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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 1:34 pm  Post subject: Movie classification
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Hi!

I'm relatively new to horror movies as such and have a lot of problems with classification. As i searched the internet for horror movie classification i found nothing maybe I'm not very good at searching information but i think the problem is, there are'nt any good classifications. So what i wanted to say was, that anyone could post in this topic thier vision on classification.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 1:56 pm  Post subject:
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By classification do you mean the rating films are given and if they are cut or uncut etc.

Or do you mean classification of horrors like The best zombie films or slasher films etc??

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 2:14 pm  Post subject:
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I mean the classification of movies like for example:

slasher- definition
splatter - definition
etc

Sorry if my english is bad :oops:


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 3:21 pm  Post subject:
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You'd probably find what you're looking for if you change the word 'classification' for 'genre'

e.g. A quick search on Google for 'Horror movie genres" gave loads of results, here's one for a start.... http://www.webhorror.com/genres/genres_index.html


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 3:36 pm  Post subject:
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Location: Hell ___________________________ ------ Horror Dealer ------
Zombie
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Blood
Rape
Horror
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Guts
Gore
Shit
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 5:29 pm  Post subject:
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I gave up pondering this question a long time ago, sure there are genres like slasher, comedy horror, etc. But they also tend to bung a whole loada shit in the "Horror" brackets now, no offence to anyone that liked scream, but, to me, those films are not even close to horror, good films but sure as hell not horror in my eyes.

I think horror films in general have been watered down too much in the last decade, sure wrong turn was a great film, but it barely scraped in as a horror type film, same as most other so called horror films lately.

Personally I am more of a graphic violence type guy, all this psychological horror just bores me, I like to watch a horror film that has a decent, but not too deep, plot and mucho blood, guts, sex, titties and violence.

Just 2 pennies worth.

P.S. does anyone else think a horror film just aint right without some bird flashing her bristols and then being slashed/eaten to death 10 minutes later?

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:21 pm  Post subject:
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hehe my dear TaKYoN arent u a little sicko hehe... but anyway whats wrong with *wrong turn* and why do it just scrap the horror surface?? it got alot of blood, body parts and tits.... u tell me why...

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:27 pm  Post subject:
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Just had a quick skim thru wrong turn, was stoned the first time LOL, to refresh my memory, and I would indeed concur that it is a great film, and I may have been incorrect in my first assumption, it is indeed a horror film in my eyes.

Like I said tho, too many films are getting clumped in with the horrors just to be trendy, sometimes I think the eighties really were the great days for horror, but once again this is just my opinion and I will of course respect everyone else's.

P.S. what is ya opinion on Undead? maybe I am just desensitised but that film, altho really good, was not a good zombie film. DOn't ask me why, just seemed a bit "off" to me, no frights at all in the film, altho it had a rather interesting ending.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:41 pm  Post subject:
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i liked undead very much its a all around good zombie movie and with very nice effect to be a budged movie, this movie u can see that they can make acceptable blood gore effects and dont need to use the computer gfx cheap way becouse they make a budget movie... Steven Spielberg has something to learn here i think, just look at the raped new starwars movies that he puke out... this movie set the stander for gore effect in the 2003 and years to come. very nice done and i expect that horror movie makers dont go for less quality gore effect...

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 7:03 pm  Post subject:
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d0c wrote:
i liked undead very much its a all around good zombie movie and with very nice effect to be a budged movie, this movie u can see that they can make acceptable blood gore effects and dont need to use the computer gfx cheap way becouse they make a budget movie... Steven Spielberg has something to learn here i think, just look at the raped new starwars movies that he puke out... this movie set the stander for gore effect in the 2003 and years to come. very nice done and i expect that horror movie makers dont go for less quality gore effect...


I agree, I thought Undead was excellent :)

BTW George Lucas raped and puked out Star Wars, not Spielberg.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 8:04 pm  Post subject:
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I indeed agree on all the positive points regarding Undead, good effects, etc.... But like I said, just didn't seem to feel right for a Zombie film, dunno why, but still a seriously nice flick. I was waiting a long time to see it, and I was glad that I was not disappointed.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2003 8:31 pm  Post subject:
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ok it was George Lucas then... my misstake sorry...

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2003 7:31 am  Post subject:
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Buckethead wrote:
You'd probably find what you're looking for if you change the word 'classification' for 'genre'

e.g. A quick search on Google for 'Horror movie genres" gave loads of results, here's one for a start.... http://www.webhorror.com/genres/genres_index.html


There is not what i have been looking for :) I would like to see your genre classification with examples (if anybody has time for that).
Mostly why i made this thread is because me and my friend started arguing about splatters. He defined splatter as a horror movie with lots of gore but i said that there are different kinds of splatters that's why i want to see the genre classification by the genre fan's.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2003 8:13 am  Post subject:
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Um, not sure what you mean :?
But http://www.terrortrap.com/ there's some genre examples. Check out "slasher frenzy", "ghost movies" etc. Good reviews and stuff like that...

