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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat movie scared the crap out of you as a kid?
It's trending on FB right now. I think it's an interesting question.
lisa58
(5,755 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)And "The Screaming Skull". Had nightmares for years.
lisa58
(5,755 posts)raccoon
(31,119 posts)"The Screaming Skull" scared the dickens out of me a few years later.
CanonRay
(14,112 posts)orwell
(7,775 posts)I still can't watch horror films because of that movie.
lisa58
(5,755 posts)livetohike
(22,160 posts)samnsara
(17,635 posts)...hubby and I both refer to foggy days as Crawling Eye Days.
SaveOurDemocracy
(4,400 posts)I was afraid of the dark for years after that movie. Still gives me the creepies.
voteearlyvoteoften
(1,716 posts)Cruella wanted to make coats out of puppies!
bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)Watchfoxheadexplodes
(3,496 posts)And battle for the planet of the apes.
putitinD
(1,551 posts)did scare the crap out of in 1968.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)By then it wasn't that scary, at least not in the same way.
exboyfil
(17,865 posts)That was the one that got to me as well. I saw it at home by myself. I was creeped until my dad got home from work. That never happens.
Saw Texas Chainsaw Massacre in the theater with my dad as well when I was eleven.
Carrie when I was thirteen with both my parents.
putitinD
(1,551 posts)innocent time, when nobody locked their doors, left the keys in the ignition in the car and never thought anything of it. I remember we saw it at a local drive-in theater. and when it was over, driving home, there were no other cars on the road, it must have been about 1 o'clock in the morning. It felt like some kind of Apocalypse had happened!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)And I thought Mr peepeepuddles here was diving me nuts!
samnsara
(17,635 posts)..when I worked as a High School counselor I actually got it added as an ASB film! The kids LOVED it!
samnsara
(17,635 posts)I had nightmares afterwards.
putitinD
(1,551 posts)Phoenix61
(17,018 posts)I was about 7 or 8. My brother, who is 7 years older, was babysitting me while my parents went out for the evening. They told him not to let me watch the movie but he did. After the movie was over and I was in bed he went outside and started cawing and pecking on my bedroom window. Why do older brothers think it's funny to torture little sisters?
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Skittles
(153,185 posts)so do tell us.....how did your brother turn out?
Phoenix61
(17,018 posts)Born-again, right-wing, Trumpster. We weren't close before the election and haven't spoken in over a year.
Skittles
(153,185 posts)very sad indeed
I was 9 or 10 when it was first shown on TV. I had a parakeet I was very fond of and was worried the whole movie about what would happen to the lovebirds. Really superb movie!
Aimee in OKC
(158 posts)Daphne du Maurier, which had a bit more horror in that it didn't end like the movie. Ergh.
As an adult ... "The Day After" due to its realism portraying some of the aftermath of a nuclear attack.
procon
(15,805 posts)Bates Motel
The Birds
The Exorcist
Alien
Silence of the Lambs
Carrie
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Kids should NOT see either of those.
lisa58
(5,755 posts)The first one...
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)Nitram
(22,861 posts)Scared the bejeezus out of me. As did the Exorcist.
50 Shades Of Blue
(10,036 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)No blood, gore, or special effects. -- virtually all suggestion and, scary as all hell!
50 Shades Of Blue
(10,036 posts)pkdu
(3,977 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)still.around, born the same year as me.
50 Shades Of Blue
(10,036 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)you jest..but do tell me if you're not.
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)Nitram
(22,861 posts)While I didn't see it as a a kid, I recommend "The Changeling" as a great ghost story with Micael C. Scott in the lead role.
Brother Buzz
(36,458 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Brother Buzz
(36,458 posts)When I was a kid, they were fucking real!!!!!
Boomerproud
(7,964 posts)Stayed up on Friday nights to watch Chiller Theater...bad idea.
Thor_MN
(11,843 posts)So many of the Munchkins were also Flying Monkeys.
What scared me was the tornado. Growing up next to Lake Superior, I've never seen a tornado. As an adult, Ive lost two huge trees to separate storms, but both were considered straight line. One of those was a tornado about 3 miles from my house.
yardwork
(61,700 posts)I never minded the monkeys.
Brother Buzz
(36,458 posts)From my grammar school principal with the stinky perfume, to the old bitty up the street, they were everywhere, but I could cope with them. Fucking flying monkeys? No way!
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)My mother was born in 1934, so she was 5 when WOO came out. When one of the flying monkeys grabbed Toto and flew off, my mother just lost it. There's really a lot of scary stuff in that movie, including the scarecrow being torn apart.
Betty88
(717 posts)could never finish watching that movie, also Jaws we had a beach house...
bluedigger
(17,087 posts)safeinOhio
(32,714 posts)the Werwolf movie one afternoon. Slept with the blanket over my head for a year after that.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)woodsprite
(11,923 posts)Wouldn't go to sleep in my own room alone for weeks after watching Poltergeist. I made my brother set all my dolls out in the hallway and close/lock my closet door.
As for The Poseidon Adventure -- I'm 53 and had the opportunity to go on a Disney cruise last year at Christmas/New Years for our 30th Anniversary. Nope! Not celebrating New Years on a ship in the middle of the ocean. We did Disney World instead Dry land, fake snow, wonderful time.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)But I remember thinking that the movie exploits every single fear of children: closets, thunderstorms, clowns, things under the bed, etc.
cemaphonic
(4,138 posts)Part of my childhood too.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Eugene
(61,939 posts)had me sleeping with the light on.
