Irene Jacob in Three Colors: Red by Krzysztof Kieslowski

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I tend to ignore top 100 film lists because they are usually made by people who know little about movies beyond Hollywood stuff made in the last 15 or 20 years. But the list of "100 scariest movies" compiled by the members of the Chicago Film Critics Association does include several oldies and even, gasp, a handful of non-American horror films.

Since I’m a total wimp when it comes to scary movies, I found it curious that several titles in the Chicago critics’ list left me utterly unimpressed (e.g., Misery, Psycho, The Exorcist), while others that — whether good, bad, or so-so films — gave me nightmares for days (e.g., El Espinazo del diablo / The Devil’s Backbone, The Fog [1980], Mulholland Dr.) are nowhere to be found in it.

Also, I couldn’t find any Lon Chaney vehicles or any of the neo-horror Japanese films that have found a large audience worldwide. Either I missed them, or perhaps Lon Chaney and Japanese horror films aren’t available in Chicago.

(They do, however, have the 1935 campy comedy Bride of Frankenstein listed. But then again, Elsa Lanchester’s wig was frightening…)

The Chicago critics’ top 100 choices:

Psycho (1960) by Alfred Hitchcock, with Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles, John Gavin, Martin Balsam1. Psycho (1960) Alfred Hitchcock

2. The Exorcist (1973) William Friedkin

3. Halloween (1978) John Carpenter

4. Alien (1979) Ridley Scott

5. Night of the Living Dead (1968) George A. Romero

6. Jaws (1975) Steven Spielberg

7. The Shining (1980) Stanley Kubrick

8. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) Tobe Hooper

9. Dawn of the Dead (1978) George A. Romero

10. Rosemary’s Baby (1968) Roman Polanski

11. The Silence of the Lambs

12. The Blair Witch ProjectNosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens aka Nosferatu the Vampire (1922) directed by F. W. Murnau, starring Max Schreck and Gustav von Wangenheim

13. Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922)

14. Frankenstein (1931)

15. A Nightmare on Elm Street

16. Carrie (1976)

17. The Thing (1982)

18. Bride of Frankenstein

19. The Haunting (1963)

20. Poltergeist

21. Suspiria

22. Wait Until Dark

23. The Birds

24. Don’t Look Now

25. Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn

The Innocents (1961) directed by Jack Clayton, starring Deborah Kerr, Martin Stephens, Pamela Franklin26. The Innocents

27. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer

28. Freaks

29. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

30. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919)

31. The Omen (1976)

32. The Fly (1986)

33. Seven

34. The Re-Animator

35. The Sixth Sense

36. The Ring (2002)

37. The Evil Dead

38. Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (1931)

39. The Hitcher

40. Near Dark

41. Dracula (1931)

42. Vampyr (1932)

43. Onibaba

44. Scream

45. Aliens

46. Creature from the Black Lagoon

47. Session 9

48. Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht / Nosferatu the Vampyre (1978)

49. Black Christmas

50. When a Stranger Calls

51. Repulsion

52. Misery

53. Horror of Dracula

54. The Others

Jurassic Park (1993) by Steven Spielberg, with Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough

55. Jurassic Park

56. The Seventh Victim

57. Peeping Tom

58. 28 Days Later

59. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)

60. The Hidden

61. May

62. Shaun of the Dead

63. Last House on the Left

64. 10 Rillington Place

65. Salo

66. Cat People (1942)

67. Frailty

68. The Howling

69. Trilogy of Terror

70. Blue Velvet

71. I Walked with a Zombie

72. Bram Stoker’s Dracula

73. Martin

74. Deliverance

75. Carnival of Souls

76. Spoorlos / The Vanishing (1988)

77. Masque of the Red Death

78. The Night of the Hunter

79. Salem’s Lot

80. Fright Night

81. Black Sunday (1960)

82. Scream 2

83. Dressed to Kill

84. The Stepfather

85. Friday the 13th

86. The Exorcism of Emily Rose

87. Let’s Scare Jessica to Death

88. The Brood

89. Dead-Alive

90. Open Water

91. The Mummy (1932)

92. Requiem for a Dream

93. Signs

94. The Wolf Man

95. Phantasm

96. The Night Stalker

97. Brides of Dracula

98. M

99. God Told Me To

100. Les Yeux sans visage / Eyes without a Face

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12 Responses to “Chicago Critics’ Scariest Films”

  1. on 26 Oct 2006 at 2:23 pm James

    “Bride Of Frankenstein” a comedy? Hmm, I don’t get that one. Although it certainly does have elements of comedy in it. I just saw this film on the big screen at Cinesation( And had seen it before on the lovely DVD release). It’s actually quite a touching film because it speaks to elements of lonliness, societal ostracism, and to the desire for all living beings to be loved and accepted. Take the “horror” element out of the film and it’s a fascinating look at man’s inhumanity to one another, and their inability to see past external superficialities. My mother mentioned being very moved after watching it.

    Of course that’s just my personal take. I haven’t really read a great deal about James Whale(Haven’t gotten around to the biography yet), but I find that aspect of the film quite interesting considering Whale was a gay director.

    So no, I can’t say I find “Bride Of Frankenstein” a “horror” film per se. But something much more significant. I’m a big Karloff fan, and despite the fact that his face is obscured by the heavy makeup, it’s one of his finest performances. Coupled with James Whale’s excellent direction and his moody, surreal cinematic touch, seeing it on the big screen was an entirely different and emotional experience.

  2. on 27 Oct 2006 at 12:49 am Andre Soares

    James,

    I gotta admit that I saw “Bride of Frankenstein” many years ago. I remember finding some of it humorous. I definitely remember that it wasn’t at all a “scary movie.”

