The Fly
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Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
I was about 6 when it was running in free TV here, as a major blockbuster and everyone talked about it, so I begged my dad to let me watch it.
Was good fun in the beginning, but when they ripped the slave's heart out, I nearly shat myself.
The Seventh Sign.
To this day I can’t watch biblical horror in particular without nightmares. I’m not even Christian.
The Clan of the Cave Bear
Why did my parents think it was a good idea to take me to see The Excorcist
I saw Nightmare on Elm Street at age 4... my sister was "babysitting" I had nightmares for years.. still remember them decades later.
The Blair witch project when I was 8. Watched it by myself.
The Big Boss, there is a scene where some killed guys are frozen in a ice factory and their bodies cut into smaller pieces. I was watching it through the door which was opened just a little bit instead of sleeping, while my dad and uncle where watching it.
Goldeneye - the squeezing scene
Anaconda - regurgitated people
Congo - when they throw his brain
Mercury Rising - "Mother, Simon is home"
Peewee Herman - Large Marge
The truly harrowing experience I had as a kid was the Alien Encounter ride at Disney Orlando. I was 8 and it was a field trip so the peer pressure was high. Nightmares for weeks after that. I still remember it breathing on me in the pitch dark.
I saw a bit of Ghoulies by happenstance at a very young age back in the 80s. While it doesn't haunt me, I do remember it making me very irrationally uneasy any time I remembered the incident later. Not even uneasy in the context of the clip, which was the stupid puppet monster popping up out of a toilet lol
Jaws
I was around 6 or 7 when I saw it on television, before R rating was even a thing and almost 40 years later I am still terrified of sharks.
Alien is pretty high up on the list. The chest-buster scene was a bit much for this 8yr old. Next up would be the faces melting scene in Raiders.
Apparently my parents were extremely good about not exposing us to stuff too early. Except for blazing saddles. My brother picked up some new vocabulary from that film at the age of 2.
Arachnophobia. That movie is the reason I’m scared of spiders. I loved spiders prior and had a book of spiders that I’d read while pooping (grass spiders are so fckn cool) and would even play with them, but after that movie I couldn’t anymore. I’ve gone back and watched it as an adult and it’s so campy and cheesy. If only I’d watched it when I was older I could have enjoyed it.
I was 11, and the movie was the sixth sense. The girl vomiting scared me, and also when the mom leaves the kitchen and returns a few seconds later and all the cupboard doors and drawers are open…
I was watching this with my family at home and during the movie my older brother used his cell phone to call our home phone which was located on the other side of the house in the kitchen. I hadn’t realized it was him calling the home phone and I jumped at the opportunity to leave the scary move to go answer the phone. All the lights were off as I entered the kitchen. I flipped the lights on and boom… all of the doors and drawers are wide open. My brother lured me into the kitchen with that phone call just to scare me.
It’s not that scary of a movie but to this day I refuse to watch it. Also, I stopped speaking with my brother years ago.
The Omen at seven. I wasn't allowed to watch the "scary parts" so I only heard them. Turns out the audio design was way better than my parents gave them credit for. The sounds of the dog attack, falling shingles, and zombie nanny were burned into my brain for years.
Then I watched the movie properly as an adult and... it kind of sucked. The reality couldn't compare to what my imagination conjured up from the sounds alone.
Fire In The Sky. I haven’t rewatched it ever since.
Ghostbusters 2 - that painting and the pink goo gave me nightmares for weeks.
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Final destination 2. I was of driving age.
Aliens. I was terrified of facehuggers being under my bed for a decade. Not so much anymore.
It's never an entire movie, it's a scene here and there.
Like in The Exorcist, when they showed it on network television back in the late-70s it must have been, the CBS Saturday Night Movie or something like that, "viewer discretion is advised".
Anyway... clicking channels, I stumbled upon a moment during the ritual itself, with the girl in silhouette on her knees, arms towards the ceiling, the demon Pazuzu behind her. That screwed up many a night afterwards.
As a young adult, another scene that fucked with my head for many a night was the grainy dream transmission, with the faint audio covered in static noise, from John Carpenter's "Prince Of Darkness".
Now I'm gonna flip the concept on its' head and tell you what film cured my fears of the dark at the time. Martin Scorsese's "The Last Temptation Of Christ".
Kentucky fried movie
The Thing messed me up as a 14 year old.
Brain Damage. I definitely should not have seen that movie at whatever age I was.
8mm
The Crying Game.
Sybil
Eight Legged Freaks fucked me up with the cat scene at the beginning. I’m a big softie for animals in films.
Dominion (2018 film), I was a mear 40 something & way not ready to see that shit!!
Independence Day: The dissection scene
They: The whole damned movie