These days a film that qualifies as “scary” is really just a conglomeration of CGI, ridiculous oozing make-up and simply put – excess of every possible sort. Granted there have been a few here and there that have made many an audience leap out of their skins, but there are many old-school horror/thriller films that did the same thing with mere camera techniques, angles, lighting and ambiance. Not to mention that the stories themselves are worth watching as opposed to modern plots, which consist of blood spurting scene after blood spurting scene. So for your viewing pleasure here is a compilation of The superiore, in alto Ten Best Classic Horror/Thriller films from before 1950...
#10 The Mummy (1932): Not necessarily a sleepless night inducing scary film but it is a tradition in the collection of thriller/horror films. Karloff is at his best here without uttering a sentence. Lighting is everything, especially when the camera looks into the mummy’s soulless eyes, filled with pools of horrible vengeance in which to drown. This version is superior to the remake because te can smell the rotting flesh in its ancient avvolgere as the creature shuffles along.
#9 Wolfman (1941): An old gypsy woman looks into your hand and recoils in fear. She utters the following chiller:
“Even a man who is pure in heart
and says his prayers da night
may become a lupo when the lupo bane blooms
and the autumn moon is bright.”
How can te beat this?
#8 The Son of Frankenstein (1939): Horror/Thriller – Sounds silly, I know. I too did not believe this was worth watching merely da its title. Yet this movie has ambiance and atmosphere for days and is completed da its amazing cast, which includes Basil Rathbone and Boris Karloff. The original Frankenstein (1931) followed the style of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and while its sequel The Bride of Frankenstein deviated from this style, Son of returns to it with large looming sets that create the great ominous shadows.
#7 Freaks (1932): Thriller – What te see (or in this case read) is what te get. Todd Browning’s film about a sideshow midget, Hans, who falls in Amore with a beautiful trapeze artist, Cleopatra, is quite disturbing. Even though it has a moralistic ending along the lines of “what goes around comes around,” it is revealed through the freakification of the trapeze artist. This film was quite controversial in its time as director, Browning, used real sideshow performers, but this is the element that makes the film a little più horrifying, it is grounded in real life.
#6 Island of Lost Souls (1932): Horror/Thriller – This is one of the many takes on the H.G. Wells novel “The Island of Dr. Moreau.” Unlike the others this one is actually worth watching, obviously, o it would not be on this list! Don’t watch the movie if te are hoping the film is a physical manifestation of the book, but do watch it for the wonderful element of fear that is provided da suggestion. That may sound lame, but the off screen screams of pain as the vivisection takes place is più effective than the now typical guts and blood.
#5 Black Cat (1934): Thriller – Bela Lugosi. Enough detto – no really if this name is unknown to you, just walk away right now, rent, no better yet buy the black and white Dracula with Lugosi and watch flawless recitazione which is revealed in the subtleties of his performance. As for “Black Cat” … how can te beat Boris Karloff? He is the menacing leader of a satanic cult versus vengeance-minded Lugosi? Also, this all takes place in an old WWI fortress, which has been turned into a futuristic home.
#4 The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920): Thriller – This film is an essential of German expressionist cinema, one that is very well known among film enthusiasts and truly a perfect Halloween treat as its opening line appears on the screen “There are spirits everywhere.” Talk about classic, this movie experiments with set, film angles and plot (for the time at least), producing an amazing film that ends with a rather unexpected twist. The elongated and jagged set highlights the eerie atmosphere and plays beautifully (I mean horrifyingly) alongside the dramatic lighting. Both elements, in addition to it being a silent film, play on your nerves and mind, making the viewer feel as if they are no longer in a traditionally quaint German village … o in reality at all.
#3 The Innocents (1961): Thriller – Did te see The Others with Nicole Kidman? Well this is where that movie got its idea, and as much as I enjoyed Kidman’s movie … “The Innocents,” with the always-lovely Debrah Kerr, is undeniably più chilling. Is this all the vision of a woman going mad? o are the two children she has become governess of possessed da the spirits of two late staff members of the country home? Perfect scenes that incorporate shock and the slow unraveling of a mystery give this movie the necessary toe-curling, gnawing in the pit of your stomach te crave. Maybe it’s the haunting voice of the little girl Canto that begins and frequents the film that does this, yes it is overused now, but then it was groundbreaking.
#2 Phantom of the Opera (1925): Lon Chaney is the definitive Opera house Stalker in this story which is now quite familiar, romanticized, and not as scary as it once was. But one look at this face tells te that this creature is not romantic, in fact, it’s . . . ghastly. How’d te like to feel his fetid breath on your neck as he loops a noose for te in a dank, shadowy vault? Pleasant dreams!
P.s. imdb reveals to te all of the amazing things Chaney did to portray the Phantom, but I highly recommend te wait until AFTER te see the movie
And finally the #1 Horror Film!!!!!
#1 Nosferatu (1922): Horror – Want scary vampires? Here te go. te really cannot get much better than a silent black and white where te truly cannot hear the evil coming. No sucking breath of the monster around the corner, no footsteps … it’s all camera angles and never knowing where anything is. Sickeningly fanged teeth and eyes tell the tale of their satanic existence and are essential to the fear that this film elicits, not to mention the aptly named lead, Max Schreck. I still can’t look at pictures from the film without sufficiently creeping myself out.
