Top Horror Movies Of All Time

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic by 14 people | Log in to rate

Ranked #809 in Movies & TV, #20,181 overall

Bring Horror to the House!

Hey Squids! I'm going to give you the scariest and top horror movies of all times. Well, its my own opinion but you can always vote and add up your own favorites!

Its been proven that lots of people want to be scared. I wonder why.. Maybe because the human mind wanted to know their limit to take on scary thoughts? Well, whatever might be the reason for all our twisted favorite it won't change the fact that WE like to watch horror movies. Oh not LIKE but we LOVE to watch horror and scary movies!

So this lens is a treat for everyone who LOVES to scare themselves! Enjoy and as I've said blurb about what movie scared you more than anything else. The One that keeps you awake at night!

Top Horror Movies Of All Times 

It is of human nature to be scared. But some of us can't just stop to watch scary films. Maybe this is due to the fact that we want to be scared. Or we just want to believe. Whatever your reason might be, i will just bring to you my top choices of the scariest horror movies of all times. I will update this lens once in a while by adding up other horror movies to this collection. Hope you will always be here to check. Scary thoughts to all of you!

Featured Horror Movie on DVD 

the horror movie that you should own!

Every month I'm going to feature a horror movie that I recommend you should own. If you have any suggestions for a featured movie on DVD contact me, I'm open to suggestions! Watch the trailer below..

Quarantine

Amazon Price: $18.99 (as of 07/10/2009)Buy Now

Quarantine is one of the best horror movies of 2008 and a must watch..unfortunately I didn't catch this on the big screen which I neglected! With the documentary style of filming similar to the Blair Witch Project, Quarantine will lift you from your seat when you least expected it. This movie is worth watching for!

Top Horror Movies of All Times 

Vote for your favorites! You can always add up your recommendation here. Don't forget to leave a comment! Share your thoughts!

The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty

The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty

When originally published in 1971, The Exorcist became not only a bestselling literary phenomenon, but one of the most frightening and controversial novels ever written. (When the author adapted his book to the screen two years later, it then became one of the most terrifying movies ever made.) Blatty fictionalized the true story of a child's demonic possession in the 1940s. The deceptively simple story focuses on Regan, the 11-year-old daughter of a movie actress residing in Washington, D.C.; t...2 points

The Shining

The Shining

Stanley Kubrick's The Shining is less an adaptation of Stephen King's bestselling horror novel than a complete reimagining of it from the inside out. In King's book, the Overlook Hotel is a haunted place that takes possession of its off-season caretaker and provokes him to murderous rage against his wife and young son. Kubrick's movie is an existential Road Runner cartoon (his steadicam scurrying through the hotel's labyrinthine hallways), in which the cavernously empty spaces inside the Overloo...2 points

Alien Quadrilogy (Alien/ Aliens /Alien 3 /Alien Resurrection)

Alien Quadrilogy (Alien/ Aliens /Alien 3 /Alien Resurrection)

The Alien Quadrilogy is a nine-disc boxed set devoted to the four Alien films. Although previously available on DVD as the Alien Legacy, here they have been repackaged with vastly more extras and with upgraded sound and picture. For anyone who hasn't been in hypersleep for the last 25 years, this series needs no introduction, though for the first time each film now comes in both original and "special edition" form.

Alien (1979) was so perfect it didn't need fixing, and Ridley Scott's 2003 direc...

2 points

Saw [Blu-ray]

Saw [Blu-ray]

Lionsgate Saw (Blu-ray)
Adam (Leigh Whannell) and Dr. Lawrence Gordon (Cary Elwes) wake up chained to pipesat opposite ends of a dirty utility room. They soon learn that they have become the victims of the Jigsaw, a serial killer who devises intricate situations to get his victims to kill each other. Pitted against the clock and each other, the two must work to outwit their captor and save Gordon's family, who have been taken hostage by the killer.2 points

Shutter

Shutter

(Horror) A photographer named Tun and his girlfriend, Jane, hit a girl in a car accident and flee the scene. Afterwards, he finds mysterious shadows in his pictures and the couple is systematically haunted by the ghost of the girl. They soon learn that they cannot escape their pasts when the relationships between the girl they hit, Tun, and his friends us revealed.2 points

