just finished watching! i absolutely loved the sfx, they were incredible. i was a bit shocked at how the previous battles with the thing were more riveting than the final one
Halloween III is such an outlier. I remember the first time watching it thinking that Meyers was going to eventually show and he didn't. The only thing Halloween III and the rest of the Halloween series have in common is they take place on Halloween.
This is because the Halloween series was originally intended to be an anthology-style thing where each movie was different, and the concepts which were going to link them together would just be Halloween itself and masks. But Halloween I did so well that they brought Michael back for the sequel. When installment III time came around, they made it without Michael and the audience didn't understand why. It also was not too well-received in general, so for part IV they brought Michael back again and called it The Return of Michael Myers.
I personally think it's a great standalone movie, but I don't include it in the Halloween series and my collection reflects that.
Oculus (2013) is, despite its shortcomings, one of the best horror movies I've seen.
Maybe because I have siblings, maybe because I'm attracted towards occult and paranormal movies, but it was a fantastic ride from beginning to end.
As a show, not a movie, the excellent Archive 81, which again is a flawed gem, but has one of the best soundtracks a horror movie could ask.
Now and then I'll play it and it needs mere seconds to make my skin crawl.
If we go a bit back, I love Night of the Hunter, not scary per modern standards, but a fantastic story that is seldom seen nowadays.
just watched oculus due to this recommendation, wild fucking ride. very enjoyable and unique. was glad to not see another supernatural formulaic jump-scare based 'horror' movie. has its flaws, but i recommend it to others.
@massive_bereavement Yeah, Night of the Hunter is what I'd call suspense with horror elements. It definitely crosses that line into horror at a few key moments. And it's a classic not a lot of people mention nowadays.
Another oldie that I really like is Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. It's super campy but so creepy, and I'm not 100% on that one really being a horror movie either but it does that same kind of thing Night of the Hunter does where it veers into horror at several moments.
I watched 1 & 2 recently and was impressed by the sfx in it, it was cool. I didnt really enjoy #2 as much as #1, it felt super silly, especially how Pinhead immediately switched gears at the word human lol.
I really recommend The Wailing (2016), a unique Korean horror that stayed in my thoughts for quite some time.
Alongside that, also check out The Innocents (1961) for some vintage horror, and I see Babadook (2014) hasn't been mentioned yet, that one is also a favourite of mine.
@clitoris Not the best, but a very good and unique horror film is Society from 1989. There is one caveat with this movie: you have to watch it completely cold. Don't read anything about it, don't watch any trailers, don't look at any posters or stills. Trust me on this one.