Do we like scary movies? Hell yeah! That's why we've picked the 31 best scary movies of all time. And it's why we're at it again, counting down the 31 most twisted and terrifying moments ever filmed by Hollywood.We've got scenes that'll make you scream and shots that'll make you jump. Check out our countdown -- and you might just live to see another sunrise. -- By Ed Tahaney
31. 'The Sixth Sense' (1999)Moment: Ghostly Mischa Barton under her bed
Why It Scares Us: These days, actor Haley Joel Osment would probably be excited to find Mischa Barton in her bedroom. But when she materializes in this 1999 ghost story, the sight of her sickly apparition hiding under the bed was the kind of movie moment that made every theater-goer jump. Or maybe even wretch. Writer-director M. Night Shymalan's spirited story about a kiddie shrink (Bruce Willis) and his young patient (Osment) who sees dead people received an Oscar nomination for Best Picture. Not too shabby for a scary movie.
30. 'When a Stranger Calls' (1979)Moment: "We've traced the call ... it's coming from inside the house."
Why It Scares Us: Not exactly the words you want to hear if you're babysitting and a psychopath keeps calling the house like some twisted telemarketer. Carol Kane plays the terrorized high schooler living every babysitter's nightmare in an otherwise forgettable 1979 flick. Kane's character eventually makes it out of the house, only to have the creep come back to haunt her and her hubby in the sequel. Next time don't answer the phone. And skip the 2006 remake.
29. 'The Blair Witch Project' (1999)Moment: Final shot of something in the corner of the room.
Why It Scares Us: 'Blair Witch''s scariest scene was one in which you couldn't really make out what was happening. All anyone can see is student filmmaker Michael Williams silently standing in the corner of an abandoned basement (clawing his eyes out? who knows!), a shot that is quickly followed by a freaked-out Heather Donahue, who drops her handheld camera. The final shot of something in the corner of the room is disturbing because the fake documentary style -- improvised by cast and crew -- seems so real. Of course, all those weird rock piles and stick figures were pretty darn spooky, too.
28. 'The Wizard of Oz' (1939)Moment: Flying monkeys!
Why It Scares Us: "Fly, fly, fly!" the Wicked Witch of the West cries into her crystal ball after ordering her head winged monkey Nikko (Pat Walshe) to send the troops on to capture Dorothy and her posse of misfits. Many of the actors playing what appeared to be hundreds of flying monkeys were not credited in the film and several were injured shooting this scene when the piano wires lifting them up snapped. Not that that makes us any less irrationally afraid of these nasty creatures.
27. 'Signs' (2002)Moment: The aliens show up in home video footage shown on TV.
Why It Scares Us: Creepy crop circles have been appearing on the land surrounding a charming farmhouse inhabited by the Rev. Graham Hess (Mel Gibson) and his good looking family. But how does the family learn who is behind the spookiness? By watching the news. Namely, Graham's brother Merrill (Joaquin Phoenix) turns on the boob tube to discover that out-of-this-world lizard men have invaded a children's birthday party in South America. (Even scarier: the sight of Phoenix speaking Spanish to the television.) Cue the screams.
26. 'The Fly' (1986)Moment: Scientist turns into Brundlefly (and loses body parts) in the bathroom.
Why It Scares Us: That'll teach you not to spray for bugs before you attempt to teleport yourself, you twit. The scene when scientist Seth Brundle (Jeff Goldblum) is turning into Brundlefly, half man-half housefly, and starts losing body parts in the bathroom -- serious ick! The great stuff from director David Cronenberg helped the film snag an Oscar for Best Makeup. Bet it was that ear in a jar that won over the Academy.
25. 'The Birds' (1963)Moment: A playground slowly fills up with menacing black birds as a teacher sings to her class.
