Showing posts with label eerie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eerie. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

What Scares Me! What Scares You?

This was a post I originally did for a Friday the 13th in March of 2009. It is suitable for Halloween, as well, so I am re-posting. Below the post, I am adding the comments from back then and I hope to get more comments about what scares you!

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Okay, so I am one who likes being scared. Love horror movies, love creepy stuff. Like that feeling of eeriness you get from a good scare. So, here are 13 things that creep me out. I am sure there are more, but these are the ones that came to the top of my mind, so they have obviously had a lasting effect. I am not saying these movies or shows are the scariest, most unnerving things out there, but these are just parts that stuck out, to me.

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1) The way Michael Myers watches Laurie in HALLOWEEN. There are a bunch of instances in this film: the scene after she drops off the key at his old house and walks away and he steps out onto the sidewalk to watch her; the scene in the school when she sees him outside the window; the scene in her backyard standing amidst the drying laundry. Not to mention when only Laurie spots him near the hedge on their walk home from school. CREEPY!

This is also done to great effect in HALLOWEEN 5: THE REVENGE OF MICHAEL MYERS - there is a scene, where the teens are in the park and talking and in the background you can see Michael, wandering around some trees. He isn't so much as hiding as just staying slightly obscured. Creepy! And the scene where Rachel is showering and what-not, and Michael is in the house, as well. I bet this scene can still scare people who are home... "alone".


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2) The scene in JEEPERS CREEPERS where they are driving past the old church and see the Creeper dumping something in the pipe. What creeps me out here is when HE LOOKS BACK AT THEM! Something about evil being there but unaware of your presence is so much better than when evil looks at you and says "Oh, I see you, too..."

(the first 45 seconds here are the creepiest part)


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3) The same feeling plays into the very creepy X-FILES episode "Home". I think the scene towards the beginning, when Mulder and Scully are examining the ball field and they are told about the Peacock family and they look over to see the three men on their porch, watching the agents themselves. So much about this episode is wrong (in a good way), but the fact that those disturbed, bizarre, homicidal creeps were right there out in the daylight was scary stuff.


(I see you on the porch! Knock it off!!!)

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4) Clowns, to me, have lost that lovin' feeling. But that damn creepy clown doll from POLTERGEIST? Ugh, who in their right mind would give this to a kid, even before this movie came out? Just so wrong and such a nightmare inducer. I would never have just left it sitting on a shelf to watch me sleep at night. That fucker would have been locked up tight, preferably in another room. In another house.


(Bet you look under your bed tonight!)

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5) The scene in FRIDAY THE 13TH: PART II where Ginny and Paul are in the cabin and the lights are out. When Ginny says "There's someone in this room!" and Jason is there, quietly waiting in the dark. THIS is why grown people can be afraid of the dark - there might be a once-dead-but-now-alive-with-a-sack-on-his-head-irrational-killer in the corner. Also in this movie, when Ginny is in Jason's shack and she peers out and see Jason running towards her. Holy momma! Where the flip can she go? There are only two rooms, and we KNOW what Ginny finds behind door number two.


(OF COURSE a dude with a sack on his head lives here.)

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6) The original THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE is scary stuff, especially when I first saw it as a wee lad. But there is one scene that always freaks me out. When Kirk enters the house and Leatherface just appears and whacks him. Before you know it, the door is shut and Kirk is just GONE. What just happened? The fact that something so unexpected and horrific can occur so damn quickly... Well, it just goes to show you why you should stay the hell OUT of strange farmhouses in the country. The fact that they made an actual toy/collectible of this scene tells me I am not alone in this feeling.


(The kicking legs make it all the worse.)

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7) It may not hold the same punch these days, when everyone has a cell phone, but the 70s film WHEN A STRANGER CALLS was seriously creepy in it's time. The 'calls coming from inside the house' scare was something babysitters (and loners) feared already and this movie just made them jump up and say "SEE??? I TOLD you it could happen!!!" The very different sequel WHEN A STRANGER CALLS BACK has a semi-creepy scene, when that movie's killer hides himself right in the woman's apartment - by painting himself to match her brick wall and just standing still.


(Carol Kane, your eyes speak volumes. So perfect for horror flicks.)

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8) The flying monkeys in THE WIZARD OF OZ. They are creepy in their own right, with their bizarre monkey/human hybrid faces and expressions of perpetual glee - which they shouldn't have. But, what puts them over the top are their little coordinated outfits! Holy buckets! The witch was evil, but this just proves the bitch was bat-shit crazy! She spends her off time making matching outfits for her band of flying monkeys?! Run, Dorothy, run!!!


