There, he meets several friends who become his closest allies and help him discover the truth about his parents' mysterious deaths. Released: 2001 Directed by: Chris Columbus Dig Deeper Things You Didn't Know About 'The Sorcerer's Stone' If You've Only Seen The Movie Also ranks #2 on ...
Also ranks #1 on The Most Disturbing Deaths In The 'Final Destination' Franchise Also ranks #2 on Non-Final Girls Who Would Have Made Better Leads Also ranks #2 on The Best 'Final Destination' Movies, Ranked 15 Halloween II 1981 724 votes Following in the footprints of its predecessor, th...
As the two are mystically drawn to each other, the Girl must suppress her desire for his blood, while Arash must ignore the feelings of unease that arise after he suspects she may be responsible for a series of deaths in the neighborhood. —MG 60. “An American Werewolf in London” (...
The follow-up to Hammer Film Productions’ 1957 “The Curse of Frankenstein,” the second pairing of director Terence Fisher and screenwriter Jimmy Sangster is arguably their finest. The movie takes plentiful liberties with the original text, tweaked to maximize scares (and deaths) while eliminating...
Frankenstein Watchlist Storyline Edit This is an English language film (made in America) adapted from a novel by German author Erich Maria Remarque. The film follows a group of German schoolboys, talked into enlisting at the beginning of World War 1 by their jingoistic teacher. The story is ...
With a title inspired by Glenn Miller's song "Pennsylvania 6-5000," this horror comedy film stars Jeff Goldblum and Ed Begley Jr. as tabloid reporters tasked with locating Frankenstein's monster in Transylvania. They bump into other classic horror monsters on the ground, including a mummy, a...
Little Maria (Frankenstein) Marion Crane (Psycho) Ben (Night of the Living Dead) Neil Howie (The Wicker Man) Chrissie Watkins (Jaws) Kirk (The Texas Chain Saw Massacre) Clare Harrison (Black Christmas) Keith Jennings (The Omen) Pat Hingle (Suspiria) ...
elderly man, who unfortunately ends up having the slime adhere to his hand. The substance begins to consume him, growing in size, and oozing its way around the town, graphically absorbing everyone in its wake. The film is great fun, has some crazy deaths, and never takes itself too ...
wife by recreating a trap he pretended to have faced in order to get publicity. When he fails, his wife (an entirely innocent woman who had no idea he was lying) is treated to one of the most horrific deaths in a franchise full of horrific deaths. She is roasted alive in a brazen ...
Like Frankenstein for Generation X, Re-Animator’s shock factor suggests the absurdities of life (and death) writ large, a sublime reminder that sometimes we must laugh so we may not cry. Humanick 63. The Birds (1963) Every Alfred Hitchcock film could be said to be about the world’s ...