Why It Scares Us: Why the heck are these birds on the attack? Is it global warming? Loss of habitat? We never find out, but the infamous schoolyard attack scene, in which a playground is slowly swarmed by menacing black birds as a teacher sings with her class should have us all worried about saving our environment. Granted, not all present were so awed -- main character Melanie Daniels (Tippi Hedren) jadedly chain-smokes throughout the ordeal. Alfred Hitchcock pulled out all the stops in producing this end-of-the-world scenario of avian vengeance.
24. 'Jacob's Ladder' (1990)Moment: Jacob sees scary faces on the back of a subway.
Why It Scares Us: Vietnam veteran and postal employee Jacob (Tim Robbins) misses his subway after working late and sees some very creepy figures in the last car of the train as it speeds away from the platform. Or did he? Was he imagining it? Were those really demons? Or a couple of Brooklynites heading home after a party? This scene is the first sign that this psychological thriller would take viewers on a roller coaster ride through unreality and back.
23. 'Nosferatu' (1922)Moment: Count Orlok's entrance
Why It Scares Us: The vampire movie genre begins here. The bald, pointy-nosed, long-fingered Count Orlok makes his spooky, slow-motion entrance -- wearing not a cape, but tails. And the legendary vampire is ready to drain some vein (namely a hapless guy who can do little more than quake at the sight of him). Despite more famous names, like Lugosi, Lee, Langella, Oldman and even George Hamilton donning the fangs in later versions, the portrayal of the bat-like Count Orlok by Max Schreck remains the creepiest and most disturbing.
22. 'Misery' (1990)Moment: Crazed fan hammers some ankle
Why It Scares Us: When fans attack! The hobble scene in Stephen King's twisted tale about nutty nurse Annie Wilkes (Kathy Bates), who rescues her favorite author (James Caan) from a car wreck, is gruesome. The unfortunate scribe endures a novelist's nightmare when his no. 1 reader blithely, and with good humor, takes a sledgehammer to his feet. Bates took home a Best Actress Oscar for her performance; Caan was allowed to keep his crutches.
21. 'Les Diaboliques' (1955)Moment: The "corpse-brought-to-life" in the bathtub scene
Why It Scares Us: Christina Delasalle (played by Vera Clouzot) and Nicole Horner (Simone Signoret) have killed a cranky school headmaster played by Paul Meurisse. Or, at least they think they have. The scariest scene in this creaky French thriller is the scene in which the presumably dead Meurisse -- whose lifeless body had been dumped in the swimming pool -- is found alive and well in the bathtub. There was a remake (with Chazz Palminteri and Sharon Stone), but it didn't pack the wallop of the original.
Reader Comments (129)
JB at 1:12PM on Oct 3rd 2008
I think you hit most but you missed one of the all time cult hits: phantasm. That phrase "Boy" will always make my hair stand up!!
angelo at 11:16PM on Oct 1st 2008
seriously can someone tell me who the voters are
Mike at 7:59PM on Oct 31st 2009
The voters were clearly anybody who achieved the near impossible of watching 'Nosferatu' and not sleeping, and watching the shear awfulness of blair witch without laughing.
Lilpanda718 at 1:29AM on Oct 2nd 2008
Um...I'm pretty sure that Barton was hiding under her own bed. When he first saw her, she found him in his tent as he was hiding and she puked all over the place. Then he went to her house after the funeral, and that's when she came out and handed him the box with the incriminating video. It was an important part to the plot, so it should be correct.
C at 4:12AM on Oct 2nd 2008
I am amazed at this list which is obviously opinion based and not based on statistics or fan response. The fact that "The Changling" did not make the list, or "Poltergeist" is amazing. I think the editor of this article should do him/herself a favor and check out the two movies above and also try to get a really consensus going next time.
Linda K at 10:30PM on Oct 2nd 2008
I guess who ever wrote this didn't watch the movie because she was under her own bed not his. He went to her funeral after she haunted him at his house where she went in his tent he had made in his room. She kept throwing up saying I feel better now.