The fire scene was a vision of Hell.
DeadLetterOffice
(1,352 posts)CincyDem
(6,385 posts)Audrey Hepburn, Richard Crenna, Alan Arkin.
Still afraid of stuffed bears after that one.
PearliePoo2
(7,768 posts)That is some fine acting!
whathehell
(29,090 posts)Good pick.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,018 posts)Skittles
(153,185 posts)no blood, no gore, no real special effects, just spooky as hell
longship
(40,416 posts)I was in Jr. High School. A friend and I drove our bikes to the local theater, about two miles away from home. The ride home after dark was really, really scary. I don't think I slept that night.
It is still one of my favorite flicks. The book is awesome as well.
Here is something to remind you:
No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream. Hill House, not sane, stood by itself against its hills, holding darkness within; it had stood so for eighty years and might stand eighty more. Within, walls continued upright, bricks met neatly, floors were firm, and doors were sensibly shut; silence lay steadily against the wood and stone of Hill House, and whatever walked there, walked alone.
(The beginning of Shirley Jackson's novel.)
BTW, your pic is of Lois Maxwell, 007's original Miss Moneypenny!
SaveOurDemocracy
(4,400 posts)Great movie!
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)Esp. when that thing was outside their door and tried opening the doorknob...
Skittles
(153,185 posts)TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)Little_Wing
(417 posts)ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)amerikat
(4,909 posts)Warned me about stuff I would experience later. Didn't know it at the time.
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)uppityperson
(115,678 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)uppityperson
(115,678 posts)"THEM!!!" and clicking noises, that was scary.
UTUSN
(70,725 posts)That night I put chairs next to my parents' bed and slept right there!1
happy feet
(871 posts)Night of the Living Dead (b&w)
The Excorcist
"Flying Monkeys"
CanonRay
(14,112 posts)redstateblues
(10,565 posts)LakeArenal
(28,837 posts)To this day I do not put my feet on the floor when I watch movies.. There might be a pod under the couch...
COLGATE4
(14,732 posts)Evil nobleman grabs enemy, proceeds to gouge out his eyeballs: "Out comes the jelly". Scared the shit out of me for days.
Dave Starsky
(5,914 posts)A friend of mine talked an older friend of his to take us to see it with him. We wanted to be "cool" with all our friends. I quickly regretted it.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I remember falling asleep once with the TV on and that movie woke me up, but I was too afraid to get up and turn the channel (before I had a remote TV). It. Was. Terrifying.
Dave Starsky
(5,914 posts)He was one of the kindest, most jovial celebs I ever met at one those. If he were just that "nice old guy" who lived next door to you, you never would have recognized him. The only trait he physically shared with that character is that he WAS pretty tall.
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)and my husband would wake up screaming about those little buzzy flying things? LOL, I told him about the new man made drone bees and he started to freak a little when I showed him the picture and mentioned Phantasm. A good scare can last forever.
Dave Starsky
(5,914 posts)It was a loooooooong time before I could watch that movie again, and though I chuckled at the terrible acting and less-than-spectacular production values (though not bad, for the time), it still gave me the creeps.
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)and yes it is very funny. I bought the VHS tape of it long long ago and it is still sitting in a pile of old VHS tapes unopened. Hee Hee. It was on TV not too long ago and I turned it on. After a while he looked up and saw the tall man (I cannot remember much about it, it had no real impact on me, just it's overall creepiness) and got up and left the room. He came back hours later and never said a word.
Iggo
(47,564 posts)unc70
(6,117 posts)Still haunted by "Waltzing Matilda".
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)longship
(40,416 posts)Gregory Peck, always great. Ava Gardner, likewise! Fred Astaire's first dramatic role. Plus, the supporting cast! Admiral Bridee and Lt. Hosgood in their farewell scene!
And yes, Waltzing Matilda!
Love that flick. The remake for TV was not good.
irisblue
(33,020 posts)blue cat
(2,415 posts)underpants
(182,870 posts)MuseRider
(34,115 posts)I think it is one of my most favorite movies. I do confess that, as a scuba diver, I always worry what I will see after jumping in. When the bubbles clear from around the mask I always take a good look around. All because of that movie but I love it dearly. Such a great cast.
underpants
(182,870 posts)I just never feel completely safe.
If you haven't check out the documentary on the making. Spielberg had a completely different (cheap gimmicky) movie in mind until all of the sharks stopped working in the salt water.
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)Forkboy, remember him? He also loved the movie and he told me about the documentary. It was very insightful wasn't it? It was amazing how the actors did not get a long, Dreyfuss and Robert Shaw. The movie turned out so much better than what he wanted. I did not hate Jaws 2 but after that, blech! Jaws the original has it all doesn't it? I watch it every time I have the time and see that it is on. It just works so well and Roy Scheider, well he was just nothing but great. He was the one that actually made it scary to me. Love it!
underpants
(182,870 posts)The sharks were named after Spielberg's lawyer. Too funny. I wonder if the shark named Bruce in "Finding Nemo" was a reference to that.
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)MrPurple
(985 posts)because the movie had been filmed in Mass. and my friends and I knew the movie was coming out soon. Has never fully been out of my head when I go to the beach.
Maru Kitteh
(28,342 posts)And there were people there on the "beach" of this little pond, so small more that 2 or three rubber rafts would be kind of a crowd - that were afraid to go in the water.