(WHY would you even own this picture? And the dude got it signed!)

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9) The Oompa Loompas from the original WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY. They were like midgets but not, with odd colored skin and green hair and strange white jumpsuits and... they were helpers from hell, is what they were. ONLY Wonka would be okay with living and working with these bizarre and unsettling little men. The Oompa Loompas from the remake were odd, but not stay-the-fuck-away-from-me odd.


(STOP looking at me!)

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10) This albino dude from FOUL PLAY, the 70s movie with Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase.


I don't remember much about the movie, but he scared the CRAP out of me when I was a kid. Anytime I saw this movie in the TV Guide I would look away for something else. I couldn't watch it again cause I knew I would see him. Turns out he was an actor named William Frankfather and he WASN'T really an albino. Don't care, really, as he has haunted my brain for decades now.

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11) The old 70s show IN SEARCH OF, with Leonard Nimoy. Hot damn, this show freaked me out. Bigfoot, the Loch Ness monster, aliens, heck - even Amelia Earhart and her disappearance scared me. But it was all because of the combination of fear and mystery and the unknown they infused into each episode. From the eerie music to Nimoy's normal-yet-scary-uncle narration, I was scared spitless.


(Could have done a show on missing socks - I would have been petrified.)

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12) This creepy, creepy, CREEPY picture. It just gives me the willies. I have lost the image twice over the years (probably subconciously deleted it) and had to search the 'net for it, never recalling what to actually use as search terms. "Creepy midget", "Scariest dwarf", "What the fuck?".


I finally remembered something about him being arrested, so I searched for "arrested midget" and wham-o! As soon as I saw it, I jumped and aged another year. Great googly moogly ... I don't know if it is real or not, but frankly it doesn't matter. It freaks the ever-loving-beejebus out of me. I would jump up into Michael Myers arms for safety and tell him to high-tail it to Jason's shack if I was confronted with this alleged "peeping tom". Can you even IMAGINE seeing him looking in your window? I would move to a place with one entrance, no widows. And then blind myself.

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13) Okay, the peeping tom midget IS less scary than one thing:


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Comments on original post:
  1. Hey, the midget might be a really nice guy!

    Good list, I'd add Danny Glick tapping at the window in Salem's Lot. And the looming hag from the original House on Haunted Hill...
  2. You are probably one of the funniest writers ever! You crack me up. I didn't know you liked coffee that much. :)
  3. Great idea, Wings..
    I'm so glad I'm not the only person creeped out by the oompa loompas. They seriously gave me nightmares as a kid. The most horrible scene in that entire movie is when they roll away the little girl who has blown up into a giant blueberry. For a kid with separation anxiety, that was absolutely terrifying!
    The one thing that still creeps me out - statues, especially religious ones.
  4. AMAZING list here, Wings! If I may add possessed elderly people crawling on ceilings (Exorcist III). That movie just plain bothers me.

    Prediction: I will have night terrors and wake up crying like a schoolgirl due to your midget picture.
  5. Can you try to lose that midget pic again!? You've just scarred me for life...

    Great list.
  6. Found you through "Theme Thursday". I love this post and it's funny because we all have creepy moments from old movies. I have three from my Boomer childhood:

    "Beast With Five Fingers" about a concert pianist whose hand is cut off and the hand takes revenge by hand walking about and killing people. Five or six when I first saw it on television; I'd been locked in a room by my older playmates who wanted me to watch it and be scared. I was. I am.

    "Outer Limits" tv show had an episode about a spacecraft of criminals from another planet sent into exile and they land on earth.
    They turn out to be robotic looking bugs who climb out of the space craft and crawl up people and kill them. I have an image of these things overwhelming someone and just taking him down!

    Alfred Hitchcock Presents "The Jar" I think was the name of this particular episode from his old tv series about a jar containing some globby blobby looking mass with an eyeball. Don't know if they ever figured out what it was but that eyeball in the jar haunted me for years.
  7. A solid list, but a lack of those moments when a character has their back to you, and you just know it's "not them" or some shit. For whatever reason, that scares me more than anything. Hence, I suggest the ending to Don't Look Now, and Psycho. Blair Witch would fall into that category too. Just in terms in skin crawling fear, rather than those cheap "jump" moments (which are also scary and fun in their own way).

    Yes indeed, Freud would have a field day with these responses...
  8. hahaha ~ Great list Wings! :-)
  9. As a fan of horror films I often pause and think to myself: “Why do the theaters get polluted weekly with generic, ham fisted, and worst of all boring horror films ?
  10. You know what creeped me out? The ending of The Blair Witch Project, when the dude's standing in the corner. For a second, I thought the film was going to scare me, but then it ended. I was pissed.

