scream was one of those movies I wasnt expecting anything and it gave me so much. I bet I saw that movie when it first came out in theaters 10 times.
There is one moment the film absolutely nails, and this stands out as the scariest moment for me. After Casey Becker Drew Berrymore is mentally and phycally tortured, she sees a chance for escape, and the headlight of her parents’ car winding up the long, isolated road. Just a few more seconds and she’ll be saved. Then bam, the killer finishes her off. Just the idea of safety being so close, but not able to reach it, is multaneously heartbreaking and terrifying.#9. THE SHINNING

There’s nothing scarier than creepy kids and The Shining has three of them. While Danny explores the overlook hotel on his tricycle he bumps into two of the freakiest little girls and they give him a peek at their disturbing murder scene. If your not just a little creeped out by this sequence then you must have ice water in your veins. Thats good clean horror folks!#8. JAWS

If you took the audio out of a horror film, it wouldn’t be that scary anymore. It’s the screams in the opening scene of Jaws that eat away at the audience. You don’t even see the shark, but hearing the victim scream as she’s yanked around the ocean is disturbingly chilling. This movie ngle handedly hurt the tourism industry at beach resorts. Why this isnt number 1 is mind boggling. Whos writing this list? :-#7. THE RING

A slow-burner, this one, and the best example of Japanese-horror that has ever appeared on DVD or should I say video cassette?. :-
The majority of the film is only mildly unnerving, with videos full of bizarre images and the iconic image of a water-sodden little girl. So far, so average cliched horror film. But the films pace and timing slowly builds up to a climatic scene that is the scariest scene in any film ever!
For those who have seen it you know exactly what I am talking about, and even though it was copied in the American remake to some credibility as well as being parodied in Scary Movie 3 theres no other scene more breathtakingly nister than the slow, evil crawl of Sadako as she crawls through the TV to claim her victim.
#6. HALLOWEEN

Visually stunning, poetry in motion of a terror ride with nothing much happening, yet the tenon is almost unbearable. Perhaps the most imitated movie of the last twenty years or so, it has lost the power to shock because we audiences have become so accustomed to the "rules" of the horror movie genre as cleverly pointed out to us in "Scream". BUT, Halloween was indeed the first, or nearly the first to take the stalker idea to unprecedented, murderous heights. Halloween is THE clasc Psycho on the loose horror movie of all time. The gliding visual point of view camera, the tinkling eerie score, the use of shadows and oh that agonizing, stark tenon. You love it, I love it we all love the original Halloween. Haters check your badges at the door. Halloween had us all checking under our beds at night looking for the boogeyman.#5. THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE

Left me shell shocked for several days after I first saw it. The first death scene is so absolutely shocking and presented with such cold starkness that its almost too real to be bearable. Almost snuff film like. Followed by such shockers like the girl being slowly let down onto a meat hook which is hooking into the back of her head. She tries desperately to climb off the hook, but to no avail. There was an expectancy of such brutal horror materializing from nowhere in this film that even an open doorway into the darkness of night presents a terrifying prospect. There are elements of black humour here, but obscured by the monstrous horrors on display. It just takes the sound of that grotesque chainsaw sputtering to life to make the hairs on ones neck stand up.
The film is an incredible terror ride, and more incredible for the fact that having watched it and felt as though you have just vited a slaughterhouse, there is hardly a drop of blood shown in the entire movie. Tobe Hooper has created a masterpiece of horror that suggests so much outright violence and mayhem that you can swear that you have seen it, even though you havent. Indeed the most terrifying aspect of the movie is actually embedded in the name itself, another masterstroke of triggering the mind to all sorts of horrors. A brilliant movie in every sense and one of the greatest horror movies ever IMO.
#4. POLTERGEIST