I was still pretty much a kid, but I thought it was a riot.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)I think I was around 10? We went to cape cod for a week or so every summer.
Love Cape Cod too. ❤
Speaking of scary (and heartbreaking) shark/ocean movies, Deep Water is a must!
JDC
(10,132 posts)madamesilverspurs
(15,806 posts)The one with Heston as Moses. I was seven, and that green fog gave me nightmares for months. Years later it gave me nightmares when it became obvious that Heston viewed the role as having conferred moral authority on him...
.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)RKP5637
(67,112 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I remember being terrified by an Abbot & Costello movie, the name of which I can't remember. Did "Mummy" have a scene with Costello and a werewolf(?) trapped on a revolving stone platform. I was so afraid Lou would get eaten, I've never forgotten in a long, long time.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)and the whole scene had a very very very eerie green cast to it. They were in front of a platform with a stone like cover talking/scared, lit by a candle lantern and when they turned away the stone cover moved and something was coming out, but when they turned back the cover had slid back ... something like that.
It was a horribly scary scene to a tiny kid in a dark movie house. My parents were with me and comforted me and it was fun, I did enjoy the movie. I did not scream out or anything remotely like that, but I've always remembered that scene, and I think it was the mummy coming out of the mummy's crypt.
Overlapping memories! This is an unbelievable site.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)Jane Austin
(9,199 posts)Tarantula.
:shudder:
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Due to her character being so horrifying. It is a movie not for the little ones.
Frogg
(365 posts)I was very young and it scared the crap out of me. I couldn't sleep without a light for over 25 yrs!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I STILL don't sleep in the dark. I have to have a TV on.
JCanete
(5,272 posts)Lochloosa
(16,068 posts)brewens
(13,618 posts)into the Exorcist. I didn't think this one through. We walked there. I was two miles away, his house was right by the theater. Plus my mom was out for the night! I remember using the Tonight Show as a comedy antidote but it wasn't very effective. I'm not sure how I got to sleep that night. I felt kind of creepy for days.
I finally watched it again a couple years ago after all those years. Not much ill effect at all but it still holds up as really hard core to me.
bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)When it gets u even when you know it's coming - that's good!!!
LiberalLovinLug
(14,176 posts)It didn't help that I grew up in a fundamentalist Christian household. Nor that we had missionaries speaking once in awhile with horror stories and fear-mongering guest preachers that told tales of demonic possession for years before that movie came out.
red dog 1
(27,845 posts)and I was in my '20s when I saw it.
I'd read the novel a couple of years earlier, and literally "could not put it down."
("The Exorcist" topped the New York Times bestseller list for 17 weeks & remained on the list for 57 consecutive weeks)
Interesting side note.
Growing up in the 1950s, I loved to watch the TV show "You Bet Your Life" with Groucho Marx.
Somewhere around 1960 or 1961, William Peter Blatty appeared on the show as a contestant.
He called himself "Bill Blatty" & his occupation was "a writer."
He decided to go for the grand prize, while his partner decided not to.
Blatty won $5,000, and after being asked by Groucho what he intended to do with the money, Blatty said he was going to use it to write a novel, something he'd not done before, (although he had written screenplays).
The novel he wrote turned out to be "The Exorcist"
StubbornThings
(259 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)JustAnotherGen
(31,874 posts)I didn't think he was 'cute' - my mom had to sit with me in the lobby while my dad and brother stayed in the theater. He was creepy to me - not cute.
dewsgirl
(14,961 posts)tonyt53
(5,737 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)It's not nearly as good as the original.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)I actually liked that one a lot.
There was a remake in 1993 just called "Body Snatchers". It had Gabrielle Anwar.
redstateblues
(10,565 posts)Pachamama
(16,887 posts)Seeing the alien explode out of the stomach and attach itself to people's faces freaked me out. Would still scare the shit out of me.
The Velveteen Ocelot
(115,829 posts)MuseRider
(34,115 posts)My dad used to like to watch scary or old space movies or Tarzan on Saturdays with me. I was just little, the movie was made the year I was born so I am guessing this would have been around 1960 or earlier and it scared the ever loving crap out of me. That and an old Tarzan movie, again black and white, where a certain tribe hung people upside down on long, flexible trees that they bent until they crossed and then they cut the ties and the people were torn apart. Good dad, really what I needed.
MFM008
(19,818 posts)in the 60s that scared me so bad i checked under my bed and closet for years.
About a lady space vampire that glittered and bit you in the wrist lol.
Probably on MST 3000 now.
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)but back then they could be terrifying.
MFM008
(19,818 posts)but when your 6 or 7!
longship
(40,416 posts)You must have seen it on television.
Trailer:
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)All these years and I never looked back to see it in color!
longship
(40,416 posts)The remake of the late 90's was absolutely horrible!
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)lately leave out too much story and just go for the noise and the gore. Nothing wrong with that I suppose but for me it does not work.
I would agree with you on that. The original is really spooky.
jpak
(41,758 posts)ChazInAz
(2,572 posts)that great Arizona epic; "Night of the Lepus".
