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  1. Sir Plebeians Top Horror Films's icon

    Sir Plebeians Top Horror Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:1. My personal favorites
  2. Sound On Sight: The Definitive Foreign Language Horror Films's icon

    Sound On Sight: The Definitive Foreign Language Horror Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. From the site: "English language film has long been a place for some of the greatest horror film directors of all time. All the way back to Alfred Hitchcock, we have seen the genre grow and develop sub-genres, thanks to the public’s ongoing thirst for fear and the possibility of danger around every turn. But, for every Saw or Hostel or terrible remake of classic English-language horror films, there are inventive, terrifying films made somewhere else that inspire and even outdo many of our best Western world horror films. This list will count down the fifty definitive horror films with a main language that isn’t English; some may have some English-language parts in them, but they are, for the most part, foreign. Enlighten yourself. Broaden your horizons. People can get murdered and tortured in every language."
  3. The 50 Best Horror Movies You've Never Seen's icon

    The 50 Best Horror Movies You've Never Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. In this 2014 TV special "50 lesser-known horror flicks hailed by critics and genre fans as "absolute must-sees" are given the spotlight with fun, engaging commentary from journalists, directors, actors and critics in a countdown like no other."
  4. The Best Of Horror's icon

    The Best Of Horror

    Favs/dislikes: 4:2. A list of the best horror movies, from slow-burning chillers to straight-up behind the sofa jumpers.
  5. Tiny Monster Related Horror Movies's icon

    Tiny Monster Related Horror Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Only tiny fantasy creatures. Movies with real animals (like insects, rats etc.) and dwarf-sized monsters (like Troll) are excluded.
  6. Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror (2018)'s icon

    Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror (2018)

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Vulture's chronological exploration of the 100 key films that shaped the evolution of the horror genre. Written by Jordan Crucchiola, with Bilge Ebiri, Angelica Jade Bastién, Brittney-Jade Colangelo, Kalyn Corrigan, Michael Gingold, Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, April Wolfe, and Mark H. Harris.
  7. Watch Mojo: Top 10 Horror Movies per Decade's icon

    Watch Mojo: Top 10 Horror Movies per Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The Top 10 Horror Movies per decade, 1920s-1950s to 2000s, per WatchMojo.com. From these lists, WatchMojo named the "Top 10 Horror Movies of All Time": 1. Psycho 2. The Exorcist 3. The Shining 4. Halloween 5. Dracula 6. Night of the Living Dead 7. A Nightmare on Elm Street 8. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 9. Rosemary's Baby 10. Friday the 13th
  8. Wes Craven Filmography's icon

    Wes Craven Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Wes Craven's filmography
  9. You Wanna See Something Really Scary? A 365 Day Guide to Must See Horror Films's icon

    You Wanna See Something Really Scary? A 365 Day Guide to Must See Horror Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The filmography of the book by W.P. Spence. You Wanna See Something Really Scary? is a 365 day crash course in horror films. One film a day, viewed and reviewed, to turn the average Joe into Mighty Joe Horror. Full of the monsters, madness, blood, guts, screams, bad dreams, slices, dices, thrills and chills that make Horror the greatest genre in film, this book has it all. You'll scream in terror through the classics of yesteryear, the golden years of horror, the rise of the slasher and the new wave of gore. You'll gasp in fright at the heroes of horror, the actors, scream queens, special effects wizards and creature creators. And you'll clutch your heart at the nightmares on the screen, created by some of the greatest writers and directors in film history. So enter, if you dare.
  10. 20 Recent Horror Movies Based on Actual Medical Conditions's icon

    20 Recent Horror Movies Based on Actual Medical Conditions

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. From masterpieces to obscure splatter films, the horror genre has always preyed upon the weaknesses of the human mind. Whether it’s the monster under the bed or the monster next door, most horror films share a common currency: fear and its more popular form of exchange, anxiety. However, there are certain titles that manage to refine this formula and, instead of relying only on supernatural antagonists and murderous maniacs, follow the more intricate paths of psychology and psychiatry. The list next contains a series of recent films that manage to trade their characters’ psychological and sometimes physical wellness for a copious amount of fear. While these movies might feature their own dose of supernatural, the classical horror recipe is not their strong point. Also, most of these productions will cast doubt either on their characters’ sanity or the viewer’s. We went for titles that came out during the past three years and intentionally left out the classics, including Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining and highlights from the 2000’s such as Identity or Frailty. Also note that this list does not contain any actual plot spoilers, but it might “spoil” the thrills you’d eventually get from discovering some of these movies’ key characters.
  11. All Horror Movies 1960 - 1969's icon

