gman36 wrote:Bela Lugosi was unsurpassed. Nobody, not ever Vincent Price or Christopher Lee, came close.
beg4ignore wrote:Gman, I wasn't allowed to stay up that late, but my Grandmother, who I lived with, would always fall asleep during the news, and I would get to stay up to watch a double bill of horror films! They weren't always Universals, but those were usually my favorites. I have a fascination, in particular, for Bela Lugosi!
DMarieSC2 wrote:gman36 wrote:Bela Lugosi was unsurpassed. Nobody, not ever Vincent Price or Christopher Lee, came close.
wow..... Vincent Price, I just flash backed to the days of Drive-In movies.
Vincent Price in The Pit & the Pendulum
gman36 wrote:The only thing I've ever watched that scared me to the core was "Protect and Survive", a series of information films made by the UK government telling what to do in the event of a nuclear attack. They were made in 1975, the year I was born. I think what scared me about them was the fact that this was a real possibility, and that I might never have had the chance to grow up.
Not that I've ever really grown up, anyway.
dillon4412 wrote:I like the black and white horror movies.I use to watch Wolfman Chiller Drive in.It was out of Detroit.He played all the old horror movies.
dillon4412 wrote:The Wolfman online.He trying to get back in the Detroit local Tv market.
CutsieSC2 wrote:If you like gore, rent "Battle Royale" ... it's in Japanese but it's like the hunger games but gorier.
Cutsie
Xandusk wrote:CutsieSC2 wrote:If you like gore, rent "Battle Royale" ... it's in Japanese but it's like the hunger games but gorier.
Cutsie
Gore isn't overly my thing. I pretty much watched Human Centipede to find out what the fuss was about. Then had to watch the second to see if they actually topped the shock value of the first (not even close in my opinion).
Xandusk wrote:LMAO. I never saw it. But the first sequence, while being implausible, is apparently medically possible.
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