Nothing like killer bunnies destroying a Tucson trailer park!
pressbox69
(2,252 posts)Invaders From Mars was in color. 1953
Doreen
(11,686 posts)and "The Omen." I was afraid to sleep for three days after "Invasion of the body snatchers" and I was afraid of crows for a week after "The Omen." I was a kid and had no clue that Ravens are not crows. I will say that I saw "Lord of the Flies" as an adult and it scared me but that is because it makes you realize that humans are really just that close to being like that if in the right situation.
revmclaren
(2,529 posts)Saw it when I was about 8. Had nightmares for weeks.
Still avoid it.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Plus, there really is a medical symptom called a "Sardonicus grin" ricsus sardonicus.
Laf.La.Dem.
(2,944 posts)Siwsan
(26,289 posts)The first time I saw it, I was very young. Every creak in the floor boards made me jump. Then we went to The Field Museum and after spending time in the Egyptian section and seeing all of the mummies, I was convinced I had come under the curse.
Chemisse
(30,816 posts)Afterward, I was afraid to sit on the toilet until I had checked to be sure there was no 'blob' in there.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Because there is often an unflushed "blob" waiting for you in the toilet.
Chemisse
(30,816 posts)Fortunately I got over it, because I have faced many a toileted blob over the years.
meadowlark5
(2,795 posts)Scared the crap out of me - and all I saw were the previews and trailers.
get the red out
(13,468 posts)Couldn't let my feet drift off the bed for quite some time after that.
Me.
(35,454 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)Classic!...Evil bastard stalking 2 little kids!
subterranean
(3,427 posts)not the famous shower scene, but the scene where Lila Crane approaches Mrs. Bates from behind, and she (Mrs. Bates) turns out to be a corpse. I watched the movie alone at night, and had to close my eyes for that part.
Stuart G
(38,439 posts)I walked out of both of them.....
House of Wax, (1953)..in 3D
Psycho....1960..
and I never got to the real scary part of Psycho, till I watched the end sometime in the 80s..then I saw what how it ended..
whathehell
(29,090 posts)A 1961 film based on Henry James "The Turn of the Screw"...No blood, no gore, and scary as hell.
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)and they require real skill to create.
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)Did you ever see Polanski's "Repulsion?"
That was pretty creepy (and well-done, of course)
whathehell
(29,090 posts)Heard of Repulsion, but never saw it.
ailsagirl
(22,899 posts)whathehell
(29,090 posts)LastLiberal in PalmSprings
(12,591 posts)Like many Japanese films at the time, its premise was the effects of a nuclear explosion on something, in this case the crew of fishermen. Basically, they all turn into gooey man-shaped creatures that glowed green. What was scary was that they could spread their bodies out and oozed from place to place like a shiny glob of Prell shampoo. When they found a person they'd cover him and absorb him. Ycch! (I was about 8 at the time.)
The thing was, my mother bought Prell for the family to use as shampoo.
pressbox69
(2,252 posts)Was there any limit to the amount of voices Paul Frees could do in these movies?
MuseRider
(34,115 posts)The Thing, the remake in 1982 with Kurt Russell. Those creepy crawly monster things scared the holy crap out of me. It took me 4 tries to get through it and I was at least 30 years old when I saw it on cable.
CountAllVotes
(20,878 posts)That one done it for me!
asiliveandbreathe
(8,203 posts)I'm horrified by spiders to this day...and they say a spider is within 6ft. of you at all times....this is not good!
LonePirate
(13,431 posts)Absolutely horrifying and I saw it in my 20s. I still refuse to watch that film ever again.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)LonePirate
(13,431 posts)MrPurple
(985 posts)Darren Aronovsky is a genius (the Wrestler, Black Swan)
BeyondGeography
(39,378 posts)First movie I ever watched and it was late on a Saturday night. Just me and my dear old granny. Bob Ewell was a beast, Mayella was haunted, the South struck me as deeply creepy in ways that we just don't experience in the NYC area and that walk home from the pageant just about finished me off. Elmer Bernstein's masterful soundtrack was a big part of it, too. The social justice themes of the film are what I primarily focused on as a teen or adult. As a kid of 10 or so in an era when children were pretty sheltered from violent imagery, it scared the crap out of me.
Break time
(195 posts)The original was out in 1951 .. scared the crap out of me for quite a while after that..
wishstar
(5,271 posts)I am still not happy that my parents thought it was appropriate for a little kid- especially since plot involved The Tingler infesting a movie theater , first being in projection room and then in seats of audience.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tingler
LiberalArkie
(15,728 posts)did not have to call me in at night, I was inside at the hint of dusk. To this day, I can not think of the show without a funny feeling in my spine.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)The film's producer/director Wm. Castle had some theaters equipped with "Percepto" devices in some of the seats that would vibrate during the movie. The gimmick added $250K to the movie's budget. He also directed "House on Haunted Hill" and did the same thing, except with a wire-strung skeleton that would swing from the theaters' ceilings. Glad I didn't attend one of those.
subterranean
(3,427 posts)Who can forget the one with the Zuni doll? Although laughable now, it gave a lot of kids nightmares back then.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I still think about that one from time to time.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I can't remember the name of it, but it was about a family that movies into a house that has a life all its own and it drives the husband insane. There was a hearse and creepy driver that eventually scare him to death. Does anyone remember?
Still Blue in PDX
(1,999 posts)I have to find this movie.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)What is it about Karen Black? My sister always said it is because her eyes are too close together (Black's, not my sister's).
