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Scenes from scary movies you remember in childhood that freaked you out.

Metamorpho1977

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This report was on Shock til you Drop. Read and follow suit. Which scenes freaked you out as achild?


Screw You, Childhood! 5 Scar-Inducing Moments in Horror
Source: Ryan Turek, Managing Editor August 3, 2010

My family was a tremendous influence on my love for horror. If you're a regular Shock reader, you've seen me refer to my father on a number of occasions. The man was, and is, a devote book collector and movie lover. Granted, these days, he's a bit more particular about the genre. But when I was growing up, he'd take me to the movies or hunker down on the couch to introduce me to a wide range of flicks. Needless to say, I was exposed to a lot in cinema very early on.

Some of it being pretty damn frightening.

Feet glued to the floor, eyes bugging out and hairs standing on the back of my neck-type scary stuff. Images that burned an eternal place in my brain and made for sleepless nights wrapped in my Empire Strikes Back bed sheets. This subject came up in a conversation I was involved with recently amongst two other horror aficionados and we mocked the scenes that hold no power today and relished those moments that still do.

Here are the five most f**ked up moments in horror that scarred my childhood. There may be spoilers ahead for those who haven't seen the films I refer to below. I'll admit, they're a bit beyond the norm. Some folks I talk to mention the twins from The Shining or the clown doll from Poltergeist, so feel free to share your own in the comments section below!

1.) Humanoids from the Deep

SCAR VALUE: Supremely F'ed Up

SEEN: It was the early '80s and my family was at the neighbor's house for a BBQ. I was the only one in the living room flipping channels and I came across this Roger Corman-produced creature feature when...OH MY GOD!

THE "MOMENT": It's not the dead kid, or the slaughtered dogs, or even that wooden dummy in the tent. You see, my introduction to Humanoids from the Deep was at the tail-end of the film. If I had seen the film from start to finish with its super-salmon gone rape-y, no doubt my mind would have been damaged. But that ending...whoa, boy.

If you've seen the film, you know what I'm talking about. A scarred woman is about to give birth when - BLAMMO - in a spray of blood, a mutated runt of a creature that might have resembled Justin Bieber's afterbirth bursts through this woman's ailing womb and out of her stomach. It flaps rubbery maw before the picture cuts to black.

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? I gave the film a revisit on Blu-Ray - superb work from the team at Shout! Factory - and I still find the scene disturbing. What a kick to the balls!

2.) The Blob

SCAR VALUE: Moderately F'ed Up

SEEN: On VHS very late one night. I expected a cheeseball remake and closed the film out with a stomach full of popcorn, a crush on Shawnee Smith and a lot of love for the film.

THE "MOMENT": There are a few I could name, particularly the scene when the kid bites it in the sewers, but what really knocked me out was when the jock is slowly yanked out of the hospital room window. Shawnee's character Meg reaches out to save him only to wind up with a handful of jock forearm.

Was it silly of me to be absolutely petrified by something like "the Blob"? Probably. But this film demonstrated the eponymous entity's abilities, and Christ, if you get devoured by it, you're still screaming while it eats you. After watch the film that night, I was awake in bed imagining the Blob was in the woods approaching my house.

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? Pretty well, although the rest of the film has some equally strong and gruesome moments, such as the famous garbage disposal gag.

3.) The Amityville Horror

SCAR VALUE: At a super young age? Fairly F'ed Up.

SEEN: I remember it was during the summer, for sure. My mother was doing a bit of house cleaning. The windows were open and WPIX was on. She left me alone in the living room, unaware of what was on.

THE "MOMENT": Those silly Lutz kids are screwing around an open window. The window comes down, smashing one little boy's hand. He's screaming. Margot Kidder can't open the damn window and neither can James Brolin. The kid's hand is eventually freed.

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? It doesn't. At all. But as I mention above, as a kid around the same age as the Lutz kids, it freaked me out.

4.) A Nightmare on Elm Street

SCAR VALUE: Super F'ed Up

SEEN: Out of context. At a friend's house. My folks were unaware I was watching it.

THE "MOMENT": Two taboo subjects coming together like peanut butter and chocolate. Sex and violence. There was no way in hell my parents were going to let me see this when it first hit VHS. And I quickly learned why when I watched Tina's death play out from the time you can hear her humping away on Rod to her grisly end that crescendos with her taking a back flop onto a bed full of blood.

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? C'mon. You don't even need an answer to this question. The scene is far from outdated and is incredibly inventive, even if it was difficult for Wes Craven and his production crew to pull off.

5.) Maximum Overdrive

SCAR VALUE: Just Plain Stupid F'ed Up

SEEN: Another summer afternoon. I had no baseball practice for the day, so for some reason the whole family sat down for a viewing of Stephen King's directorial debut.