Mike at 1:07AM on Oct 3rd 2008
Poltergeist was not scary at all. It was too filled up with FX junk to be scary. I vote the scariest to be One Dark Night, a film made in the early eighties. This movie is eerie all the way through.
Kyle at 6:05AM on Oct 3rd 2008
Ummm there's only two on the list, guys. Don't go crazy yet.
Adam at 4:40PM on Oct 4th 2008
Am I missing something? Why is 3/4 of this list attributed to scenes in a movie called "Clue" that hasn't even come out yet???
Adam at 4:44PM on Oct 4th 2008
Nevermind, I answered my own question.
FLKraka at 9:13AM on Oct 5th 2008
your description of the 31st scariest scene in a movie is WRONG.... the "dead" character doesn't materialize under the boys bed, she invades his makeshift private tent in his room ... if you are referring to the scene depicted in the pict accompanying the description, she is under her bed in her house... just check out the decorating of the room, does it look like a boys bedroom!!? Both scenes are very memorable, so getting it wrong on the first movie you are promoting calls into serious question your expertise in selecting and writing on the subject at hand. Perhaps the reason I completely disagree with the selection of the Blair Witch Project which was not scary for even a millisecond. I watched this movie with my parents (in their mid 60's at the time ) who had seen many psychological thrillers made by some of the masters of filmmaking and had to hear "when is it going to get scary" every 10 mins. Anyone pushing the propaganda that this movie was scary 10 years later is to be ignored, imho.
sj at 4:45PM on Oct 6th 2008
Any list that does not include the Kathy Bates nude hot tube scene in "About Schmidt" is incomplete....
Matthew Colburn at 5:46PM on Oct 6th 2008
*guesses* #22 is going to b the part in misery whn she slams the writers feet with a slegehammr,#11 will be the omen,#9 will be 1 of the chucky movies,#5 will be the ring,#4 will be from the exorcist.BUT THE WIZARD OF OZ,SCARY?!?!?!
davo at 8:27PM on Oct 8th 2008
what a bunch of rubbish,make people look at all of the non-movies,good gosh,what a simpleton ploy
Mike at 8:45PM on Oct 8th 2008
Scary moments? You want scary? How could this writer miss including the 1963 classic "The Haunting?" Talk about chilling, eerie moments in a haunted house. Try watching it at night alone and you won't be able to sleep.
shaun alexander at 9:45PM on Oct 8th 2008
High Tension is the scariest movie of all time.
Jason Starr at 9:47PM on Oct 8th 2008
These "ratings" are never what I like. I suggest people list their own and we can talk about them. I hate it when people dictate lists to others.
http://www.webchannel24.com/entertainment/articles.php?pageid=articles&articleID=648
Or something like that.
Bleu at 10:03PM on Oct 8th 2008
I'm going to take a stab at guessing some of the movies based on clues. Some I know for definite certainty others are well, just guesses. #22- The Shining or Misery; #20- 28 Days Later; #19- The Scanners; #18- Hellraiser; #16- Body Snatchers; #15- The Silence Of The Lambs; #14- The Fury; #13- Friday the 13th; #11- The Omen; #10- Alien; #9- A Nightmare On Elm Street; #8- Night/ Dawn Of the Living Dead or From Dusk Til Dawn; #6- Carrie; #5- The Ring; #4- The Exorcist; #3- The Fog; and #2- Psycho.
cheryl at 10:31PM on Oct 8th 2008
Uh, nothing can make a person "wretch." Wretch is a noun, it means a lowly, wretched person. "Retch," which might be what the writer for movie 31 meant, means to vomit. And yes, I am an English/grammar fascist.
Fory-san at 10:19PM on Oct 8th 2008
And yet, they continually ignore the films of Dario Argento. When I first saw Suspiria it was the equivalent to waking up from a nightmare. Beautiful, bloody, and surreal, it is quite an unnerving picture.