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2003 8:19 am  Post subject:
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And don't forget the infamous gorn movies :-)


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2003 3:25 pm  Post subject:
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snipped from the empire guide to movies:

spudthedestroyer wrote:
<table border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" bordercolor="black"><th colspan="2">The Greatest Horror Movies Ever: The Definitive Guide (Empire)</th><tr><td><img src="http://www.empireonline.co.uk/img/logo.gif"></td><td valign="top" width="100%">Minibiography: Extreme Fear; terror; dread - the dictionary definition of "horror". Facets of life advisable to steer clear of. Yet when it comes to entertainment, the creation of drama, they are ideal. And so we have the horror genre: fear, terror, dread taken to extremes...<br><br>Since man began telling stories, horror has existed. It taps into something primal; life and, particularly, death issues. In many ways it is the purest from of cinema - your reaction isn't emotional or intellectual but physical, a knee-jerk jolt of fear, revulsion or relief. And so movies have mapped it's shadowy corridors, it's bloody chambers and, in more recent times, it's high schools and teen bedrooms. Moviemakers have been enticed by the genre, it allows them to express strong themes and indulge in shocking visuals: from the stark brilliance of Nosferatu to the glowing melodrama of the Universal classics (Dracula, Frankenstein et al) through the camp vigour of Hammer to the rough and ready American indies (Night of the Living Dead). Slasher movies (A Nightmare on Elm Street) dismembered the teen movie, while recently the genre has taken inspired diversions into satirical, self-referential side streets (Scream, Fight Club).<br><br>In this, the second in our ongoing celebration of movie genres, Empire has probed, autosied cunjured up and brought back from the dead the 50 greatest horror movies ever. The classics are given a new lease of life, modern greats are granted due credit and some shad crations are brought screaming into the daylighght. Plus, there's a smattering of controversial entries thrown in to get you thinking. The idea is to invent or, indeed, reinvent some great, great movies for you. We wish you many sleepless nights.</td></tr></table>

Navigation:
1 - Creature Features
Since time immemorial at the dark heart of folklore has lurked the malevolent bogeyman - a fantastic monster that preys on mortal man. Moviemakers were quick to exploit the cinematic potential of such ghouls, from the myth of the vampire - typified by numerous takes on Bram Stoker's Dracula - to Frankenstein's tragic Monster, to lycanthropes howling at the moon and George Romero's Shambling brain-guzzling zombies. Hitchock even transformed little birds into frenzied killers all have revolted us, scared us and captivated us in equal measure, making the creature feature the pivotal genre in the shadowy history of horror</I>

<a href="#frankenstein">Frankenstein (1931)</a>
<a href="#Nosferatu">Nosferatu (1922)</a>
<a href="#Dracula-1931">Dracula (1931)</a>
<a href="#mummy">The Mummy (1932)</a>
<a href="#brideof">The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)</a>
<a href="#catpeople">Cat People</a>
<a href="#curseof">The Curse of Frankenstein</a>
<a href="#nightofdemon">Night of the Demon</a>
<a href="#Dracula-1958">Dracula (1958)</a>
<a href="#Birds">The Birds</a>
<a href="#nightof">Night of the Living Dead</a>
<a href="#dawnof">Dawn of the Dead</a>
<a href="#fog">The Fog</a>
<a href="#howling">The Howling</a>
<a href="#keep">The Keep</a>
<a href="#companyof">The Company of Wolves</a>
<a href="#neardark">Near Dark</a>
<a href="#interview">Interview With The Vampire</a>

2 - Nightmare Movies
There are some horror films in which the supermatural is more elusive but their depiction of stranger, darker places they cannot escape the clutches of the genre. Nightmare Movies hint at innocent corrupted, minds framenting and the deep perversion of humanity, from the prevading evil and looming tragedy of Don't Look Now to the bleak cruelty of Witchfinder General, to the cannibal craziness of The Hills Have Eyese. Videodrome focused its surreal horror on the emergent video culture of the '80s, while The Blair Witch Project, a raw and terrifying antidote to slick Hollywood shockers, proved itself a horror movie for the ne millenium.</I>

<a href="#dontlooknow">Don't Look Now</a>
<a href="#witchfinder">Witchfinder General</a>
<a href="#wickerman">The Wicker Man</a>
<a href="#hillshaveeyes">The Hills Have Eyes</a>
<a href="#videodrome">Videodrome</a>
<a href="#blairwitchproject">The Blair Witch Project</a>

3 - Hauntings
The existence of ghosts, restless spirits of the undead, has long troubled scientists and excited storytellers. Traditionally, the unsettled dead are a territorial bunch, confining their hauntings to castle ramparts and old dark houses. On celluloid th've been given a free rein. The best movie ghost sotries are sophisticated psychological chillers. The Haunting and The Sixth Sense subtly probe the human experience, while Poltergeist adopts a more fullon terror campaign. Candyman, one of the most original ghost stories ever brought to the screen, is a truly weird, class-related tale of revenge from beyond the grave.</I>

<a href="#6thsense">The Sixth Sense</a>
<a href="#carnivalofsouls">Carnival of Souls</a>
<a href="#haunting">The Haunting</a>
<a href="#poltergeist">Poltergeist</a>
<a href="#candyman">Candyman</a>

