Amazing Plausible, Supernatural, and Surreal Horror Films (2020): State of Terror
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About this ebook
This book contains 99 reviews of plausible horror films, 99 reviews of supernatural horror films, and 99 reviews of surreal horror films written and ranked by critic and blogger Steve Hutchison. Each description includes five ratings (stars, story, creativity, acting, quality), a synopsis, and a review. How many have you seen?
Steve Hutchison
Artist, developer and entrepreneur in film, video games and communications Steve Hutchison co-founded Shade.ca Art and Code in 1999, then Terror.ca and its French equivalent Terreur.ca in 2000. With his background as an artist and integrator, Steve worked on such games as Capcom's Street Fighter, PopCap's Bejeweled, Tetris, Bandai/Namco's Pac-Man and Mattel's Skip-Bo & Phase 10 as a localization manager, 2-D artist and usability expert. Having acquired skills in gamification, he invented a unique horror movie review system that is filterable, searchable and sortable by moods, genres, subgenres and antagonists. Horror movie fans love it, and so do horror authors and filmmakers, as it is a great source of inspiration. In March 2013, Steve launched Tales of Terror, with the same goals in mind but with a much finer technology and a complex engine, something that wasn’t possible initially. He has since published countless horror-themed books.
Read more from Steve Hutchison
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Amazing Plausible, Supernatural, and Surreal Horror Films (2020) - Steve Hutchison
99 Amazing Plausible Horror Films
#1
Scream
1996
High schoolers recognize horror movie patterns in the recent deaths of other students.
8/8
Slashers were among the most successful subgenres of horror in the 70’s and 80’s, and then they became predictable, tired, soon before they completely ran out of momentum in the early 90’s. Scream reboots the trend by now fleshing out characters that live in the same world horror movie fans do, with Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, Michael Myers and other horror villains constantly referenced.
This is both a slasher and a whodunit, but it features protagonists who try to overcome a series of murders by what they ironically have in common, as friends: their knowledge and love of horror movies. The actors are a well assorted and written bunch that does an impeccable job of reminiscing the subgenre while juggling with a complex underlying mystery the movie heavily relies on.
The jump scares are deserved; written and directed with ideal pacing, dialogue, acting and a production value rarely matched by similar movies. The intricate script throws you in all directions, and stays away from the red stuff as much as it can. Scream stimulates you mentally, proving that a good movie, disregarding its classification, can only spawn from a good story.
#2
Misery
1990
An injured author is held captive by a deranged fan of his.
8/8
Here’s the ultimate 1990’s thriller. It is so intense that it can also be considered one of the best horror movies ever made. It is based on a novel by Stephen King; what more can you wish for? Small characters aside, this is a condensed emotional duel between Kathy Bates and James Caan. Misery is the perfect storm: perfect cast, perfect novel, perfect script and one hell of a director!
Bates plays a dangerous nut job and Caan the vulnerable victim; the writer she’s a die hard fan of. If genders were inverted, these would be stereotypes. King explores a writer’s nightmares, as he often does, but this is one of his greatest works. The film is sad, violent and extremely stressful. Some scenes will make you hold your breath and keep you on the edge of your seat.
Every subplot is executed with calculated timing. Nothing feels superfluous and there are no slow moments. The film is somewhat slow-paced but something horrible is at all times developing or getting out of control. This is one of the best Stephen King adaptations out there. Misery is, quite simply, nothing less than a perfect film. You need to see this… now!
#3
Jaws
1975
A police chief, a scientist and a fisherman set out to stop a great white shark.
8/8
Like fishing, Jaws takes time, patience, and may or may not be rewarding when all is said and done. In the hands of Steven Spielberg, though, this movie promises to mark a generation of movie-goers. One of the lead is a loud-mouthed shark specialist; another one a sheriff who inspires confidence while taking danger seriously. The third boat occupant; squeamish, upholds the horror layer.
For a summer blockbuster about a killer shark, Jaws is especially shy on animatronics. The effects are ahead of their time and truly terrifying but are used very sparingly. The movie is shot in deep water and gets around enormous challenges imposed by an unusual script. Legends say the props didn’t take water so well. As a result, we end up with a heavy drama and very little shark mayhem...