Still Blue in PDX
(1,999 posts)My daughter was a biter when she was about 2-1/2. She didn't bite anyone but me, and I used to think of that little zuni doll in Trilogy of Terror whenever the darling daughter came up behind me.
subterranean
(3,427 posts)That chauffeur was creepy!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)lunasun
(21,646 posts)Not a general audience film in 70s - but anyone ever seen the black devil doll from hell? Same sort of thing but even weirder
chowder66
(9,075 posts)I also got super creeped out by the Omega Man, Soylent Green and The original Amityville Horror which I saw at the drive-in.
yallerdawg
(16,104 posts)About twenty minutes in I had to turn it off, and just recently - probably 45-50 years later - saw it on TCM.
Still scared the shit out of me!
Zambero
(8,965 posts)When he got rabies toward the end. I had nightmares of being chased around with Old Yeller baring his fangs while frothing at the mouth.
Honorable mentions: Godzilla & The Sorcerer's Apprentice
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)The book disturbed me so much I'd never watch the movie.
Mike Nelson
(9,966 posts)...Night of the Living Dead, which I did not see until the 1980s. I thought, because it was older and in B&W, it would be tame. The scene that almost put me in the asylum was when the dead little girl in the basement gets up and looks hungry. Yikes!
Docreed2003
(16,871 posts)That flick is still scary!!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)C_U_L8R
(45,019 posts)oh wait, no, that's Trump. Sorry.
no_hypocrisy
(46,169 posts)Watch the trailer especially "The Warning" at the beginning.
Here's my story: Dementia 13 was the Halloween matinee in 1963. Kennedy had not yet been assassinated, but that was three weeks away. I was 6-1/2 years old.
My mother thought it would be a good idea to drop me off alone without her, a babysitter, anybody (it WAS 1963 after all) at the movie theater for a good afternoon of Halloween "fun". She didn't think the movie would be anymore scary than monsters, but then again, she didn't check. I certainly didn't get the memo.
So there I was in the dark, eating popcorn, watching one axe murder after another, dead bodies being dragged over grass. And then at the very last scene, a doll's head split apart with an axe and you couldn't be sure if it was a doll's head or a little girl's. Shit! Did I just see what I thought I just saw? I'm alone in a theater with hardly anyone there and I'm watching mass murder at age 6+.
I wouldn't say the movie traumatized me, but I always wondered about it until the 1990's when PBS was showing a retrospective of Coppola movies and THERE it was! I knew it immediately.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Did you tell your mother?
no_hypocrisy
(46,169 posts)No, never told Mom or anyone else.
Frankenstein was a kindergarten birthday party by comparison.
dhol82
(9,353 posts)Boris Karloff and those fricking tanna leaves.
I still have to lock the door to the cellar before I go to bed.
Docreed2003
(16,871 posts)The original scared the crap out of me. My parents loved to watch scary movies after I "went to bed", but I've always been a night owl and I could always hear the movies from my room. The music and sound effects alone were terrifying from most early 80's horror flicks!
rogerashton
(3,920 posts)the 1953 3D version. It was the 3D that did it.
BigBearJohn
(11,410 posts)Turn CO Blue
(4,221 posts)My dad was watching the late movie, and I must have been around 4 or 5 years old. The plot was so stupid a returning astronaut's hand falls to earth after some explosion, and after being infected by something or irradiated or something, and the EVIL hand crawls around killing people.
For a couple of years after that, I had to have some one check under the bed, etc.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)It was about a pianist who lost his hands in an auto accident. Needless to say, they came back.
On edit: The Five-Fingered Monster? Something like that.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)ThoughtCriminal
(14,047 posts)No scary monsters, just doom.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Terrifying. The Renfeld character still scares me. I love it.
demosincebirth
(12,542 posts)IcyPeas
(21,901 posts)scared the crap out of me that I didn't want to walk on the floor in my bedroom and would jump from my bed to my sister's bed. I've never forgotten this movie and I think of it every time a sinkhole is in the news.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Loved the trailer though. Might have to watch the whole thing.
n2doc
(47,953 posts)The scene with the truck going over that bridge always has given me nightmares.
The first Friday the 13th. Carrie.
Also not a movie but The Trilogy of Terror, the part with the Zuni Doll that comes to life, has always stuck with me.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)You're not the only one.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)mevoici
(2 posts)The birds from Hitchcock
Danascot
(4,694 posts)how can there be 161 replies to this thread so far without any mention of The Shining?
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)The part with the twin girls...
d_r
(6,907 posts)First Speaker
(4,858 posts)...I had a phobia about choral groups for years and years. Especially children's ones. And I still have nightmares about waking up to find myself turned into Ray, a Drop of Golden Sun...
rzemanfl
(29,567 posts)JCanete
(5,272 posts)bathroommonkey76
(3,827 posts)JenniferJuniper
(4,515 posts)elleng
(131,077 posts)I was in high school, so maybe not a 'kid.'
Rhiannon12866
(205,927 posts)I was reluctant to take a shower for years! LOL. And it didn't help that one girl there decided to scream bloody murder during the shower scene. That one stuck with me for years...
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,482 posts)I'm afraid to wash my hair
'Cause I might open my eyes
And find someone standing there
People say I'm crazy
Just a little touched
But maybe showers remind me of
"Psycho" too much
Rhiannon12866
(205,927 posts)And not just for a semester or a few months, but for years!
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,482 posts)I'm trying to learn how to laugh at the great orange plague.
Rhiannon12866
(205,927 posts)Though I do think we do a pretty good job on DU!