The Thing [HD DVD]

The Thing [HD DVD]

Director John Carpenter and special makeup effects master Rob Bottin teamed up for this 1982 remake of the 1951 science fiction classic The Thing from Another World, and the result is a mixed blessing. It's got moments of highly effective terror and spine-tingling suspense, but it's mostly a showcase for some of the goriest and most horrifically grotesque makeup effects ever created for a movie. With such highlights as a dog that splits open and blossoms into something indescribably gruesome, th...1 point

Night of the Living Dead

Night of the Living Dead

We can hardly imagine how shocking this film was when it first broke into the film scene in 1968. There's never been anything quite like it again, though there have been numerous pale imitations. Part of the terror lies in the fact that it is shot in such a raw and unadorned fashion that it feels like a home movie, and is all the more authentic because of that. It draws us into its world gradually, content to establish a merely spooky atmosphere before leading us through a horrifically logical p...1 point

Dawn of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut) [HD DVD]

Dawn of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut) [HD DVD]

Are you ready to get down with the sickness? Movie logic dictates that you shouldn't remake a classic, but Zack Snyder's Dawn of the Dead defies that logic and comes up a winner. You could argue that George A. Romero's 1978 original was sacred ground for horror buffs, but it was a low-budget classic, and Snyder's action-packed upgrade benefits from the same manic pacing that energized Romero's continuing zombie saga. Romero's indictment of mega-mall commercialism is lost (it's arguably outmoded....1 point

28 Days Later (Widescreen Edition)

28 Days Later (Widescreen Edition)

The director/producer team that created Trainspotting turn their dynamic cinematic imaginations to the classic science fiction scenario of the last people on Earth. Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up from a coma to find London deserted--until he runs into a mob of crazed plague victims. He gradually finds other still-human survivors (including Naomie Harris), with whom he heads off across the abandoned countryside to find the source of a radio broadcast that promises salvation. 28 Days Later is basic...1 point

Jaws (30th Anniversary Edition)

Jaws (30th Anniversary Edition)

In the vastly overrated 1998 book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, author Peter Biskind puts the blame for Hollywood's blockbuster mentality at least partially on Steven Spielberg's box-office success with this adaptation of Peter Benchley's bestselling novel. But you can't blame Spielberg for making a terrific movie, which Jaws definitely is. The story of a Long Island town whose summer tourist business is suddenly threatened by great-white-shark attacks on humans bypasses the potboiler trappings of....1 point

A Nightmare on Elm Street

A Nightmare on Elm Street

Wes Craven's 1984 horror film is a better movie than it is generally credited for being. Forget the tawdry sequels; this highly original, almost surrealist work stars Robert Englund as a mutilated monster who kills teenagers during their dreams. Craven, who only directed one Elm Street sequel (Wes Craven's New Nightmare), takes the Hitchcockian step of layering in psychological explanations for the terror and then proving them all irrelevant in the face of mindless evil. The horror in the film i...1 point

Friday the 13th

Friday the 13th

This splatter flick, along with John Carpenter's Halloween, helped spawn the great horror-movie movement of the '80s, not to mention eight sequels, many of which had nothing to do with the films that preceded them. It also gave birth to Jason Voorhees, one of the three biggest horror-movie psychos of the modern era (the other two being Halloween's Michael Myers and A Nightmare on Elm Street's Freddy Krueger). Forever duplicated, the original Friday the 13th popularized a number of themes and tec...1 point

Psycho (Collector's Edition)

Psycho (Collector's Edition)

At last--a great American movie available on video for the first time in its original aspect ratio. For all the slasher pictures that have ripped off Psycho (and particularly its classic set piece, the "shower scene"), nothing has ever matched the impact of the real thing. More than just a first-rate shocker full of thrills and suspense, Psycho is also an engrossing character study in which director Alfred Hitchcock skillfully seduces you into identifying with the main characters--then pulls the...0 points

Nosferatu: The Vampyre/Phantom Der Nacht

Nosferatu: The Vampyre/Phantom Der Nacht

Werner Herzog's remake of F.W. Murnau's original vampire classic is at once a generous tribute to the great German director and a distinctly unique vision by one of cinema's most idiosyncratic filmmakers. Though Murnau's Nosferatu was actually an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula, Herzog based his film largely on Murnau's conceptions--at times directly quoting Murnau's images--but manages to slip in a few references to Tod Browning's famous version (at one point the vampire commen...0 points