Released on June 4th 1982, director Tobe Hoopers Poltergeist is one of the most uneasy feeling movies of its time.
The story, co-written and co-produced by Tobe Hooper and Steven Spielberg revolves around the Freeling family who is at first amused by, then later tormented by ghosts. The word poltergeist is German for noisy ghost.
The tenon is heightened in the film when the Freelings youngest daughter Carol Anne, played by the late Heather ORourke, turns up misng, but where it turns really creepy is when the family can hear her talking through the TV.
Feeling out of options the family brings in a team of paranormal investigators who turn out to be so amazed yet terrified of the events in the home that they call in a little extra guidance from a spiritual medium, named Tangina Barrons played by Zelda Rubinstein.
She helps them get Carol Anne back but in the third and final act of this film we learn something that is hinted at earlier on when Steven Freeling spoke to his boss about moving a cemetery for houng developments, their house ts right on top of a cemetery that was never fully dug up.
Thats right! They moved the headstones and left the dead bodies. In a pretty gruesome scene skeletons and caskets float up to the surface in the muddy water of their unfinished swimming pool.
Superstition seems to be attached to this film due to the fact that the final scenes did in fact use real human skeletons. Thats just freaky.
#3. SALEMS LOT

Tobe Hooper gets another pick from me. This fantastic make of Stephen Kings novel "Salems Lot" 1976. This movie is by far the most freakiest and most memorable vampire movie I have ever seen. The three hour movie has gruesome events happening all around the little town of Salems Lot. The first vampire that shows up in the movie is of course the unforgettable little brother who begins scratching on the window of his older brother.
The movie is not gory or full of the special effects we are all use to today, but the scare factor is definitely in there in mass amounts. If you want that feeling that someone is behind you, turn the lights down, and watch the unbelievable creepy movie "Salems Lot". If youve never read the book do it now and if youve never seen this movie you arent a true horror movie fan. :-
#2. THE INNKEEPERS

Why is this only number 2? Because The Exorcist just had a little more effect on me, not much. To be honest this movie probably effected me personally more than any other horror movie ever. Something about director Ti Wests pacing and the way he builds to the payoff in his movies absolutely terrifies me. This film literally had me looking away and turning the lights on in the house after it was over. I felt like I was in grade school again and horror films just dont effect me like this these days so something was right. I recommend watching this alone, in the dark on a stormy night. If you do you just might bump this up a couple of spots. It is that scary!#1. THE EXORCIST

I have to put in the 1973 Academy Award winning film The Exorcist in this for the extreme reaction it got at the time of the release, and sometimes still gets. This movie was rated X in some regions and my mother in law still to this day cant talk about this film without recounting a horrible dream she had that involved a crown of thorns and a crucifix. She literally starts to tear up when she talks about it. That is the effect this movie had on people.
Adapted from the novel by William Petter Blatty who also wrote the script, and directed by William Friedkin this films tells the shocking story of a woman trying to help for her daughter who appears to be possessed by the devil. In modern times this movie could have ealy become a cheesy B flick with studios so eager to cut the first half of the script with Freddy Kruger like gloves because they perceive todays audience to have a short attention span, but the first half of this movie I think is what propelled it. The mother, played by Ellen Burstyn, takes her daughter through various doctors and tests to find out what is wrong with her. There are scenes of her spitting at a nurse as she goes for a checkup, a painful scene of her undergoing a brain scan, and of course the scene where she attacks a psychiatrist. All these things lead the exports to tell her to send her daughter to the nuthouse because they cant find anything wrong with her.
When her outbursts grow more violent leading her mother to suspect her of the death of a friend, she turns to a catholic priest, played by Max von Sydow. This films final act took the longest to shoot. They had made the set into a refrigerator dropping the temperature until the actors could see their own breath in the air. Then they brought in a magician to create the now famous seen where daughter Reagan played by Linda Blair rises up into the air. They also spent a ton of time on SFX makeup, props, and contraptions to make Reagans body do all sorts of unnatural things.
Why is the Excorcist #1? Because Satan is fing scary people
I also want to give an honorable mention to Lake Mungo. This was truly a creepy film that I just watched again last night with my wife who saw it for the first time. Spine tingling is a good description for this film. It's a slow, believable burn that is full of layers. I really recommend this to anyone that loves a good solid storyline and terrific acting.
So do you agree or disagree and what would you add to the list? HorrorBid turns 5 years old on June 22nd and we would love to hear what the Bidite nation thought of our list. Take the time and chat away....