Doreen
(11,686 posts)Good one.
Alpeduez21
(1,755 posts)I was eight. Saw it on a big screen. The father walking around talking to 'ghosts', Scarlet and Rhett whip the horse to death, and that man gets his leg cut off.
Honorable mentions: When a Stranger Calls and The Ring.
Mr. Ected
(9,670 posts)rurallib
(62,445 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Wakulla Springs in Florida. It's still there and is a park and sanctuary. If you ever get a chance to visit don't miss it. There are guided boat rides and all kinds of wildlife. I go every time I visit Tallahassee which is every other year or so.
rurallib
(62,445 posts)but that is quite interesting to know.
mia
(8,361 posts)I saw it on television as a kid.
I don't remember the plot, but only his face and expressions.
FrankfurtCat
(1,213 posts)Last edited Tue Feb 21, 2017, 09:15 AM - Edit history (1)
Easiest question ever😶
Also a great question!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)FrankfurtCat
(1,213 posts)It freaked me out a little. Many people actually walked out after the first scary/gorey scene!
https://www.google.com/search?q=suspiria&oq=suspiria&aqs=chrome.0.69i59l2j5j69i61l3.8741j0j4&client=ms-android-att-us&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8
A remake was recently made starring Dakota Johnson and Tilda Swinton for 2017 release.
bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)had a great ending.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)They always have something near the beginning that you see but don't really think about. The first of his films that I saw was Deep Red. It's still my favorite.
FrankfurtCat
(1,213 posts)...as well as the two later installments of the "The Three Mothers" series that began with 1977's "Suspiria": "Inferno"-1980 and
"The Mother of Tears"-2007.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)Be sure and specify widescreen, because some editions are the dreaded pan and scan.
FrankfurtCat
(1,213 posts)FrankfurtCat
(1,213 posts)-thanks for the referral. I'm going to watch it now. I haven't seen any other of Dario Argento's movies. I rented "Suspiria" a few years ago, because I wanted to see if it was as eerie as I remembered. I couldn't finish it that time. I seem to be more squeamish now than I was at 13.
oxymoron
(4,053 posts)With Julie Harris. Kept me up for weeks.
blue neen
(12,327 posts)That girl was crazy!
gordianot
(15,243 posts)Learned this can happen in real life.
Tikki
(14,559 posts)I must have first seen this movie when I was around 6 years old...saw it on television..
scared me, but the whole concept also intrigued me.
Hence, my mad, mad devotion for Science Fiction since.
Tikki
Iggo
(47,564 posts)Dirty hippies with rabies. Saw that one with a bunch of older kids and "the cool parents" at the drive-in. Scared the living bejeezus outa me.
And oh yeah, The Legend Of Hell House. Didn't even make it to the end of that one.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)Need to look it up.
eppur_se_muova
(36,281 posts)Very dark and moody, very suspenseful. Must have been only about 5 or 6 when my family watched it. I didn't understand any details of the plot, but it left me scared to go to sleep.
Nominated for 7 Academy Awards, so it must have been pretty good. :/
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)There's a miniseries coming up in March on FX calleD Feud. Susan Sarandon plays Bette and Jessica Lange plays Joan Crawford.
zentrum
(9,865 posts)Vincent Price.
catbyte
(34,438 posts)creeped me out when I was a teenager--and I didn't even believe in demons & all that shit. I think it was Linda Blair's make-up.
Guilded Lilly
(5,591 posts)MrPurple
(985 posts)I was an adult, but that is the only movie I've found so troubling that I wouldn't rewatch. It's not a slasher film, it's just disturbingly realistic with mundane details.
Lotusflower70
(3,077 posts)That movie was incredibly scary and creepy. Such a total mindfuck and messed with me for a long time. Jack Nicholson was absolutely amazing in it. Texas Chainsaw Massacre was another one that really scared me. I wasn't supposed to be watching it but I did and it took my forever to fall asleep afterwards. It was late at night with my older brothers and we were watching it in the dark and everyone was trying to scare everyone else. It felt like an initiation or something.
applegrove
(118,767 posts)and could only hold her truck outside the bars and rock Dumbo. Don't remember any scary movies. We weren't such a movie family. And we were not allowed much in the way of TV.
Binders Keepers
(369 posts)I was seven.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I remember seeing it in a theater and was probably around the same age as you were. The organ music with the keys covered in blood was pretty scary if you were seven.
hurple
(1,306 posts)I was 9. We lived near a lake and went swimming almost every day during the summer...
3catwoman3
(24,032 posts)...The House of Wax. I was about 11.
When the wig was pulled of the one figure and the young woman realizes it is her friend, I about jumped thru the ceiling.
murielm99
(30,755 posts)My parents were too cheap to get a babysitter, so they put me in the backseat of the car and we all went to the drive-in. I was about five.
I had nightmares for weeks.
mithnanthy
(1,725 posts)I had nearly the same experience as you. I was about 6 and my babysitter drove me to a Drive in. Still have nightmares!
Doreen
(11,686 posts)I kept my terror to myself.
They were not the most sensitive of parents.
MosheFeingold
(3,051 posts)It floated around Germany, Poland, and Austria in the 1930s. It was shown in a tent in a traveling fair, as it was considered unsuitable for polite company. I remember distinctly the creepy gypsy guy who would put on the records to play with the sound track.