  11. mb ITS NOT THE SCARIEST MOVIE--BUT THE SCENE WHERE THE DETECTIVE PUTS HER HAND UNDER THE BED IN THE ALPHABET KILLER MADE ME LITERALLY JUMP AND MY HEART STARTED POUNDING!!!! I WAS REALLY NOT EXPECTING THIS PART AT ALL--THATS ALL ILL SAY!

    So - What scares you?

Thursday, October 11, 2012

A Coincidental Ghost


Let me preface this piece: I do not believe in ghosts.

A few weeks ago, I was walking with a couple of dogs, Eva and Izzie, on a quiet New England road. Over a year ago, the older brother to these sisters was killed in a car accident. Diego had been a companion to the older sister, Eva, for about a year at the time of his death. Several months later, she was paired up with her younger sister, Izzie.

When we walk, I am always amazed at how these two dogs do almost everything in sync. If one catches some scent, the other quickly catches the same scent and both noses head in the same direction, sniffing the same trail. If they hear a noise, both heads turn toward it, simultaneously. If they spot a chipmunk or a bird, both dart after it. Simple, I know. But amazing to watch.

On the day I mentioned, Izzie was following the scent of something in the leaves. To my surprise, I noticed Eva had stopped behind me. I turned and saw her standing, staring across the street and into a neighbor's yard. My gaze followed hers.

In this yard stood a dog who could have been a twin to the older brother she lost. He was the same size and coloring as Diego. In fact, the resemblance was just astounding. He stood, watching her, watching us. He didn't run up to the edge of the property, barking and warning us away as most dogs do when we walk by. He merely stood, away from the street, watching us.

Eva stood watching him, as well. She didn't rush to the end of her leash. Her fur didn't go up along her back. She just stood there. Izzie paid no heed to this moment, continuing to sniff something out in the leaves.

Eventually, I prodded the dogs along and we continued on our walk. Almost instantaneously, the sisters were back in sync, walking as a pair, this strange dog forgotten.

We have walked this road for about a year now, and I had never seen this neighbor's dog before that day. And I have not seen this dog again in the days that have followed.

As I said at the beginning of this piece, I do not believe in ghosts or an after life, for dogs or humans alike.

But the strangeness of this moment, the way aspects of it were just amazingly coincidental and particular to our situation, show me why it is very easy for others to believe in such things as visits from beyond the grave.

All I can say is form your own opinion.

(If you want to read about Diego, read my previous post here.)

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

C'Thlu Thlu by Caravan

I was introduced to this song last year and it has just grown on me.

So eerie, spooky and unsettling...

Give it a listen, lyrics below to follow,
since the video is just a still of the album cover.


C'Thlu Thlu

by Caravan

From the forest down below
Came a voice that cried "no"
Something seemed nearly dead
Making me feel so cold
Even the trees seemed to fear
There was something unreal
Couldn't see very far
And the sky had gone dark

So we ran, yeah, as fast as we can
Only thought to get away
On and on we didn't know where we'd gone
If it was night or day
"Come back", I can hear a voice call
I can feel it pulling me down
In my head it felt like something had said
You better slow down
But I tried so hard not to make a sound
Feeling better I turned round
And coming up behind me I could see...

Like shadows in the trees
They came creeping unknown
Keeping close through the ground
I can feel them tramp on
Saw the music they knew
We were somewhere close by
They began to crowd us in
Sinkin' deeper in pain

So we ran, yeah, as fast as we can
Only thought to get away
On and on we didn't know where we'd gone
If it was night or day
"Come back", I can hear a voice call
I can feel it pulling me down
In my head it felt like something had said
You better slow down
But I tried so hard not to make a sound
Feeling better I turned round
And coming up behind me I could see...

Friday, October 7, 2011

Dark Mansions

Yesterday, in my post of Halloween-themed pics, I posted a few "haunted houses". They got me thinking about an old TV movie.

Greystone Mansion, used as the estate in the film


Dark Mansions was a pilot for a proposed TV series, however it was never picked up and instead aired as a one-time ABC TV movie on August 23, 1986.

The show was an Aaron Spelling-Douglas S. Cramer production and was written by Anthony Lawrence, Nancy Lawrence and Robert McCullough, produced by McCullough and Jerry London and directed by London.

