YouTubeI saw The Void recently, which was a great throwback to the body horror Carpenter era and utilizes fantastic gore and creature effects. Characters could've been more well rounded but an otherwise really enjoyable homage to the golden era of horror.To answer the OP:-The Thing (possibly my favourite horror of all time)-Day of the Dead-28 Days Later-REC-Hellraiser-The Fly-An American Werewolf in London-The Witch
Quote from: 🅱️egone thots on May 04, 2017, 06:16:32 PMYouTubeI saw The Void recently, which was a great throwback to the body horror Carpenter era and utilizes fantastic gore and creature effects. Characters could've been more well rounded but an otherwise really enjoyable homage to the golden era of horror.To answer the OP:-The Thing (possibly my favourite horror of all time)-Day of the Dead-28 Days Later-REC-Hellraiser-The Fly-An American Werewolf in London-The WitchThe Witch is unbelievably good. Is The Fly actually good? I have trouble taking Jeff Goldblum seriously in anything.
If you have an affinity for body horror, yeah. I would say about 50% of the film is standard neurotic Goldblum acting and the other half is pure body horror.
Quote from: 🅱️egone thots on May 04, 2017, 06:28:10 PMIf you have an affinity for body horror, yeah. I would say about 50% of the film is standard neurotic Goldblum acting and the other half is pure body horror.I think that's my least preferred method of horror. Event Horizon is relatively tame, but I'd say it's right about where my tolerance lies. Stuff like Attack on Titan is really unnerving for me because of that content. I prefer more psychological horror.
Quote from: Sovereign Citizen Kane on May 04, 2017, 06:32:14 PMQuote from: 🅱️egone thots on May 04, 2017, 06:28:10 PMIf you have an affinity for body horror, yeah. I would say about 50% of the film is standard neurotic Goldblum acting and the other half is pure body horror.I think that's my least preferred method of horror. Event Horizon is relatively tame, but I'd say it's right about where my tolerance lies. Stuff like Attack on Titan is really unnerving for me because of that content. I prefer more psychological horror.Really? I feel like that's where the impact of horror is kind of underutilized. I recognise the effect psychological horror can have on people but they really just don't do it for me. I can enjoy films like the Shining or The Blair Witch Project for what they are but they hardly disturb/frighten me, and a good majority of the subgenre has me disengaged throughout.Body horror is where it's at famalam.
the only horror film i'd recommend that you've no doubt already seen is the babadook