THE "MOMENT" A little league player and his bike get squashed by an intelligent steamroller...set to the awesome "screech, screech, screech!" wailing of AC/DC's soundtrack. This is about as far as the Turek family got before my mother deemed it unworthy for my eyes. Pity, because it'd go on to be a guilty pleasure of mine later on. That's a few years of Maximum Overdrive love I lost in my youth!

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? The film, over all, is rather absurd. So, the scene plays more humorous than anything.
 
Easy answer: the friggin` clown from Poltergeist. That thing freaked me out so much i locked all my dolls in the closet each night before i went to bed, just because i was scared any of them would try and kill me while i slept :o :hehe:
 
Terminator 2 (first saw it when I was about 3 or 4)
1. The scene where Arnold is cutting his arm up
2. Pretty much any scene with T-1000
3. Sarah Connor's dream sequence < -- Disturbed me for WEEKS

Nightmare on elm street (saw it when I was about 5 just flipping through the tv channels, lol...my mom was unaware)
I only caught the end when Nancy was fight Kruger and it all scared me. Especially the scene where Kruger pulls the mom through the window.

Predator 2 (saw it when I was 6 I believe)
1. The scene with the skinned bodies
2. Scene on the train where Predator slaughters everyone
3. The decapitation scene

Goldeneye (saw it theaters with my dad, I was 4)
1. Any scene with Famke's character. Even the scene where she dies
2. The massacre at the base
 
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E.T. scared the crap out of me. The stuff at the beginning where Elliot couldn't see him. The one scene that stuck with me for all of childhood was when they scare each other in the grass or whatever it was. Stephen's really lost that touch for atmosphere in his movies. Personally, I think Janusz Kaminski is equally to blame. I liked Allen Daviau's and Dean Cundey's cinematography much more.
 
I saw the transformation scene in American Werewolf in London when I was 7. Still freaks me out to this day.
 
Pennywise from IT. I remember seeing a commercial of himcoming out of the manhole or something. Then a while later I was going through the channels and saw him and I immediately changed it. Didn't watch it until years later, but he's the only clown I've ever been afraid of.

A scene from Urban Legend when the person forced a pipe down the victom's throat and forced them to drink anti-freeze.

The Swamp Thing when the dude ran into the swamp while on fire then later in the film when the villain turned disfigured.
 
Definitely the 80s Blob remake. I was 8 years old at the time, and that **** had me scared to get in the bath tub, for risk of getting attacked by a blob coming through the ****ing plumbing.

I was pretty impressionable as a kid and most scary movies got to me. This includes "Tremors" (I was 10), which when you watch it today is some of the cheesiest (yet hilariously entertaining) stuff ever.

"American Werewolf in London" ****ed me up something fierce.

For some reason Nightmare on Elmstreet never really got to me.
 
Goldeneye (saw it theaters with my dad, I was 4)
1. Any scene with Famke's character. Even the scene where she dies
2. The massacre at the base

:huh: What exactly scared you about her?

I saw the transformation scene in American Werewolf in London when I was 7. Still freaks me out to this day.

Same here, his face especially, when he flips over on the ground.

Another one that scared me when I was younger would have to be the monkeybeast from Creepshow in "The Crate" story.
 
Halloween... just about the whole damn thing.
 
:huh: What exactly scared you about her?
She squeeze a full grown man to death. She shot two guys in the head. She killed a bunch of people at the base. She was driving like a maniac in the beginning of the film...obviously not scary now but for some reason it was when I was young, I was only 4 though.
 
I used to watch Alien movies, Predator movies, Terminator movies, Jurassic Park, and numerous other horror flicks. I never was scared, all I cared about were the monsters/creatures. Predator was my favorite. I know alot of those have sex and language, and i do remember that a little, but really I didn't care. I'd do other stuff and when the monster would come I'd watch. :)

Edit: Actually, I hated the scene in Aliens where the Facehugger is in that room after Ripley and Nute. I have a fear of spiders though, and that thing is practically a damn spider. :o
 
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Superman 3. Cyborg Women. Nuff said.

oh and Communion, alien... living room... you know what I mean :eek:
 
As a kid, The Leprechaun movies scared the hell out of me.

About a year or so ago I re-watched the first one and there was absolutely nothing scary about it. It's one of the lamest cheesy movies I've ever seen. Especially the scene with the Lep using a pogo stick to kill the man. He jumps on the man with the pogo stick until he dies, I couldn't stop laughing :lmao:
 
The scene in the hallway with the kid riding the bike in The Shining. To this day it's imprinted into my mind.
 
I was 4 when I saw The Howling and An Amercian Werewolf In London, scared the hell outta me. By the time Freddy, Jason, Michael Myers came about I was used to it.
 
I was spooked by the green mist in The Ten Commandments. When it's descending from the sky around the moon, and when it's slowly creeping through the village street....it still gives me goosebumps.
 