The actors give an honest, authentic and subtle performance. Spielberg takes a genre considered learning ground for filmmakers and raised the bar so high that he had to resort to dialogue to craft tension when he met a technical wall. There is a shark, but he won’t show up until we’re fully involved in the characters. With its immersing scenery and intrigue, Jaws takes fear back to its origins.
#4
The Silence of the Lambs
1991
A FBI recruit interviews an incarcerated cannibal in order to investigate a recent wave of murders.
8/8
There is good dialogue to be had when a cannibal psychiatrist and a cop meet with both something to win from sharing extended verbal exchanges. The cop can save a life and, in return, the incarcerated serial killer hopes to negotiate his liberty. The performances are confident, calculated and played for maximum tension. This movie perfectly marries thriller and horror, with little room for humor.
While it is technically a slow burn, it doesn’t actually feel slow
because there are two main threats. A large portion of the film happens between the investigator and the cannibal separated by a transparent wall. It sets the tone for deeply felt dialogue. When suspense turns into horror, the gore-goer can expect creative splatter. Nothing here is cheap, but nothing is overdone either.
The writing is smart and stacks many layers on an otherwise simple plot. The true antagonist is the reason behind all its theatrical setup. The second killer, not Hannibal, is kidnapping and skinning victims. Hannibal Lecter is depicted as a genius who can solve riddles and crimes by deduction, and he is the heart of the movie. As a discrete sequel to 1986’s Manhunter, this is a big improvement.
#5
Saw
2004
Chained to pipes in a disused bathroom, two men are given a puzzle to which they must provide answers.
8/8
Saw is both a torture film and a police procedural. It’s a ongoing mystery that explores new grounds in storytelling. It’s refreshing and unique, yet closely reminiscent of the Cube franchise and Se7en. The power of this movie resides in how it cleverly parses clues, how complex the puzzle is, and how twists and turns reveal themselves. They do so in the most creatively shocking fashion.
The writing is brilliant. The photography is impeccable. Extreme color balance, photo filters and quick editing gives this movie a particular trademark. The actors do a fine job of keeping us guessing, sympathizing, cringing. Their performances make you feel as powerless as their characters become. One of the two main plot lines happens in one place and with only two characters.
While the cast is limited, each of their movements, lines and performances has been scrutinized and polished. When dialogue makes room for gore, Saw shows another significant strength; displaying pain and suffering crudely and realistically, thanks to stunning top-of-the line effects. Innovative, yet formulaic, Saw gives us a new horror icon with its own sonata; a nod to slasher flicks.
#6
Arachnophobia
1990
A species of killer spiders starts to breed and kill.
8/8
Arachnophobia
refers to Jeff Daniel’s character’s uncontrollable fear of spiders. For a good while, people around him die mysteriously and he gets blamed for it, as their doctor. The inhabitants of the town he just moved in don’t see what we see. We witness it all. The camera constantly impersonates a breed of killer spiders we know just got imported mistakenly. We see them kill.
The way the camera treats the victims and the spiders is reminiscent of slasher flicks of the preceding decade. But, that’s not all Arachnophobia is. The film isn’t supernatural, but it’s not exactly probable or even plausible. It’s a thriller with solid jump scares and the kind of suspense the 1990s are known for. It’s not a comedy but it’s funny when it chooses to be.
To have various spiders follow established trajectories and interact with actors, all with perfect timing, is pure genius. The movie constantly impresses by the way it presents the spider. This subgenre is rarely taken seriously. There is no CG, here. What you see is what you get. The acting is impeccable. The casting is more than you can ask for. This is horror filmmaking at its best.
#7
Cape Fear
1991
An ex-convict takes his revenge on the lawyer who defended him.
8/8
Robert De Niro crafts a truly despicable character in this remake of a psychological thriller adapted from a novel by John D. MacDonald. He is a shabby rapist who will stop at nothing to get his revenge. This is a slow-burn film with a lot of dialogue and exposition intertwined with shock and terror. It makes us feel like powerless voyeurs of a situation that gradually gets out of control.