This was made worse by being taken by my grandmother (a legit peasant woman) who was convinced that golems were real (and had occasionally run amuck) and dybbuks (kind of a Jewish zombie) were quite real and a legit problem.
All this going on with the post-WWI malaise and the feel from the soon-to-be-news rise of Hitler made for a serious scarring of my psyche.
pressbox69
(2,252 posts)Frankenstein, Dracula and The Wolf Man on Shock Theater but for some reason the less famous The Mad Ghoul gave me nightmares.
A couple of years later on Chiller Theater, this one creeped me out:
Chipper Chat
(9,687 posts)Mom took me to see it about 1944. I started bawling at one of the Wicked Witches - she scared the hell out of me.
Tanuki
(14,920 posts)bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)In both - when you first saw the monster... Also stunned by INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1950s version) - all three on TV can came out of nowhere for me as a kid... As for the ending - easily INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS - could not believe a film would end like that!
bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)Another that was unlike any other film I'd ever seen at the time!
Chipper Chat
(9,687 posts)I took my little brother (he was 5) to see it in 1956. He didn't cry during the movie but started screaming in the middle of the night. He kept saying "big red dog." That puzzled me until I remembered the big red monster that roared when Morbius instructed the electronic fence to erupt.
bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)neeksgeek
(1,214 posts)Specifically the scene where Khan introduced Chekhov and Captain Terrell to "Ceti Alpha Five's only remaining indigenous life form."
yesphan
(1,588 posts)Jason and the argonauts (1963)
The Blob(1958)
As a 4 and five year old, those movies were very frightening.
TlalocW
(15,389 posts)I have no idea why - I just remember one scene in an old house with a lot of suspense. I've had other adults agree with me.
TlalocW
FSogol
(45,524 posts)Bayard
(22,128 posts)I used to have nightmares about that shooting green light from the big eyeball thingers.
And The Birds. Yikes!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)The spaceships were terrifying.
lunatica
(53,410 posts)Scared the snot out of me. I got under the blankets and kept very still hoping the aliens coming into my bedroom wouldn't notice anything was in the bed!
Denverchick
(17 posts)bagelsforbreakfast
(1,427 posts)Even when you knew the Vampires were coming...still hit home. Also S. King's moving garden topiary animals in THE SHINING (book).
OxQQme
(2,550 posts)OxQQme
(2,550 posts)Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)JunkYardDogg
(873 posts)As a kid, it was " Naked Jungle" which was about African killer ants
and as a young adult, it was Pulanski's "Repulsion" an incredible study into a deteriorating mind
Doitnow
(1,103 posts)huge eyes on a large waving curtain. Had nightmares after that of those eyes.
LudwigPastorius
(9,167 posts)...and one theatrical release that was on TV in the 70s.
woodchuck mom
(16 posts)I slept with the light s on forever
LudwigPastorius
(9,167 posts)Did Not Like the boggy creek monster!
benld74
(9,909 posts)Another movie was on the shows advertisment
I showed up to see it
And this was on
The Polack MSgt
(13,192 posts)The Hills Have Eyes - Classic creepy ass movie
And last but not least the scariest thing a 9 year old ever saw - Last house on the left
TalenaGor
(1,104 posts)Tiggeroshii
(11,088 posts)My cousin telling me about the movie when I was a kid, while not actually seeing the movie. Somehow it was far more scary than when I eventually did watch It.
lunatica
(53,410 posts)I had a real love/terror thing for SciFi.
lark
(23,148 posts)a la izquierda
(11,797 posts)And the Blob. Terrified me. My dad told me most horror movies were real.
My favorite horror now is Nosferatu and anything by Hitchcock.
BHDem53
(1,061 posts)world wide wally
(21,754 posts)I didn't watch another horror movie for 10 years after that!
turner52
(39 posts)Besides green witches and flying monkeys in the WOO...Gort scared me terribly. Klatu Borrada Nickto
tclambert
(11,087 posts)He was Gort, walking implacably toward me. I was cowering like Patricia Neal, trying to remember the magic words. My brother got mean about pronunciation--"You pronounced it wrong! The visor's going up. You get disintegrated!" (Apparently, Gort didn't have spellcheck.)
Squinch
(50,993 posts)Johnny Whittaker, the red headed kid from A Family Affair.
Scared the crap out of me!
LeftInTX
(25,526 posts)The true story of a father whose cigarette butt got lost under the sofa, the entire family died, including the dog. This movie showed the graphic agony of the family trying to escape their inferno. The kids tried to escape by opening their bedroom doors and you can imagine what happens next.
Syphilis....my gosh, it was enough to make me scared to have sex with anyone.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,211 posts)It starred Kim Darby, of True Grit fame. It had these demonic little people.
Also, there was an Alfred Hitchcock presents called "An Unlocked Window" that scared the bejeesus out of me and my cousin.
StevieM
(10,500 posts)mnhtnbb
(31,402 posts)Saw it with my brother when I was about 10--we were visiting an aunt and uncle in California--and
there was a scene at the end with the eyes of someone being tortured looking out of the torture device.
That night I was sleeping in a bed under the window of my aunt's sewing room. I woke up in the night and there
were eyes staring at me from the window! Scared the CRAP out of me!!! Turned out to be the kitty--outside--
who routinely would jump on that windowsill asking to come in.
I have never wanted to see another horror movie the rest of my life (and I'm now in my 60's).
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)I probably saw it when I was around 7? I was born '57. Movie came out '55.
