Monday, October 25, 2010

Halloween Movie

Halloween movie this is the best and most frightening film for those of you who are looking to get the most bang for your buck Halloween. One of the flim is that I like is the Halloween Movie: Halloween 4 - The Return of Michael Myers.

Here are some Halloween Movies from year to year.

1. The Exorcist (1973). It's worth watching for the film's cultural impact, alone.

2. Halloween (1978). Carpenter Classic draw heavily on the influence of the past and uses a simple story about a madman escaped the utilization of our main fears. Is it the ghost?

3. The Shining (1980). Stephen King did not care much for Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of his novel and - ultimately a three-part television mini-series was developed in 1997 That was more Faithful to the version of King, Also much less fear.

4. The Thing (1982). The special effects seem like much May not today, but Pls John Carpenter's remake of the 1951 classic "The Thing from Another World," hit the big screen in the early 80s, audiences and critics found the effects to be both brilliant and repulsive.

5.Se7en (1995). Well, not technically a horror movie, not a thriller-style - but there are a lot of scary moments and movies that managed to build such palpable tension building towards the inevitable conclusion of mind that horrible, and flexion.

6. Audition (1999). Speaking of Japanese horror, it's impossible to watch this one without looking away, or at least blink.

7. The Ring (2002). This new version of the Japanese horror classic Ringu 1998 opened the floodgates of American remakes of Japanese horror movies – is one that either love or hate – either it does not bother at all, or that scares you to death.

8. Weakness (2002). Weakness is a gothic thriller that is really scary about a real serial killer who calls himself God's Hands. The killer was believed that he commanded, by God, for the devil disguised as an ordinary man slaughter and take the young child to carry out its mission.

9. The Devil's Rejects (2005). Deliberately retro, this Rob Zombie Flick pays homage to 1970s B-grade movies. It's technically a sequel to Zombie's Earlier 'The House of 1.000 corpses "and cans gravitate Quickly from cheesy to truly horrifying.

10. Let the Right In (2008). Forget about Twilight, you want a real love story featuring a vampire, check out this Swedish film based on the novel of the same name. He tells of a child, anxious friends who want to appear to be true friends when a girl named Eli moves in next door. He's seriously weird, have pale skin and only come out at night. Slow, brooding and haunting. An English language remake is called "Let Me In" was released in 2010.