    I do have the DVD here. I need to check it out again. (I can’t think of any big-screen showings of “Bride” in the Los Angeles area in the near future.)

  3. on 27 Oct 2006 at 5:37 am James

    Well, there are definitely comedic touches. Una O’ Connor was a big hit with the audience as well as Ernest Thesiger’s highly flamboyant performance as Dr. Frankenstein’s comrade in his experiments (Thesiger was also a big hit earlier that day with his performance in Whale’s “The Old Dark House”)But, while I don’t consider the film a “horror” film in the traditional sense, I also wouldn’t classify it as a comedy. So, I think that’s why you’re description of it puzzled me. Again, merely a personal thing though.

  4. on 27 Oct 2006 at 8:43 am Andre Soares

    It’s funny you mention “The Old Dark House.” Some of it is hysterically funny — and intentionally so.

    But then the film takes a turn toward the macabre, and it had me on the edge of my seat until the (lighter) finale. There are precious few horror movies from the 1930s that actually put the fear of godawfulness in me — but “The Old Dark House” is one of them.

    So, perhaps we should call it a Horredy?

    Curiously, “The Old Dark House” is nowhere to be found in the Chicago critics’ top 94 (!) list of scariest movies.

    Maybe it’s one of the missing last six titles…

  5. on 27 Oct 2006 at 10:27 am Daniel Camargo

    Yeah, those top 10, 50, 100 whatever lists are pretty dumb all right. I agree that Chicago’s was not so bad at all. In this matter of stupid lists, no one can beat AFI.

  6. on 27 Oct 2006 at 12:35 pm James

    **** Warning: Spoilers Below*******

    Yes, “The Old Dark House” is terrific. People attending Cinesation kept repeating Thesiger’s line “Have a potato” for the rest of the weekend. There’s a really interesting relationship between Karloff’s character as the mute manservant and the insane brother Saul which the family has kept hidden in the attic. When Saul is killed in the end, Karloff is seen very tenderly holding Saul as he’s dying and Karloff is clearly very bereaved by his death. It had a certain gay subtext for me. If I remember correctly, I think Karloff was particularly watchful over Saul, and was the one who was mainly in charge of his care. You get a sense that perhaps there was a deep love and intimacy that existed between the two men. Again, just my personal take on that.

    I don’t know that I was necessarily “frightend” watching “The Old Dark House” but it has a very palpable and stirring atmosphere due largely to the superlative cinematography of Arthur Edeson and the perverse performances from several of the actors. The print shown at Cinesation was taken from a stunning 35mm LOC print. The film was as clear and smooth as glass on the big screen and breathtaking to behold.

  7. on 27 Oct 2006 at 1:02 pm James

    I think most lists are pretty silly these days. I just don’t understand the concept of actually sitting down and coming up with 10, 50, or even 100 items on a “Best Of” or “Greatest of All Time” list. I never get the need people have to place things in such dogmatic hierarchial contexts. How do you prove “better”? How do you prove “bad” or “good”? You can’t, simply because film appreciation is such an incredibly subjective thing. One person’s “junk” is a meaningful journey for someone else. We might have our personal opinions as to what we like or don’t like, but that hardly etches it in stone. Ask 100 people what the “10 Greatest Romantic Films” are, and guarenteed you’ll get different responses depending upon the person and they’re experiences in life. In a more casual setting, lists can be fun among friends to seeing what other people enjoy. But as a means of measuring film history, they’re pretty useless.

  8. on 28 Oct 2006 at 3:52 pm Dan Schneider

    Diabolique is far scarier than Rosemary’s Baby, or 4 or 5 of the otther Top 10.

  9. on 28 Oct 2006 at 9:48 pm Andre Soares

    I haven’t seen several of the films in their top-ten list. But I’d say that the less popular a film is — even though we’re talking about film critics who should know their classics — the less likely it’ll be for that film to make it to any top-100 list — let alone a top-ten list.

    Unfortunately, a list filled with relatively obscure titles (i.e., anything made outside of Hollywood, released before 1985, and that hasn’t become a major “classic” of some kind) will not get the sort of media attention accorded to lists consisting of more popular fare.

    And, needless to say, such lists are almost invariably self-promotional tools.

  10. on 28 Oct 2006 at 10:28 pm Andre Soares

    James,

    Lists as a “means of measuring film history” are indeed useless (just take a look at the AFI lists), but I bet that Sight & Sound will come up with another such list in 2012.

    As I said in my previous post, those lists are good seeling tools. That’s why publications create them — including the Alternative Film Guide. (I do, however, explain that my lists — and my reviews — are, like everybody else’s, highly subjective and definitely NOT written in stone.)

    Now, I do enjoy reading lists — depending on who is doing them, of course. I look at those lists not to discover the Greatest Movies of All Time, but to find out what particular individuals or group(s) of individuals find special.

  11. on 28 Oct 2006 at 10:31 pm Andre Soares

    And before I forget…

    I’ve never seen a good print of “The Old Dark House.” What’s available on video or on cable is a high-contrasty print.

    Those guys should make the restored LoC version available on DVD.

    And no, I don’t recall sensing a gay subtext between Karloff and the Old Dark wacko. I gotta watch that movie again…

  12. on 29 Oct 2006 at 11:36 am Beb Harvey

    “Play Misty for Me” scared me more than any other movie I’ve seen. Nothing spectacular, just quiet, building tension in a California town. I think it may have been the first contemporary movie Clint Eastwood did; it certainly was the first one in which he was stalked.

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