    All Horror Movies 1960 - 1969

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. 50 most popular horror movies for each year 1960 - 1969
  12. CultMovieForum's The 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever's icon

    CultMovieForum's The 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. "Back in the summer of 2006 I started a poll aimed at finding the 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever. Votes were tabulated, I stalled,stalled some more then stalled a bit longer but finally here we are! I think you will agree this is a fantastic Top 100 representing horror and exploitation cinema in all its forms. Thanks once again to everyone who took time out to vote. "
  13. Gary Gerani's Top 100 Horror Movies's icon

    Gary Gerani's Top 100 Horror Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. The 100 best horror movies according to Gary Gerani in his book [url=http://www.amazon.com/Top-Horror-Movies-Gary-Gerani/dp/1600107079]Top 100 Horror Movies[/url]
  14. gorehounds 15 Must See Horror Films (2000's)'s icon

    gorehounds 15 Must See Horror Films (2000's)

    Favs/dislikes: 5:1. A personal list of must see horror flicks in no particular order. Mostly newer horror I'm not getting into the classics.
  15. Horrorshows's icon

    Horrorshows

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. A list compiled from the entries in Gene Wright's 1986 book, Horrorshows: An A-to-Z of Horror in Film, Radio and Theater. The entries below are found in the following chapters: Crazies and Freaks: 1-70 Mad Scientists: 71-155 Monsters: 156-224 Cataclysmic Disasters: 225-271 Ghouls: 272-285 Ghosts, Demons and Witches: 286-363 Vampires: 364-439 Mummies: 440-453 Werewolves and Other Shape-Shifters: 454-494 Zombies: 495-524 Splatter: 525-549 Anthologies: 550-565 Television and radio programs are also showcased, along with theatrical productions. Those warranting their own entries in the volume are given below: Television: The Addams Family (1964-1966) Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1965) [includes The Alfred Hitchcock Hour] Circle of Fear (1973) [renamed from Ghost Story] Dark Shadows (1966-1971) The Evil Touch (1973-1974) Ghost Story (1972) [renamed to Circle of Fear] King Kong (1966-1969) Kolchak: the Night Stalker (1974-1975) Lights Out (1949-1952) The Monster Squad (1976-1977) Mr. and Mrs. Dracula (1980) The Munsters (1964-1966) Night Gallery (1970-1973) One Step Beyond (1959-1961) The Outer Limits (1963-1965) The Sixth Sense (1972) Struck By Lightning (1979) Suspense (1949-1954) Tales of the unexpected (1977) Tales of Tomorrow (1951-1953) Thriller (1960-1962) The Twilight Zone (1959-1964) Radio: Escape (1947-1954) Everyman's Theater (1940-1941) The Hermit's Cave (1930-1944) I Love a Mystery (1939-1944) Inner Sanctum Mystery (1941-1952) Lights Out (1934-1947) The Mercury Theatre on the Air (1938) The Mysterious Traveler (1943-1952) Peter Quill (1940-1941) The Shadow (1931-1954) Stay Tuned for Terror (1944-1945?) The Strange Dr. Weird (1944-1945) Superstition (1943-1946) Suspense (1942-1962) Theatrical Productions: Carmilla (1976) Dracula (1924) Frankenstein (1981) Television Episodes Frankenstein (Wide World of Mystery season 1, episodes 2 & 3, January 16-17, 1973) Night Gallery (Pilot episode, November 8, 1969)
  16. Movies & TV Shows I've Seen's icon

    Movies & TV Shows I've Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 5:9. A list of all the movies I have seen (that I remember...) and TV shows - if a TV show is checked, it means I've watched every season of that particular show. Thanks for checking my list out!
  17. Terror moderno e inédito's icon

    Terror moderno e inédito

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. 30 terror movies of the decade of the 00's by Spanish magazine "Dirigido"
  18. "The Top 66 Zombie Films of All Time" - 2016 Edition's icon