Scream (Dimension Collector's Series)

Scream (Dimension Collector's Series)

With the smash hit Scream, novice screenwriter Kevin Williamson and veteran horror director Wes Craven (A Nightmare on Elm Street) revived the moldering corpse of the teen horror picture, both creatively and commercially, by playfully acknowledging the exhausted clichés and then turning them inside out. Scream is a postmodern slasher movie, a horror film that cleverly deconstructs horror films, then reassembles the dead tissue, and (like Frankenstein's monster) creates new life. When a serial ki...0 points

Ju on

Ju on

Writer/director Takeshi Shimizu's Ju-on (The Grudge) originally aired on Japanese television, and eventually developed a worldwide cult following as a low-budget horror classic. 2003 Japanese film (with English subtitles) directed Takashi Shimizu and starring Yui Ichikawa and Misaki Ito. 92 minutes/NTSC/Region 3/Letterbox. IVL.0 points

Frailty

Frailty

Steeped in gloomy atmosphere, Frailty locates its horror in the tyranny of religious fanaticism. Making an assured directorial debut, actor Bill Paxton costars as a Texas widower who believes God has recruited him to destroy demons in human form. Feeling divinely justified in committing a series of ax murders (discreetly unseen), he urges his two young sons to assist him in the killings--a living nightmare recalled in flashback by one of the now-adult sons (Matthew McConaughey) to the FBI agent....0 points

The Descent (Unrated Widescreen Edition)

The Descent (Unrated Widescreen Edition)

Claustrophobia and bloody mayhem collide in the high-adrenaline horror flick The Descent. Six women (including one who lost her husband and child the year before, and one who harbors a bitter secret) spelunk in an unexplored cavern system that turns out to harbor mysterious, predatory creatures. That sums up the story, but--as with writer-director Neil Marshall's previous low-concept movie, Dog Soldiers--the plot doesn't begin to describe the riveting, stomach-lurching thrills this movie provide...0 points

Halloween - Unrated Director's Cut (Widescreen Two-Disc Special Edition)

Halloween - Unrated Director's Cut (Widescreen Two-Disc Special Edition)

More of a supercharged revamp than a remake, Rob Zombie's take on John Carpenter's Halloween expands the back story of masked killer Michael Myers in an attempt to examine the motivation for his first deadly attack, as well as some reasons for his longevity as a horror icon. Zombie's Myers is a blank-eyed teen (played by Daeg Faerch) whose burgeoning mental problems are left unchecked in a horrific home environment; harassed by schoolmates, a randy sister, and his mother's deadbeat boyfriend (Wi...0 points

The Silence of the Lambs (Full Screen Edition)

The Silence of the Lambs (Full Screen Edition)

Based on Thomas Harris's novel, this terrifying film by Jonathan Demme really only contains a couple of genuinely shocking moments (one involving an autopsy, the other a prison break). The rest of the film is a splatter-free visual and psychological descent into the hell of madness, redeemed astonishingly by an unlikely connection between a monster and a haunted young woman. Anthony Hopkins is extraordinary as the cannibalistic psychiatrist Dr. Hannibal Lecter, virtually entombed in a subterrane...0 points

The Bride of Frankenstein

The Bride of Frankenstein

It appeared, at the end of the epochal 1931 horror movie Frankenstein, that the monster had perished in a burning windmill. But that was before the runaway success of the movie dictated a sequel. In Bride of Frankenstein, we see that the monster (once again played by Boris Karloff) survived the conflagration, as did his half-mad creator (Colin Clive). This remarkable sequel, universally considered superior to the original, reunites other key players from the first film: director James Whale (who...0 points

The Haunting

The Haunting

A group is introduced to the supernatural through a 90-year old New England haunted house. Be prepared for hair-raising results in this classic horror film!0 points

Watch the trailer of Quarantine Now!  

Most terrifying movie of 2008!