The cast is irreproachable. All actors give a grade A performance in a story with suspense built like a stairway where each abrupt step leads to a plateau. Characters are pushed to their limits, required to confront their secrets and lies. Cape Fear knows how to make us angry, stressed or uncomfortable; often all at once. It constantly juggles with taboos and dares us to keep watching.
The ominous soundtrack is remixed from the 1962 original movie. It is a tragic recurring melody that gives the film a dark retro ambiance. Some scenes are reconstructions of the original Cape Fear, while some events of the old script are reorganized and shifted from one act to another for maximum impact. All in all, Cape Fear is one of the best and most quintessential horror thrillers out there.
#8
Hannibal
2001
A runaway cannibal is tracked down by the police and a past victim of his.
8/8
Anthony Hopkins approached the Hannibal persona with subtlety, class, vocabulary and calm in 1991’s Silence of the Lambs. His passivity was concerning and he was frightening by implication only until the third act. He was a mysterious figure in the shadow of another; both a protagonist and an antagonist to Jodie Foster’s character. She is replaced by Julianne Moore in this sequel.
Though her absence breaks an otherwise clean continuity; with references to the past and recognizable patterns, Moore fills the mandate with a fair rendition of Clarice Starling. This is Hopkins’ show, regardless. The gore is glorified but celebrated by slow captivating build-up that pays off. The film is eerie, looks luxurious and the score gives significant gravitas to suspense.
It borrows from the cheesiest horror subgenres yet benefits from a good budget, stunning make-up, keen photography and the best actors money can rent. The end result is highly professional, calculated and always reaches full impact. Hannibal appears omniscient, as he always did, and his intelligence is terrifying when fully exposed. He is both who we follow and who we fear.
#9
One Cut of the Dead
2017
Things go sour for a director, his crew, and his cast while shooting a zombie film, as the undead actually rise from the grave.
8/8
This film will require all your attention. Every detail matters. The first 37 minutes were shot with one camera, in one take, and that, in itself, considering the rhythm and special effects involved, is something to witness. Some filmmakers have attempted this in the past, but rarely with such accuracy. The first act is absolutely bonkers. It is incessant. It is a frantic masterpiece.
And then, there’s everything else. The second act will remain unspoiled, and the third one is nothing but twists. This is, simply put, one of the best and most creative horror films in history. One Cut of the Dead is a movie about people making a movie, and that doesn’t even begin to describe what awaits. The actors are sublime, but the first act only reveals a glimpse of their potential.
The thing is, the whole crew’s working miracles. The cameramen are giving all they have, which is an understatement considering what you’re signing up for. They’re extremely agile, precise, and only surpassed by the actors’ calculated yet vivid performances. One question resurfaces every five minutes: what the fuck are we watching? Answers will come. Better enjoy the ride till everything adds up!
#10
Se7en
1995
Two detectives hunt a serial killer who uses the seven deadly sins as his motives.
8/8
The murders of Se7en are elegant and based on the seven deadly sins. We learn this from Morgan Freeman who speaks as if we were ten years old. Morgan Freeman plays an intellectual veteran detective who never pulled the trigger in his whole career, and Brad Pitt an impulsive and arrogant rookie. This is a dialogue-driven buddy cop film that dips its toes into horror when it gets intense.
The whole film is barely lit, which gives us the impression that everything important happens at night. Also, it sure rains a lot. The action really starts in the second half, as the protagonists finally encounter, for a brief instant, the serial killer. Although the main actors are excellent, the most interesting character is the murderer. He gets all the good lines and is highly unpredictable.
Director David Fincher is a perfectionist. He comes up with a signature and sticks to it. Kudos to Darius Khondji, director of photography, for keeping up with him. The screenplay starts on an interesting note and gets increasingly creative. It is quite simply brilliant. The last act is full of surprises. The twist is, simply put, one of the best in film history.
#11
The People Under the Stairs
1991
Three burglar break into a house occupied by a dangerous couple and become trapped.
7/8
This film works like a charm for the same reasons Goonies did, except that it’s made for an adult audience despite the main protagonist being a kid. The kid is basically stuck within the walls of a giant house owned by psychos. This is written and directed by Wes Craven. It’s one of his most accessible films and is easily overlooked. It’s right up there, in the upper tier of his filmography.
