|
Post by DiBiase is Good on Apr 24, 2019 16:48:59 GMT -5
But we don’t have a PG-13 rating here, we now have the 12(a) rating. And even so, It has been re-rated several times and is still rated as a PG. The Goonies went up to a 12a and never came back down. And Gremlins is a 15 here. On topic, the evil ghosts in Ghost at the end freaked me out for years. But then so did the picture of Ren and the laugh at the end of Stimpys invention... IIRC, The Goonies going up to a 12 was entirely down to the scene at the beginning when one of the Fratelli brothers is hanging in his cell. Gremlins was re-rated here a few years back. It’s now a 12.
|
|
|
Post by Sir Woodrow on Apr 24, 2019 16:58:07 GMT -5
ET and My Girl, when I was like 3-4. That scene where ET is attacked by the bees still gets me
|
|
jagilki
Patti Mayonnaise
Nobody notices him; No, we noticed him
f*** Cancer
Posts: 33,594
|
Post by jagilki on Apr 24, 2019 21:57:37 GMT -5
Arachnophobia. I know it's more of a dark comedy, especially when John Goodman shows up. But having a real fear of spiders, and seeing how big and terrifying they can be...ugh. I've seen it a hundred times, but every time a spiders pops up, I get chills. I am like Jeff Daniels in the movie, I freeze when I see a spider. what I came to post
|
|
|
Post by Clint Bobski on Apr 25, 2019 7:16:58 GMT -5
Halloween The Shining Arachnophobia (Hate spiders) Ghostwatch (I know, not a movie but still) The Thing (Overcame it but still scared the life out of me) Ghostwatch is to this day a great piece of scary TV. I remember watching it when it was on and actually thinking for a bit it was documentary, until Craig Charles appeared.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 25, 2019 12:35:09 GMT -5
I have never had a more troubled feeling then after watching Requiem for a Dream and that includes any horror movie I have ever seen
|
|
|
Post by Sir Woodrow on Apr 25, 2019 14:54:10 GMT -5
I have never had a more troubled feeling then after watching Requiem for a Dream and that includes any horror movie I have ever seen Requiem for a Dream is a brilliant movie but I never need to see it a second time I had to watch a lot of goofy comedies for a week to erase what that movie did to me
|
|
|
Post by Hit Girl on Apr 25, 2019 15:57:38 GMT -5
Jaws
There's a three ton, 25 foot reason I don't go near the sea.
|
|
Bub (BLM)
Patti Mayonnaise
advocates duck on rodent violence
Fed. Up.
Posts: 37,742
|
Post by Bub (BLM) on Apr 25, 2019 16:37:52 GMT -5
None as an adult, but as a kid I was terrified of the Wicked Witch of the West (and Ms. Gulch for that matter). The accompanying music did not help. She was terrifying as a small kid.
|
|
Shark
Hank Scorpio
The world's only Samurai Ninja Pirate
Posts: 7,045
|
Post by Shark on Apr 25, 2019 19:10:07 GMT -5
The most recent It movie. When the headless child chases Ben around the library. That stuck with me for days especially when a week or so later, I was alone in the stock room of the store I work at and I heard foot steps and I know I was alone back there. I ran my ass right out of that stock room.
|
|
El Pollo Guerrera
Grimlock
His name has chicken in it, and he is good at makin' .gifs, so that's cool.
Status: Runner
Posts: 14,739
|
Post by El Pollo Guerrera on Apr 25, 2019 20:07:30 GMT -5
Halloween The Shining Arachnophobia (Hate spiders) Ghostwatch (I know, not a movie but still) The Thing (Overcame it but still scared the life out of me) Ghostwatch is to this day a great piece of scary TV. I remember watching it when it was on and actually thinking for a bit it was documentary, until Craig Charles appeared. He wasn't a character, though... he was there as a "guest star interviewer" as himself.
|
|
|
Post by Limity (BLM) on Apr 25, 2019 20:41:48 GMT -5
I have never had a more troubled feeling then after watching Requiem for a Dream and that includes any horror movie I have ever seen Requiem for a Dream is a brilliant movie but I never need to see it a second time Yes! That's exactly how I've described that movie for years. Not even Jennifer Connelly going ass to ass is enough to make me crack that movie open again. I've maintained that to keep kids from ever trying drugs, just have them watch this movie. Problem solved.
|
|
|
Post by Brandon Walsh is Insane. on Apr 25, 2019 21:00:20 GMT -5
The Large Marge story in Pee Wee's Big Adventure.
|
|
Rave
El Dandy
Perpetually Bored
Posts: 8,126
|
Post by Rave on Apr 26, 2019 0:56:11 GMT -5
The horse scene in The Brothers Grimm bothered the hell out of me.