Quarantine Movie Trailer (2008)

Television reporter Angela Vidal (Jennifer Carpenter) and her cameraman (Steve Harris) are assigned to spend the night shift with a Los Angeles Fire Station. After a routine 911 call takes them to a small apartment building, they find police officers already on the scene in response to blood curdling screams coming from one of the apartment units. They soon learn that a woman living in the building has been infected by something unknown. After a few of the residents are viciously attacked, they try to escape with the news crew in tow, only to find that the CDC has quarantined the building. Phones, Internet, televisions and cell phone access have been cut-off, and officials are not relaying information to those locked inside. When the quarantine is finally lifted, the only evidence of what took place is the news crew's videotape. October 2008

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Horror/Suspense Books 

Check out this list of horror and suspense books that you'll definitely enjoy!

Have a Scary Thought? 

share your horror!

sudever wrote...

Welcome to the 'Global' Group
( http://www.squidoo.com/groups/global ) - Your lens is featured on the group page!

ReplyPosted February 04, 2009

punkgrinder wrote...

Nice list, i think the Devils Rejects, by Rob Zombie also,should feature somewhere as well.

ReplyPosted January 14, 2009

Dr-Cornelius wrote...

Hey, great list, best that I have seen. What about "The Haunting" (1963). Scariest film ever!

ReplyPosted November 09, 2008

Sophie_Marie_C wrote...

I love horror movies! This is a great list. :P

ReplyPosted October 31, 2008

hqsitemaster wrote...

Absolutely beautiful! My favorites are the Saw series! I love all the gory stuffs and the twisted mind of the culprit. No matter how twisted he is, he still had a very brilliant mind! Thanks for making this lens! 5' stars for you!

ReplyPosted October 30, 2008

catherine2255 wrote...

Great list, absolutely love silence of the lambs my all time favourite#1
If you get the chance check out my website
Download Movies

ReplyPosted October 30, 2008

Oosquid wrote...

I love horror movies. Great lens, great list - except for Jaws, I can't say I find that one to be a horror movie. 5 stars

ReplyPosted October 27, 2008

cannedguds wrote...

You have the best list of all top horror movies! It's even way better than a movie critic's list! Thanks for sharing this! Hope you can also get to read some of my lenses but they're not scary!!! LOL....But they might entertain you one way or another! You might also want to take a peek at a site where you can find an example of eulogies speeches or two. Great work you got here!

ReplyPosted October 23, 2008

Lensmaster

Transformer wrote

What about Black Christmas that was pretty scary!!!!

Reply Posted October 05, 2008

Lola818 wrote...

The exorcist as number 1; I agree this list rocks! 5*s

ReplyPosted September 12, 2008

 
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Finding A Movie Theather 

Finding a great movie theatre is almost as important as finding a good local bar or coffee shop. You really need a place to go to see movies - a place that isn't just a large, anonymous all. Movie theatres come in all sorts. On the one hand, you can go to a showcase Cinema or AMC movie theatre - the big, impressive, and ultramodern kind. On the other hand, there is your neighborhood movie house.

A lot of people believe that bigger and newer means better, but this isn't always the case. In the neighborhood I live in, there is an old movie theatre where you can see matinees for $3.75. They serve beer and popcorn, as will as pizza, and the staff is always friendly and courteous. Because they are not one of the big movie showcase theatres, they can screen interesting, independent films from time to time.

The thing I like most about it, however, is that it is a local landmark. The movie theater is something unique to the neighborhood I live in. You can find a showcase cinema in any city, but not every place still has its own independent movie theaters. It can be nice to see something quaint, old-fashioned, and comforting among the hustle and bustle of modern urban life.

Of course, the modern movie multiplex theaters have their own advantages to them. The two most obvious ones are comfort and convenience. these theaters have cushy, comfortable seats, many different screens running at the same time, games to play in the lobby, and a wide assortment of food and beverages. Local movie theatres only have one or two films showing at the same time, but one of the big ones will show half a dozen films at the very least on any given day.

The quality of the experience can also be better. A big movie theatre will probably have better sound systems, better image quality, and better upkeep in general. A lot of the old ones are really beautiful, but kind of worn down. They have seen better days, and tend to not have enough money to really keep things up like they used to. Don't get me wrong - the little guys have a certain charm to them, and I can't deny that it is fun to drink beer and eat pizza while out watching a movie. Even so, it is sometimes nice to be able to go to a clean, spacious film theatre where you can see anything you want.

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