What is the weirdest horror movie you have ever seen?!


Question: Habit~Anything by Larry Fessenden is offbeat but generally worth watching! Here's his take on vampires.

Doppelganger~What seems to be a "normal" slasher pic turns into something truly bizarre during the closing scenes. No one could have guessed THAT!

Killer Klowns from Outer Space~SF/horror
Based on "The Blob" (original), this film definitely deserves to be yet another cult classic with its creative uses of popcorn, cotton candy, hand shadows and evil clowns ~um~ klowns. And, what a great theme song!

Fiend Without a Face~SF/horror
It takes awhile for the fiends to show up, but they are worth the wait! So, why does the title go singular, not plural? I could ask the same about "The Monster That Challenged the World", which isn't weird enough to be on the list.

About Larry Fessenden: His works generally are worth a look or two:
No Telling aka No Telling (Or the Frankenstein Complex)

Wendigo~based on the legendary creature from Native American lore

The Roost~sort of vampires and zombies, with bat attacks and a framework by a horror film host

Headspace~possession? demon in human guise? I've seen it once, very late at night, so I could have missed some clues.

I've merely clawed (pun intended) the surface of Fessenden's works and intend to search out the others. I watched "Habit" for the first time in the wee hours of the morning and intend to watch it again. Is Anna really there? Is she a vampire? Is she the symbol for his habit? Is he going over the edge in more ways than one?

EDIT: OMG! I saw "Eaten Alive" (1977) for the first time a few months ago! I guess it didn't play at our drive-in back then~not that I'm sure I would have gone to see it! You've heard and read the term "grindhouse", which has been thrown around a lot lately. "Eaten Alive" is the REAL thing! The cast is truly remarkable, including Neville Brand, Mel Ferrer, Carolyn Jones, Robert Englund, Marilyn Burns, William Finley, Stuart Whitman, and Kyle Richards. It's brutal, bothersome, "icky" and totally warped, rather like a wreck you don't intend to look at but do~a case of morbid curiosity perhaps. My favorite quote: "Daddy's off to slay the dragon." No, she doesn't know about Brand's "pet".


Answers: Habit~Anything by Larry Fessenden is offbeat but generally worth watching! Here's his take on vampires.

Doppelganger~What seems to be a "normal" slasher pic turns into something truly bizarre during the closing scenes. No one could have guessed THAT!

Killer Klowns from Outer Space~SF/horror
Based on "The Blob" (original), this film definitely deserves to be yet another cult classic with its creative uses of popcorn, cotton candy, hand shadows and evil clowns ~um~ klowns. And, what a great theme song!

Fiend Without a Face~SF/horror
It takes awhile for the fiends to show up, but they are worth the wait! So, why does the title go singular, not plural? I could ask the same about "The Monster That Challenged the World", which isn't weird enough to be on the list.

About Larry Fessenden: His works generally are worth a look or two:
No Telling aka No Telling (Or the Frankenstein Complex)

Wendigo~based on the legendary creature from Native American lore

The Roost~sort of vampires and zombies, with bat attacks and a framework by a horror film host

Headspace~possession? demon in human guise? I've seen it once, very late at night, so I could have missed some clues.

I've merely clawed (pun intended) the surface of Fessenden's works and intend to search out the others. I watched "Habit" for the first time in the wee hours of the morning and intend to watch it again. Is Anna really there? Is she a vampire? Is she the symbol for his habit? Is he going over the edge in more ways than one?

EDIT: OMG! I saw "Eaten Alive" (1977) for the first time a few months ago! I guess it didn't play at our drive-in back then~not that I'm sure I would have gone to see it! You've heard and read the term "grindhouse", which has been thrown around a lot lately. "Eaten Alive" is the REAL thing! The cast is truly remarkable, including Neville Brand, Mel Ferrer, Carolyn Jones, Robert Englund, Marilyn Burns, William Finley, Stuart Whitman, and Kyle Richards. It's brutal, bothersome, "icky" and totally warped, rather like a wreck you don't intend to look at but do~a case of morbid curiosity perhaps. My favorite quote: "Daddy's off to slay the dragon." No, she doesn't know about Brand's "pet".

Reanimator.

Wicker man...... it wasnt scary and it was just strange... i watched the gorry ending where we see the character get beat up and legs chopped off and then burned and then my friends and i realized there was the not gross version and watch it afterwards lol. but it was a strange movie

Return to Horror High.
or even, Jeepers Creepers

I've seen quite a few horror movies but I think that
The Ring 2 was the weirdest. It was also the least scary. Every time one of those deer came on the screen, my friends and I would burst out laughing. I mean, just because the director has some sort of odd deer phobia doesn't mean the movie-viewing people do!

Well, I don't know if you would call it wierd, but The Evil Dead was definitely an odd horror movie. Actually I laughed until I cried when I saw it. I would classify it as a comedy before horror. But it actually is classified as horror.

Hope that helps. :)

Eaten Alive- made in the seventies absolutely terrible there wasnt an aspect about it that was scary, it was 2 hours of stupid that was clearly shot on a sound stage with red lighting. Through out the movie there is a persistant screeching noise which is AWFUL and the alligator looks like they stole it from a local minature golf course. Avoid it at all costs.

Sarah Landan and the Paranormal Hour

it was soo dumb, soo weird, and the actors in it sucked. they kid that was supposed to be the whole key to the reincarnation thing just had this monatone voice the whole time. then at the end, it ended so that another movie could follow it... God i hope there isn't another one!!

Dumplings
Japan horror movies
Strange circus
"Guinea Pig: Flowers of Flesh and Blood"

Society (came out in 1989) has to be the strangest horror movie I have ever seen. It's so strange, I can't even describe it, so I included a link, which really doesn't describe it any better than I could have. It's just something you have to see. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098354/plot...
I also agree with Dumplings, which was a Japanese subtitled film in a set of three short films, entitled Three Extremes. It is a dark twist on the idea of a fountain of youth.
And for a strange, extremely cheesy plot line in a semi-decent film, my award goes to Shakma, which is about an inane role-playing game set after hours in a animal hospital and a rabid baboon on the loose. You do the math. Very fun.



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