The Peterborough Examiner

Just in time for Halloween, stream the 7 scariest movies ever made

There’s so much to scream about

- CHRIS HEWITT STAR TRIBUNE (MINNEAPOLI­S)

When it comes to movies, what constitute­s “scary?”

The answer is subjective, obviously. Horror movies from the 1930s are cool, but their quaintness keeps them from freaking me out. I’m a huge fan of “Rear Window,” “Get Out” and “Silence of the Lambs,” but they’re about tension, not scares. Although I have a weakness for the goofball “Final Destinatio­n” series, slasher movies have never done it for me — too many cat-screaming-in-a-tree fake shocks and random spurts of blood. I like humour and horror together, but the “Scream” movies don’t frighten me; neither does the Japanese “Audition,” which is squirmier than it is frightenin­g. I like ghost stories such as “The Others,” but to creep me out, I suspect they need an element of existentia­l dread that connects them to the real world.

That eliminates a lot of titles — there are so many good, scary-Ish movies that you have to — but there’s still so much to scream about.

The movie probably has some sort of monster, right? But the monster is most effective if, in some way, it is us. That’s the case with “Alien,” which I’ve seen, and been scared by, many times. And it’s true of favourites that did not quite make my list: “Night of the Living Dead,” a zombie movie but also a man’s-inhumanity-to-man movie; “Train to Busan,” the Korean thriller in which a zombie outbreak takes high-speed rail from town to town, fuelled by human selfishnes­s; “Rosemary’s Baby,” which is powerful because, like the toxic stew of Nextdoor.com, it’s driven by curiosity about what neighbours are doing when their door is closed.

That sort of fear is in all of what I’d call the best scary movies: There is something around the corner and it’s awful.

The best horror movies use suspense, warning us about the possibilit­y of the awful thing, but then upend our expectatio­ns.

“Train to Busan,” for instance, seems to end several times, eliminatin­g major characters and changing settings as swiftly as TV’s “Homeland” used to do, where you’d think, “How are the writers going to get out of this situation?” That could fall apart fast but when it’s done well, as in “Busan,” it is delirious fun.

It’s possible to do horror in the great wide open — “The Blair Witch Project” proved that in a forest — but tight spaces are a better bet. Just about everyone can be creeped out by a confined space, like the remote lab in “The Thing,” and it gets even worse when most of the fun happens in the dark.

Another common kink, in most horror and in my faves, is the shot from the bad guy’s point of view. John Carpenter is credited with the best use of this tactic in “Halloween,” which makes us identify with the killer. (Carpenter gets bonus points for composing that eerily simple music, which plays like an homage to the famous “Exorcist” score.) If we’re looking at mayhem through the killer’s eyes, whose side are we on? Forget the neighbours, do we even know what we are capable of ourselves?

If you believe these dandy scary movies below, we’re capable of almost anything.

Alien

1979

I vividly recall this Ridley Scott classic hitting theatres. I was in high school, a few years before the wave of “Friday the 13th”/”Nightmare on Elm Street”-style movies began to dominate the box office (”Halloween” and “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” were out but not yet franchises). There just weren’t that many scary movies in theatres, but then “Alien’s” claustroph­obic balance between surprise and suspense landed with a killer tag line: “In space, no one can hear you scream.”

The Thing

1982

Carpenter ’s remake takes an “Alien”-like situation — a bunch of researcher­s trapped in a remote place (Antarctica) — and introduces an element of “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” with a disgusting creature that assumes the identity of the person it devours. Claustroph­obia? Inventive gore? Even your friends are your enemies? This one has it all.

The Exorcist

1973

The grim classic shares themes with “Rosemary’s Baby,” where it’s also impossible to trust one’s own family members to escape the devil’s grasp, but it seems much more unsettling. Maybe because the

strong religious themes, which aren’t a big deal in “Rosemary,” make it easier to believe in the dark side?

Diabolique

1955

I’ve sung the praises of Henri-Georges Clouzot, whose “Le Corbeau” and “The Wages of Fear” are masterpiec­es, too, but his bestknown movie is this efficient chiller. It gets old-school fear — and one very big shock — out of a twisty menage-a-murder: a headmaster, his wife and his mistress. There’s the possibilit­y of the supernatur­al in “Diabolique” (a.k.a. “The Devils”), but it’s really about whether we can trust anyone. “We are monsters,” says one of the three title characters. “I don’t like monsters.”

Halloween

1978

Unlike the anony-corpse slasher movies that followed in its bloody wake, “Halloween’s” intensity comes from having a memorable killer, Michael Myers, and potential victim, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) — who, once again, failed to vanquish her nemesis in the 2018 entry in the franchise, also called “Halloween.” She’ll have two more shots in a pair of movies announced for 2021 and 2022.

The Descent

2005

Claustroph­obia is on the menu from the beginning when six women descend into a cave. Soon, they have more to worry about than getting stuck in a crevice or losing their lanterns. Neil Marshall (who also made the excellent “Dog Soldiers”) works by sly misdirecti­on: Just when we think one adventurer is out of a tight spot, she’s stuck in a worse one. And the moment they think they’ve found an escape is the moment Marshall positions some sort of creepy, colour-drained mole creature right behind them.

Another common kink, in most horror and in my faves, is the shot from the bad guy’s point of view.

Let the Right One In

2008

So much is unnerving about this Swedish vampire movie: that the most vicious ( but oddly sympatheti­c) character is a little girl, that its scariest scene takes place in the brightly lit sterility of a swimming pool and that, like all the best horror movies (as well as, you know, the world), we brought all the horrifying stuff on ourselves.

 ?? TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX ?? Sigourney Weaver starred as Ripley, who battles the title beastie in “Alien,” the influentia­l 1979 sci-fi horror film.
TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX Sigourney Weaver starred as Ripley, who battles the title beastie in “Alien,” the influentia­l 1979 sci-fi horror film.
 ?? LIONS GATE FILMS ?? Friends Juno (Natalie Mendoza), Beth (Alex Reid) and Sarah (Shauna Macdonald) are lost in an unexplored cave and in the dark in “The Descent.”
LIONS GATE FILMS Friends Juno (Natalie Mendoza), Beth (Alex Reid) and Sarah (Shauna Macdonald) are lost in an unexplored cave and in the dark in “The Descent.”
 ?? MONGREL MEDIA ?? Lina Leandersso­n in the 2008 Swedish vampire horror film “Let the Right One In.”
MONGREL MEDIA Lina Leandersso­n in the 2008 Swedish vampire horror film “Let the Right One In.”
 ?? AMC, ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINM­ENT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jamie Lee Curtis in a scene from the 1978 horror film classic, “Halloween.”
AMC, ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINM­ENT THE CANADIAN PRESS Jamie Lee Curtis in a scene from the 1978 horror film classic, “Halloween.”

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