Put me down for Requiem For a Dream as well. That movie is messed up.
|
|
agent817
Fry's dog Seymour
Doesn't Know Whose Ring It Is
Posts: 21,263
|
Post by agent817 on Apr 30, 2019 22:28:29 GMT -5
Another one I forgot to mention: Ghostbusters 2. Vigo towards the end. Janosz as the old lady with the stroller. The bit when all the ghosts run amok, especially the bit with the mink coat (That STILL gets me to this day). I was only 3 when I first saw it. I could only imagine how I would take it if I saw the first with the cab driver and when Dana gets dragged into the closet at that age. I was able to handle Ghostbusters 2 much better as I got older, though the mink coat bit still gives me the chills.
This one was mixed, as I didn't get nightmares, but I did think it was weird and unsettling: Judge Doom's revelation towards the end of Who Framed Roger Rabbit. The voice, the eyes, need I go on?
|
|
|
Post by Instant Classic on Apr 30, 2019 22:33:01 GMT -5
The Ring
|
|
|
Post by Clutchhausen on Apr 30, 2019 22:33:39 GMT -5
Awesome. I didn't think this thread would still be going! Thanks, guys. 😊
|
|
Chainsaw
T
A very BAD man.
It is what it is
Posts: 90,480
|
Post by Chainsaw on Apr 30, 2019 22:36:50 GMT -5
I forgot about another one. Twilight Zone: The Movie. The opening stinger. And pretty much the entirety of It's A Good Life. The rabbit was bad enough for me, but what got me was Anthony's sister who has been in an "accident". Haunts me to this day.
|
|
MiLB Fan
Fry's dog Seymour
Posts: 20,395
|
Post by MiLB Fan on May 1, 2019 1:38:07 GMT -5
Another one I forgot to mention: Ghostbusters 2. Vigo towards the end. Janosz as the old lady with the stroller. The bit when all the ghosts run amok, especially the bit with the mink coat (That STILL gets me to this day). I was only 3 when I first saw it. I could only imagine how I would take it if I saw the first with the cab driver and when Dana gets dragged into the closet at that age. I was able to handle Ghostbusters 2 much better as I got older, though the mink coat bit still gives me the chills. Same, although for me it was the scene with the severed heads in the subway tunnel. That growling voice saying Winston’s name and the heads appearing so suddenly made me leave the room anytime the movie got to that scene. As a kid, I thought the first Ghostbusters film was much scarier. Gozer’s voice is what did it for me, as well as the moment when she blasts the guys and they come so close to falling off the roof.
|
|
SmashTV
Dennis Stamp
Big Money, Big Prizes, I Love It!
The Excellence of Allocation
Posts: 4,490
|
Post by SmashTV on May 1, 2019 2:01:08 GMT -5
The Blair Witch Project. A friend and I read about a horror film coming out made up of ‘real life footage’, and pledged to not find out anything else about it. As such, I didn’t know it wasn’t real and spent the whole film thinking it was genuine footage. I couldn’t after seeing it as every time I closed my eyes all I could think of was the final shot of the guy facing the wall.
The following day I found out it wasn’t real, which, to be honest, was a huge relief as it meant I could sleep soundly in the future.
|
|
|
Post by The Tim Duncan Experience on May 1, 2019 2:22:57 GMT -5
First scary movie I watched was the first nightmare on elm street with my twin brother when I was 7. We laughed.
Around 3 years later my cousin ordered Wes Cravens a New Nightmare. I refused to sleep without the TV on. Lol I still do to this day though its cause of The Office and Netflix.
|
|