    "The Top 66 Zombie Films of All Time" - 2016 Edition

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. The list of Top 66 Zombie Films of All Time, taken from 'Zombies: The Ultimate Celebration' 2016
  19. top 50 Zombie movies's icon

    top 50 Zombie movies

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. BRAİİİİİNSSSSSSSSS!!!@@
  20. TSZDT: The 50 Greatest Horror Films Directed by Women's icon

    TSZDT: The 50 Greatest Horror Films Directed by Women

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Out of the 7,195 films that have been nominated at least once, only 212 of those are directed by women. 30 are co-directed by women and men. In the top 1000, there are only 13 films directed by women (+ 1 co-production). Some of these are anthologies that have at least one segment directed by a woman. This list is a top 50 of all films directed and co-directed by women.
  21. Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror's icon

    Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. From Frankenstein to Freddy, the movie moments that formed the genre (and our nightmares).[Vulture]
  22. 50 Bad Taste Movies's icon

    50 Bad Taste Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 6:3. The movie world is littered with any number of controversial films. But the real jaw-dropping moments come from the most disgusting, morally vacuous and downright bad taste movies around - here's our Top 50.
  23. BEST Horror Comedies EVER's icon

    BEST Horror Comedies EVER

    Favs/dislikes: 6:1.
  24. BFI: A great horror film from every year, from 1922 to now (2022)'s icon

    BFI: A great horror film from every year, from 1922 to now (2022)

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. A century of malevolent masterpieces. One film per year. 28 October 2022 By Anton Bitel, Michael Blyth, Anna Bogutskaya, Katherine McLaughlin, Kelly Robinson, Matthew Thrift, Kelli Weston, Samuel Wigley Horror cinema didn’t begin in 1922. There were ghosts in the machine as early as 1896, when the medium’s early magus, Georges Méliès, packed a giant bat, the Devil, various phantoms and a final vanquishing by crucifix into a spooky three minutes. Adaptations of gothic classics, such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and the short stories of Edgar Allan Poe, were already fixtures on the screen by the 1910s – and by 1920 the feature-length horror film wasn’t a scary kid anymore. Alongside a polished Hollywood version of Jekyll and Hyde, those German expressionist lodestones The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and The Golem marked the macabre coming of age of a genre that wanted to frighten, disgust and haunt us. But as In Dreams Are Monsters, our autumn celebration of horror, takes place in the centenary year of both F.W. Murnau’s unofficial Dracula adaptation Nosferatu and Benjamin Christensen’s witchy pseudo-documentary Häxan, 1922 seemed the ideal place to begin our year-by-year rundown of frighteners. Why year by year? Because it’s a better way to plumb the dark corners of horror’s cinematic history than a straightforward top 100. Selecting just one film per year leaves you with some nightmarish decisions for vintage years like 1960 – Psycho, Peeping Tom, Eyes Without a Face or Black Sunday? – and 1973, when December alone saw the release of The Exorcist and a double bill (!) of Don’t Look Now and The Wicker Man. And who really, for 1954, wants to pit Godzilla against the Creature from the Black Lagoon? Yet by travelling through the history of horror a year at a time, we can get a sense of the evolution of the genre – the strange, contorting, lycanthropic process by which we arrive at the fertile market we’re living in today. Bad moons rise, and purple patches come and go: the arrival of Universal’s gothic monster cycle and Hammer; the birth of the modern zombie movie and the slasher; the shots in the arm of J-horror and – though let’s not call them that – the ‘elevated horrors’ of the 2010s. But the journey also takes us through some barren terrain when either censorship took the fun out of the genre (the late 1930s) or audiences simply seemed to lose their thirst for it (the late 1940s and early 1950s). Even on these wind-blasted heaths, however, gems are to be found. Before we get started, an arbitrary ground rule: we’ve omitted any horror films appearing on the IMDb top 250 list on the grounds of over-familiarity. So no Psycho, The Exorcist, Jaws (1975), Alien (1979), The Shining (1980), The Thing (1982) or The Silence of the Lambs (1991). The internet already knows and loves these films. We do too. But in picking over the carcass of a century of terror, we just wanted to keep things fresh. – Samuel Wigley
  25. Darkweb Online's Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time's icon

    Darkweb Online's Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0.
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