Terminator 1: That stop motion Terminator creeped me the **** out, especially the scene where Kyle Reese is trying to close that door in the factory and in the distance you can see the Terminator advancing *shudders*
 
Well, I didn't really get into horror movies until I was a teen. My sister was into them, so I got to see a few of them growing up. But my parents would keep me from watching them as much as possible until I was older. Here's some that I remember.

When A Stranger Calls: The entire opening scene, where Carol Kane is babysitting the kids alone in the house. That creepy voice on the phone asking "Have you checked the children?". That just freaked me right out.

American Werewolf In London: The nightmare scene where the guy is home with his family and his brother and sister are watching The Muppet Show on TV. Then people (or were they mutants) break in and make him watch as they gun everyone down with machine guns, then slits the guy's throat.

Psycho 2: The scene where Norman stabs the sister from the first movie through the mouth. I don't know why, but for years I found the sequel scarier than the original (I think the black & white may have hurt my perception of the original).

Halloween: I didn't get to see this movie until I was about 13, but the whole damn thing still creeps me out.

That's all I can think of right now. I might post more later. But those are the ones that I saw before I started going to the video store on my own and renting whatever I wanted.
 
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) - One of the chicks was in what I suppose was the kitchen area, she stumbled on some junk and took off running, as she made it to the hallway and about a foot away from the screen door, Leatherface comes out of another door and chases her, eventually catching her. That still creeps me out to this day.
 
3.) The Amityville Horror

SCAR VALUE: At a super young age? Fairly F'ed Up.

SEEN: I remember it was during the summer, for sure. My mother was doing a bit of house cleaning. The windows were open and WPIX was on. She left me alone in the living room, unaware of what was on.

THE "MOMENT": Those silly Lutz kids are screwing around an open window. The window comes down, smashing one little boy's hand. He's screaming. Margot Kidder can't open the damn window and neither can James Brolin. The kid's hand is eventually freed.

HOW DOES IT HOLD UP? It doesn't. At all. But as I mention above, as a kid around the same age as the Lutz kids, it freaked me out.

This was mine too - I saw it on regular TV as a kid and that scene with the window slamming on the kid's hand scared the crap out of me.

Poltergeist (in its entirety) also scared the hell out of me as a kid.

I saw Raiders of the Lost Ark in theaters when I was 7, and spent the scene where the Nazis melted hiding in my dad's shirt. I didn't see the scene until a few years later when it was on HBO (and was not allowed to see Temple of Doom in theaters at all).

Same goes for the scene with the little bloodsucker leeches in Star Trek II.

Was also freaked out by: anything in the first Nightmare on Elm Street, Damien knocking his mom off the stairs with a tricycle, and the twins in The Shining.
 
Superman 3. Cyborg Women.

God yes. She scared the hell outta me when I was a kid. I still won't watch that scene today. Of course, I won't watch the movie today except for the fight between Supes and Clark .:p


Not a theatrical movie, but Micheal Jackson's warewolf transformation in Thriller traumatized me. All my friends at school were saying how cool it was. And despite my mom's warnings, I just had to see it. So she let me. The second he looks up with his eyes and teeth changed and tells the girl to run, I started screaming for my mom to change it.

Also, Fright Night. I was on the couch with my dad watching Johnny Carson, when they showed a clip from the movie with the head vamp. I had to hide behind my dad, covering my ears, until they said the clip was over.


I was a big wuss when I was a kid, so almost anything remotely scary scared the crap out of me.
 
God yes. She scared the hell outta me when I was a kid. I still won't watch that scene today. Of course, I won't watch the movie today except for the fight between Supes and Clark .:p


Not a theatrical movie, but Micheal Jackson's warewolf transformation in Thriller traumatized me. All my friends at school were saying how cool it was. And despite my mom's warnings, I just had to see it. So she let me. The second he looks up with his eyes and teeth changed and tells the girl to run, I started screaming for my mom to change it.

Also, Fright Night. I was on the couch with my dad watching Johnny Carson, when they showed a clip from the movie with the head vamp. I had to hide behind my dad, covering my ears, until they said the clip was over.


I was a big wuss when I was a kid, so almost anything remotely scary scared the crap out of me.

That scared the **** out of me when I was a kid, also Robo Michael in "Moonwalker" was scary lookin.

I can't remember which Pee Wee Herman movie it was, but there was an old lady driving a truck and her face turned into like some ugly monster, i almost pissed myself when I saw that **** :csad:
 
That scared the **** out of me when I was a kid, also Robo Michael in "Moonwalker" was scary lookin.

I can't remember which Pee Wee Herman movie it was, but there was an old lady driving a truck and her face turned into like some ugly monster, i almost pissed myself when I saw that **** :csad:

That was the first one. :woot:

Another film that had me scared when I was a kid was Twilight Zone: The Movie. The one where John Lithgow is on the plane and there is that gremlin on the wing.
 

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