ohlaph,

Smile and Barbarian were scary.

AgentGrimstone,

Twin Peaks when Bob climbs over the couch towards the camera. I was extremely uncomfortable like he was actually looking at me and was going climb through the TV screen.

scytale,

Based on kid me who hasn’t seen it again since, Fire In The Sky.

A more recent one, It Follows, not because it’s some groundbreaking horror or amazing movie, but the dread of a force so unstoppable and inevitable that you can’t get away from it no matter what you do is what makes it scary to me. I had dreams after watching it where something is chasing me but I can’t remember even looking back or seeing it. And you know how running in dreams works right? It doesn’t. So I had to do the grab the ground and pull yourself forward move to run away. Anyone who has tried running in their dream knows what I’m talking about.

potatoforyourthoughts,

Idiocracy.

sanguinepar,
@sanguinepar@lemmy.world avatar

Ringu - scares me every time I see it.

Many of David Lynch’s films too, although none are out and out horror. They almost all have moments though - Mulholland Drive, Inland Empire, Fire Walk With Me, Blue Velvet. Really insidious moments that just won’t leave you.

Blair Witch Project - many people would disagree, but I think it’s a masterpiece of fear.

Nibodhika,

I love “The Strangers”, it’s the only movie I consider actually terrifying, and not just jump scares.

cheezoid2,

Lake Mungo is a good combination of both

Shurimal,

Alien. It's the pinnacle of horror movies. And what makes it so good is the believability of it all. There is no supernatural, no ghosts, no masked mass murderers, no silly "monsters" that defy all the laws of biology and physics.

Naich,
@Naich@kbin.social avatar

The way the alien grows before it has a chance to eat anything defies biology and physics.

itsnicodegallo,

Alchemy, of course. Synthesizing body cells from the air.

Berlinblades,

It ate John hurt though? At least parts of him anyway…

Ubettawerk,

It’s rare for me to find a movie that actually scares me, but Sinister is one that really make me feel afraid. The soundtrack alone does it for me

Reverendender,

Agreed,. Scared me shitless in a very disturbing manner.

Jordan117,

Not sure if this is what you’re looking for, but my favorite eerie/creepy horror movie that doesn’t rely on jump scares or gore is The Mothman Prophecies. It’s about a journalist who stumbles across a small town haunted by this horrifying presence that seems to predict terrible disasters. The style is on point, and it’s especially creepy because it’s supposedly based on a true story.

PrinceWith999Enemies, (edited )

For “scare” here, I don’t mean I got suckered by a jump scare. I mean the scare stayed with me long after the movie ended - sometimes for months.

Two come to mind although I’m sure there’s more. One is Nightmare on Elm Street. I saw the first one as a kid when it came out, and I thought it was genuinely scary. I’ve been a horror fan since childhood but that was one of the first visual scare movies that actually scared me. I had watched the slasher films that became franchises, and Freddy went there in the very next movie, but that first one was solid (plus I was young and it was a creepy idea).

Since you also mention tension I’ll go in the other direction and say Blair Witch. I was completely freaked out when I walked out of the theater. I watched it cold - no prior knowledge. It was close to opening weekend and I liked the poster. I hadn’t heard any hype. That movie both established that style of filmmaking and has yet to be equaled in my opinion.

I probably watch more horror than any other genre, and I don’t do it to get scared. I enjoy the humor, I enjoy the stories, and I enjoy the effects. I will rarely get caught by jump scares (although I might if the person next to me yells), and I almost never get actually scared. I can acknowledge when a story is creepy-cool (like Babadook) or creep-because-the-metaphor-is-too-on-the-nose like Pontypool, but for the most part I just enjoy them.

Reverendender,

Blair Witch is terrifying.

shinigamiookamiryuu,

Pan’s Labyrinth

SzethFriendOfNimi, (edited )

The Mist. The real monsters aren’t the ones in the mist and the things we do because we have to become the things we regret the most.

So any kind of buildup of moral and societal decay where people do more and more terrible things because it’s right or good or necessary while you watch helplessly… that tends to get me.

For example, the MAS*H finale with the chicken. Man that still gets me and it’s been years.

Paradachshund,

I just saw this movie for the first time this week! They say good to begin well, better to end well, and damn!

Reverendender,

The Steelbook is a work of art

qooqie,

On dreaditt, when I browsed there, it is generally considered either midsommar or hereditary. Those movies will make you feel levels of unease I don’t think many other horrors have ever achieved

Also I think Smile was unhinged and unusually scary. For a sci-fi horror annihilation was extremely good

LegionEris,

I love Ari Aster movies. Hereditary makes me feel like I’m going to puke. We own all three of his movies on Blu Ray, including a special edition director’s cut of Midsommar with a bunch of little dicks on the spine. Beau is Afraid only kind of fits the topic, but it’s probably my favorite of the three.

JeeBaiChow,

Tension scares? Visual scares? Gore/ physical pain scares? Different stuff works for different folks.

Depending on what floats your boat, a few that come to mind would be Alien, Event Horizon and the Saw franchise.

TehBamski,

I’ll make an edit.

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