There isn’t really something bad to say about this picture. It’s in its own category. The special effects are strong. The cinematography is outstanding, considering some characters move between the walls. This must have been amusing but challenging to shoot. The actors are excellent and the characters they play are colorful. The villains, especially, are bigger than life.
The People Under the Stairs is atmospheric, tense, exciting, never boring; it is paced intelligently, it’s a crescendo of terror and it’s a damn good horror thriller. The title of the film can be misguiding. There are several layers to this story that make it stand out; that make it unique. In a sea of horror movies, this is the kind of stuff fans tend to come back to. It’s rewatchable. It’s fun.
#12
House of Wax
2005
A group of teens stranded in a village near a strange wax museum realize their lives are in danger.
7/8
Elisha Cuthbert, Jared Padalecki, Paris Hilton, and Chad Michael Murray make this film epic, though it would still impress without them. They’re not just talented actors, they remind us of people we know. They make this film fun and comfortable before it gets increasingly dark. This is the second time this story gets remade, and it is quite an enhancement. It’s a slasher with an edge.
The writers know what a good movie is and that’s exactly what they’re giving us. They bank on common horror tropes, half the time, and somewhat re-invent them otherwise. The antagonists follow the same logic. We’ve seen their patterns before, but never quite like this. The budget is substantial, and the movie needs it to tell a big story. The set decoration and the special effects are massive.
Some of the pain inflicted is atrocious and, at times, hard to watch. The gore is brilliant. In regard to who bites the dust and in which order, the script does a pretty good job of keeping us guessing and on the edge of our seat. Personality flaws end up being assets. People we thought were protected by the writers get mutilated. You just can’t take anything for granted. Great flick!
#13
The ‘Burbs
1989
A man and his fellow neighbors are convinced that the new family on the block are murderers.
7/8
The ‘Burbs is a feel-good black comedy deeply rooted into horror that pretty much sums up what 1980s cinema was like and that is likely to age well. It’s about a bunch of neighbors; all friends to each other, who suspect the few family on the block might be cold-blooded murderers. The movie makes fun of patriotism, religious pride, sardines and, of course, suburban life.
You’ll, without a doubt, have a good time with this one. The average movie-goer will enjoy it as much as the horror fan who’s seen it all. Joe Dante is directing, so this can’t possibly go wrong. His signature is everywhere. There is an element of surrealism, for example, established by nightmares, an ominous score, slapstick comedy and larger-than-life characters.
Tom Hanks, Carrie Fisher, Rick DuCommun, Bruce Dern, Corey Feldman; are you kidding me? And these are just the good guys. The villains look like they’re right out of a horror graphic novel. This mystery slowly unravels until the very end. Low on violence and scares, The ‘Burbs is big on suspense and secrets, instead. It’s a movie that keeps you guessing, on the edge of your seat.
#14
The Hitcher
1986
A hitchhiker stalks a driver and frames him for his murders.
7/8
The Hitcher is road horror at its best. The first 15 minutes could just as well be a mere stand-alone short and would still work. It’s basically a slow but action-sprinkled thriller that’s always tense and features strong, intense dialogue. In the first moments, to his surprise, the main protagonist overcomes the hitchhiker, triggering a game of domination, humiliation, big egos and revenge.
Living recurring nightmare John Ryder is like an action film villain, but with apparently no purpose to his madness and no set goal aside from taking pleasure in mental torture. Smart, determined, and purely evil, but as far as we can tell human, his lines nail us back to our seat every time we let our guard down, as intended. The script makes him and the rest of the cast shine at all times.
There are many lengthy car chase scenes. A helicopter is even thrown in the mix when our lead is tailed by both the killer and the police. A love story is shoved in, for good measure. All this unveils and progresses over a ridiculously short period of time. The Hitcher is particular in that, while the hero in isn’t experiencing an ounce of fun, we, on the other hand, are having a guilty blast!
#15
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
1974
Siblings and their friends, while driving to the desecrated tomb of their grandfather, run out of gas and become the victims of cannibals.
7/8
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre features a kind of violence that is closer to realistic torture than most horror flicks dare or choose to go. There is nothing supernatural, here, although