4 - Slasher Movies
Ever since Hitchock consigned Janet Leigh to the plughole of history in Psycho, no self-respecting studio has let a year go by without a slasher movie on its roster. Deom gleefully wanton, supernatural incarnations such as dreamstalker Freddy Krueger in A Nightmare on Elm Street, to the all-too real Henry in John McNaughton's documentry styled portrait of his eponymous serial killer, the blood has flowed with unnerving refularity. Nevertheless, it is a seminal, contrasting pair that is still way ahead of the pack: Hitch's brilliant, darkly comic masterpiece and John Carpenter's Halloween, the indelible blueprint for the modern slasher flick.</I>

<a href="#Halloween">Halloween</a>
<a href="#HouseofWax">House of Wax</a>
<a href="#Psycho">Psycho</a>
<a href="#texas">The Texas Chain Saw Massacre</a>
<a href="#Suspiria">Suspiria</a>
<a href="#nightmareon">A Nightmare On Elm Street</a>
<a href="#re-animator">Re-Animator</a>
<a href="#henry">Henry: Portrait of a Serial killer</a>

5 - Diabolic
For all the evil that men do, there is still nobody who does it better than the main man, the guv'nor, tha baddest boy on the block: Satan. And his malevolent meddlings in the affairs of men have long provided rich pickings for the filmmaker's febrile mind. The Omen fabrivated a Biblical basis for the arrival of the Antichrist, the taut paranoia of Rosemary's Baby traced a similar course for the demon seed, whilse Hellraiser took a fantastical jaunt to a hideous, gory vision of Hell itself. But the big kahuna of Diabolical movies surely remains William Friedkin's head=spinning, pea soup-spewing masterpiece, The Exorcist. Hallelujah, indeed.</I>

<a href="#exorcist">The Exorcist</a>
<a href="#rosemarysbaby">Rosemary's Baby</a>
<a href="#theomen">The Omen</a>
<a href="#hellraiser">Hellraiser</a>

6 - Psychomania
Nightmares in damaged brains? Truth, or the wild rantings of a disintegrating mind? Psychological horror treads a disturbing path through the cerebral synapses, leading us down twisting paths of tortured thoughts to murder, mayhem and madness. Be it the evil possession of men, from the Overlook Hotel's dark hold on the shattered Jack Torrance in The Shining or the whirling, kinetic charge of Evil Dead 2. Be it Carrie's pubescent, telekenetic powers; the mind games locked deep within The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, or the corrosive social atire of Fight Club, head trips are rarely more intense. Let the ride begin.</I>

<a href="#Shining">The Shining</a>
<a href="#Cabinetof">The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari</a>
<a href="#pit">Pit and the Pendulum</a>
<a href="#carrie">Carrie</a>
<a href="#EvilDead2">The Evil Dead 2</a>
<a href="#Fightclub">Fight Club</a>

7 - Comic Horror
At face value, the grim netherworld of horror, with its panoply of death, torment and pain is hardly ripe with comedic opportunity. But still, killing jokes abound, movies in which directors have fused the darkest of sensibilities to razor-sharp wit. To wit: Gremlins, lulling its audience with cutesy Capra-corn smalltown Americana before bursting into whacko subversion; An American Werewolf In London, by turns genuinely scary and ingeniously funny, blurring the boundaries like never before. And on a more modern, or - eeek! - postmodern tack Wes Craven's Scream, simultaneously sending-up and rejuvenating the high school slasher flick</I>

<a href="#scream">Scream</a>
<a href="#americanwerewolf">An American Werewolf In London</a>
<a href="#gremlins">Gremlins</a>


In addition add 'exploitation'; ilysa, guinea pig etc. and 'shockumentry'; faces of death, etc.

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 11, 2003 9:14 pm  Post subject:
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satan wrote:
Zombie
Cult
Blood
Rape
Horror
Splatter
Troma
Guts
Gore
Shit
Chainsaw
Massacre
Satan
Kill
Death


"Rape" and "Shit".. ??? :lol:


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PostPosted: Mon May 15, 2006 4:46 pm  Post subject:
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satan wrote:
Cult
i've always hated this word, it says nothing about the subject


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PostPosted: Mon May 15, 2006 9:20 pm  Post subject:
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TaKYoN wrote:
I gave up pondering this question a long time ago, sure there are genres like slasher, comedy horror, etc. But they also tend to bung a whole loada shit in the "Horror" brackets now, no offence to anyone that liked scream, but, to me, those films are not even close to horror, good films but sure as hell not horror in my eyes.

I think horror films in general have been watered down too much in the last decade, sure wrong turn was a great film, but it barely scraped in as a horror type film, same as most other so called horror films lately.

Personally I am more of a graphic violence type guy, all this psychological horror just bores me, I like to watch a horror film that has a decent, but not too deep, plot and mucho blood, guts, sex, titties and violence.

Just 2 pennies worth.

P.S. does anyone else think a horror film just aint right without some bird flashing her bristols and then being slashed/eaten to death 10 minutes later?
12 point for sincerity! i take my hat off to you!


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