What is your earliest memory of a film (or scene) that really, really scared you. Mine was an old Drive-In movie, The Legend Of Boggy Creek. The opening scene of the boy running through the field at dusk, just reaching his home, and hearing a 'bigfoot' scream. It haunted me for years!
No reason to scoff so hard at Big Foot sightings since many solid citizens have seen and even photographed them, plus several times people have been killed by them, tractor tires pulled off heavy equipment in remote national forests, etc.
I'm totally annoyed/bored with constant naysayers who think if they've not seen something it can't possibly exist.
Several times when I was out hiking in remote places in the middle of the night, I heard something roar. It's not anything you can describe..like the roar of a male gorilla but so loud it seems impossible, and the noise just keep building and building until you think your ears will burst.
It only happens if I'm talking, or otherwise making noise.
This happened to my entire family when we climbed a remote hill at 3 AM to see a comet, but it happened to me when I was only camping with my ex in national forests.
By the way, don't bother to troll me..I'll just block you. There seems to be as many trolls here as the alt-right, if I post something people don't agree with.
Miss Gulch transforms to the witch in the twister in Wizard of Oz.
I literally dove behind the couch the first time.
Oh man. That still somewhat bothers me.
There are many really terrifying things about that movie for it to be thought of as appropriate for children
And then the damn slappy hand trees. Why did you think I would like this movie at five?
@BufftonBeotch what about the flying monkeys?
@btroje Horrible awful nasty.
The Shining when it came out.
@Randy5151 all work and no play
makes Jack a bad boy.
I just remembered The Exorcist when I was about seven. I wasn't supposed to be watching it, but my trifling ass mother was out at a nightclub with her Man of the Moment. It was on HBO. Linda Blair's head started spinning and she started spewing green crap and I hauled ass out of the apartment to the neighbor's house. The End.
For me it was the 360 degree head turn.
Definitely Alien! My first introduction to the film was at the age of 5, snuggled into my big bear of a father who was then just 23 years old, feeling absolutely terrified but unable to tear my eyes away as my dad explained, laughing and lighthearted, that it was just people like you and me in makeup and costumes like on Halloween. For the next year or so I laid awake in the top bunk of my bed at night, my little sister snoring softly below, and swear I could see a black, glistening, banana-shaped head peering back at me through the darkness of an open closet door at the foot of my bed, all drooling and hissing and patiently waiting.
I got over it though. I would wear Ellen Ripley’s character like a shield of armor through the remainder of my adolescence, all strength and charisma, and was one of those nerds who lined up at midnight to see the newest film of the Alien saga on opening night in theaters; such a profoundly feminist character for 5-year-old little me.
@Randy5151 I wholeheartedly agree! I've definitely rewatched it a number of times since then--it hasn't lost an ounce of appeal ?
Wizard of Oz flying monkeys.
I was never able to enjoy the movie. I found it really scary and depressing....especially depressing.
ding dong the witch is dead
When I was little, we went to the movie to see Night of the Hunter. Robert Mitchum was terrifying. There is a scene where he has murdered Shelly Winters, and drives her into the river in her care. She I'd sitting in the car, dead, with her long hair floating out behind her. I was scared to death. When he was following the little kids down the river was so scary. It was made in 1955, so I was 8 years old when I saw it. It was a masterpiece of psychological horror.
Do you remember him in Cape Fear?
When I was very little (maybe 3) we were at the theater to see Snow White, and mom had to carry me out when the witch came on because I was so scared and crying so loud.
Killer Klowns from Outer Space when I was 7. I'll never forget the blood being sucked through a crazy straw or that one kid clown uppercuting that one guys head off into a trash can.
The Birds, Hitchcocks genius to scare the shit out of the audience was the best. The slow moving scene with all of the birds congregating outside of the school while the kids inside sang an insanely repetitive song gave me nightmares for years! Although he was a huge asshole, Hitchcock was the best.
At a drive-in in the 60's, "The Premature Burial", worried about being buried alive for weeks.
was that a hitchcock flick? I remember a scene where some friends were playing a practical joke and buried a friend o the beach and the tide came in. Cant recall what movie it was
@btroje No, this film was based on Poe's short story. It starred Ray Miland , who was paranoid about being buried alive and what he did to stop it.
@Randy5151 I have it on DVD, that and a few other of my favorites from the 50's and 60's
Movies don’t scare me, I know they aren’t real. It really sucks, I’ve wanted them to scare me but it doesn’t happen. Maybe a sudden flash will startle, but that isn’t being scared.
There was one time that I did get freaked out, though. It was an ABC CBS etc movie. I was maybe 8 or 9 at the time, my mom was watching it on tv and I was just there. A mentally ill child was involved. I don’t know the story. At some point the child didn’t want its spaghetti, maybe knocking it off the table, maybe not. When the adult questioned the child about the spaghetti, it didn’t want the spaghetti because “it looks like brains”, which apparently the child had seen previously. Anyway, that freaked me out, but otherwise, nothing.
The Shining. Those twins. Multiple scenes really.
redrum
The Wicked Witch of the West in the Wizard of Oz when I was 5 or 6 years old. I was terrified of her, but it didn't stop me from watching the movie over and over again. It was the first movie I was given on VHS.
The flying monkies were terrifying.
The ghost in the library, Ghostbusters. Still scares the crap out of me now.
I love how that movie really plays it straight sometimes and gives it a serious tone. It makes the comedy work that much better.