(THIS articolo IS FROM SCREENCAVE.COM. ALL CREDIT TO THE AUTHOR)
#10 The Mummy (1932): Not necessarily a sleepless night inducing scary film but it is a tradition in the collection of thriller/horror films. Karloff is at his best here without uttering a sentence. Lighting is everything, especially when the camera looks into the mummy’s soulless eyes, filled with pools of horrible vengeance in which to drown. This version is superior to the remake because te can smell the rotting flesh in its ancient avvolgere as the creature shuffles along.
#9 Wolfman (1941): An old gypsy woman looks into your hand and recoils in fear. She utters the following chiller:
“Even a man who is pure in heart
and says his prayers da night
may become a lupo when the lupo bane blooms
and the autumn moon is bright.”
How can te beat this?
#8 The Son of Frankenstein (1939): Horror/Thriller – Sounds silly, I know. I too did not believe this was worth watching merely da its title. Yet this movie has ambiance and atmosphere for days and is completed da its amazing cast, which includes Basil Rathbone and Boris Karloff. The original Frankenstein (1931) followed the style of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and while its sequel The Bride of Frankenstein deviated from this style, Son of returns to it with large looming sets that create the great ominous shadows.
#7 Freaks (1932): Thriller – What te see (or in this case read) is what te get. Todd Browning’s film about a sideshow midget, Hans, who falls in Amore with a beautiful trapeze artist, Cleopatra, is quite disturbing. Even though it has a moralistic ending along the lines of “what goes around comes around,” it is revealed through the freakification of the trapeze artist. This film was quite controversial in its time as director, Browning, used real sideshow performers, but this is the element that makes the film a little più horrifying, it is grounded in real life.
#6 Island of Lost Souls (1932): Horror/Thriller – This is one of the many takes on the H.G. Wells novel “The Island of Dr. Moreau.” Unlike the others this one is actually worth watching, obviously, o it would not be on this list! Don’t watch the movie if te are hoping the film is a physical manifestation of the book, but do watch it for the wonderful element of fear that is provided da suggestion. That may sound lame, but the off screen screams of pain as the vivisection takes place is più effective than the now typical guts and blood.
#5 Black Cat (1934): Thriller – Bela Lugosi. Enough detto – no really if this name is unknown to you, just walk away right now, rent, no better yet buy the black and white Dracula with Lugosi and watch flawless recitazione which is revealed in the subtleties of his performance. As for “Black Cat” … how can te beat Boris Karloff? He is the menacing leader of a satanic cult versus vengeance-minded Lugosi? Also, this all takes place in an old WWI fortress, which has been turned into a futuristic home.
#4 The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920): Thriller – This film is an essential of German expressionist cinema, one that is very well known among film enthusiasts and truly a perfect Halloween treat as its opening line appears on the screen “There are spirits everywhere.” Talk about classic, this movie experiments with set, film angles and plot (for the time at least), producing an amazing film that ends with a rather unexpected twist. The elongated and jagged set highlights the eerie atmosphere and plays beautifully (I mean horrifyingly) alongside the dramatic lighting. Both elements, in addition to it being a silent film, play on your nerves and mind, making the viewer feel as if they are no longer in a traditionally quaint German village … o in reality at all.
#3 The Innocents (1961): Thriller – Did te see The Others with Nicole Kidman? Well this is where that movie got its idea, and as much as I enjoyed Kidman’s movie … “The Innocents,” with the always-lovely Debrah Kerr, is undeniably più chilling. Is this all the vision of a woman going mad? o are the two children she has become governess of possessed da the spirits of two late staff members of the country home? Perfect scenes that incorporate shock and the slow unraveling of a mystery give this movie the necessary toe-curling, gnawing in the pit of your stomach te crave. Maybe it’s the haunting voice of the little girl Canto that begins and frequents the film that does this, yes it is overused now, but then it was groundbreaking.
#2 Phantom of the Opera (1925): Lon Chaney is the definitive Opera house Stalker in this story which is now quite familiar, romanticized, and not as scary as it once was. But one look at this face tells te that this creature is not romantic, in fact, it’s . . . ghastly. How’d te like to feel his fetid breath on your neck as he loops a noose for te in a dank, shadowy vault? Pleasant dreams!
P.s. imdb reveals to te all of the amazing things Chaney did to portray the Phantom, but I highly recommend te wait until AFTER te see the movie
And finally the #1 Horror Film!!!!!
#1 Nosferatu (1922): Horror – Want scary vampires? Here te go. te really cannot get much better than a silent black and white where te truly cannot hear the evil coming. No sucking breath of the monster around the corner, no footsteps … it’s all camera angles and never knowing where anything is. Sickeningly fanged teeth and eyes tell the tale of their satanic existence and are essential to the fear that this film elicits, not to mention the aptly named lead, Max Schreck. I still can’t look at pictures from the film without sufficiently creeping myself out.
(THIS articolo IS FROM SCREENCAVE.COM. ALL CREDIT TO THE AUTHOR)