The telefilm starred veteran actress Joan Fontaine, Linda Purl, Michael York, Melissa Sue Anderson, Nicollette Sheridan, Grant Aleksander and Lois Chiles.

The plot: Shellane Victor (Purl) is hired to write a book about a wealthy ship-building family, the Drakes. At the family's estate in Oregon she finds that she is a dead ringer for a long-deceased member of the family. Soon, strange things begin to happen that mirror the events that lead to the previous woman's death. Will Shellane fall victim as well?

I remember the very day I watched this, way back in 1986. I had been looking forward to it, as it had sounded to me like a supernatural spin on Dynasty or Dallas, which were very big at the time. The day it was to air, I had gone to my grandmother's house with my mom. As the afternoon wore on, all the adults were making plans to go to Jai Alai or the dog track, something like that. I stayed behind at my grandmother's very rural home. It was no "dark mansion", but it was a bit creepy being there alone.

Watching the movie on her small, portable television set wasn't the best, picture-wise, but the whole experience added a level of eeriness to the show that it might otherwise have lacked. I remember liking it, but it only ever aired this one time and was gone, a footnote in television history.

I have found at least one not-very-positive review for the movie online, but there is virtually nothing else available for it. No pics, no videos, just a short clip of Anderson and Aleksander from the film. It truly is one of those forgotten, brief moments in TV land.

Anyone else remember Dark Mansions?

Friday, October 16, 2009

Halloween Month: Tales of the Frightened with Karloff

Today I am showcasing the eerie uploads at the YouTube channel of "monster4josh"

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First off, "Tales of the Frightened" Vol. I from 1963 with Boris Karloff















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And "Tales of the Frightened" Vol. II, also from 1963 and with Boris Karloff













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Creepy, spooky fun!

For more scary stuff, check out "monster4josh's" YouTube channel!

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Turner Classic Movies has a Boris Karloff Marathon on October 30th!

and

Click the pic below to learn about the upcoming Boris Karloff Blogathon!





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Friday, October 2, 2009

Halloween Month: Horrifically Good Websites

Some great Halloween/Horror sites on the Net. Enjoy!

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Want to listen to some Halloween Radio?





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Here's a list of horror films, their sequels and remakes:

Horror: Sequel,sequel,sequel and of course Remake

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A Dark Celebration of Halloween

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Monster Rally is a great site that almost daily posts extensive links to horror, Halloween, movies, TV - whatever they can find that appeals to side of us that likes to be scared!

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Famous Monsters of Filmland is back! Created in 1958 by sci-fi and horror aficionado Forrest J Ackerman, the magazine captured the imaginations of countless fans, including some of today’s most iconic storytellers and entertainers.

Phil Kim obtained the trademark to the legendary Famous Monsters of Filmland. With the blessings of the original editor-in-chief, Forrest J. Ackerman (aka Dr. Acula), FM is poised to recapture the hearts and imagination of the core fans and new fans alike.

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The U.K. Telegraph has a list of 10 Most Creepy Things on the Web

I did a post on their #1 here. # 4 is also pretty damn weird.

And here is their #5:



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Zombos' Closet of Horror

Reviews, views, and interviews on the horror genre, including movies, comics, and books.

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If it has to do with horror, then you can find it at:





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I have spotlighted it here before, but PARA Abnormal is a great site.

Para Abnormal

They are also doing a 31 Days of Halloween!

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A Patchwork of Flesh is an on-going art project collecting submitted versions of the Frankenstein Monster.

I submitted this one earlier this year:



Send in your own!

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Like General Mills' Monster Cereals? Then you will love this site:





Count Chocula, Franken Berry and Boo-Berry Monster Cereals Will Rise Again!

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Obscure Hollow showcases haunted and vintage aesthetics in films, photography of home collections and other strange discoveries of old time past.

Yesterday, they did a post of stills from "Hellowe'en", an episode of my favorite show, "Friday the 13th: The Series"!

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Looking to make something scary?





The Monsterlist of Halloween Projects is the most complete collection of links to pages with do-it-yourself projects on them that I know of. These are not your little kids Halloween crafts, every scary devious seriously spooky prop and project designed for truly scaring people is listed here. Most importantly, the list is checked periodically for accuracy.

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About.com has sections on all subjects, and Mark H. Harris is in charge of the Horror & Suspense site, always great.

One of the best things about it: A weekly updated, day-by-day listing of horror movies airing on TV.

I check this out daily, to find something creepy to watch or DVR for future viewing. VERY HANDY!

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And last, but by no means least:





Everyone participating is promising daily posts of Halloween goodness!

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Halloween Month is just beginning!

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