The atmosphere, the music, the evil priest, chasing the kids....brrrrr.
That lonely, night feeling...floating helpless in a boat hiding from a murderer on your trail. Brrrrrr!
I gotta watch again. It's on YouTube! In full!
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)I want to see it now, too.
We were born the same year.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)Let me know how you like it!
Nitram
(22,861 posts)the_sly_pig
(741 posts)It was about a bulldozer that was struck by lightning on an island and came to life killing construction workers.
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)Still In Wisconsin
(4,450 posts)peequod
(189 posts)Starring Oliver Reed, Karen Black, Burgess Meredith, and Bette Davis among others. A well-acted horror movie, and that chauffer's smile...
Lunabell
(6,105 posts)Not the one about the blimp. This is a 1960 film with Barbara Steele. She played a vampire witch who was killed in the 1600's. She is brought back to life by a drop of blood. Scared the bejesus out of me.
mrs_p
(3,014 posts)Nightmares for years.
Mr.Bill
(24,317 posts)Scared the shit out of me as a very young child. Way too much weird shit going on in that movie for a five year old to process.
A lot of Twilight Zone episodes scared me, too. The one with William Shatner on the airplane especially. My dad worked for the airlines and we flew a lot. I wouldn't sit next to a window on a night flight for years. I'm 63 now and it still gives me the creeps.
Blue_Tires
(55,445 posts)I still have a crippling insect phobia to this very day
Tommy_Carcetti
(43,191 posts)For years I had no idea what it was called. I just remembered it felt sort of like a Star Trek episode, and these people on this spaceship were being attacked by this one eyed black octopus looking creatures with tentacles who made these terrible shrieking sounds. They'd come from out behind the walls and chase the people around.
At the time I saw it, it absolutely terrified me. It caused several nightmares.
But I never bothered to get its name, and I thought it was lost on me forever.
A few years ago I posted the question to DU and asked if anyone could identify it. I tried to describe it as best as I could.
Lo and behold, someone seemed to have nailed it. I'm 99% sure this was it:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0064393/?ref_=login
The Green Slime. At the time, Youtube had the full movie posted, so I checked it out and it matched up pretty well what I remembered.
In retrospect it was laughably bad and campy. But back when I was 6 years old or so, it scared me nearly shitless.
CCExile
(472 posts)with the monster living in the rocks under the lighthouse and ripping people's heads off! What was that movie? And the one where the aliens shoot people with a ray gun and they end up as a smoking outline on the ground! Which one was that?
Iggo
(47,564 posts)Not sure of the first one.
JudyM
(29,270 posts)Terror as a little kid. Dark brooding malevolent men. Haven't liked em much since, either!
FailureToCommunicate
(14,020 posts)(about giant atomic ants run amok).
But none scared me more than Trump's Inauguration coverage.
Coventina
(27,169 posts)on edit: typo
milestogo
(16,829 posts)Flying Monkeys and a Wicked Witch
NNadir
(33,541 posts)I was about the kid's age when I first saw it.
I didn't get a decent night's sleep for weeks. (I saw it on TV long after it first appeared in theaters.)
Invaders from Mars (1953 film)
The remake was nowhere near as frightening, but then again, I was a man when it came out.
Fla Dem
(23,738 posts)I don't know whatever possessed my mother, but she had my Dad drop my brother and me off at the local movie theater for a double header. I was petrified throughout the 2 movies. I do not watch horror movies to this day.
lastlib
(23,272 posts)the kid sitting up in the coffin to say "Welcome to the Delts!" just wiped me out for a week!
Also "Them!" and "The Indestrucible Man" (Lon Chaney, Jr.) gave me a few nightmares.
OldEurope
(1,273 posts)I was alone at home at about 5 when The Birds hit me.
But I was not really afraid of birds. It made sort of proud that I did not get scared.
The first movie that really scared me was many years later: Nightmare on Elmstreet. I was 29 years old when I saw it first, and I could not sleep for two complete days. Silly, I know. But I hate that movie.
red dog 1
(27,845 posts)a thriller about giant ants living inside the LA sewer system.
It was in the '50s, and I went to see it with a couple of friends at a Saturday matinée when I was about 10.
When it was over, my friends went home, but I wanted to see it again, so I stayed & had to sit through another movie before I got to see "Them" again....alone.
I began to have nightmares for the first time in my life after seeing that darn movie.
Laffy Kat
(16,386 posts)That WAS scary back then; you are not the only one to mention that movie in this thread. You are older than I am, although I'm sure the special effects for that movie were really something back then. When my two sons saw it on TV they thought it was hysterical. I kept telling them, "It was SCARY when it was released, so shut up".
trueblue2007
(17,237 posts)This one with the PIG faces. i still can't stand it 50 years later
Twilight Zone Episode "Eye Of The Beholder" Clip - YouTube
Simon_Moon
(21 posts)My aunt took me and my cousin to see this flick. She was recently divorced and recently with the guy that would become her second husband, so I suppose it may have been his choice. For all I know they didn't have a clue. We also ran over a bunny on the way home. This is the only Bill Murray movie I've never seen at least twice.
LibinMo
(533 posts)The original, not the 1980 remake. I saw it in a theater. The scene with the girl in the dark basement swimming pool being stalked by a panther scared me to death. All you see is the big cat's shadow but it's more than enough.
My Dad took me to see The Thing From Another World when I was 10. It was the second scariest movie I saw as a child.