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Tag: scary movies

  • 13 Horror Movies For Scaredy Cats | The Mary Sue

    Do you hate horror movies, but need to compromise with a friend who loves them and figure out something to watch? Take it from me, a proud wimp when it comes to spooky season. Here are some horror movies that I survived and liked even though I generally hate the concept of horror movies.

    First, let me give you a sense of my taste. There’s nothing worse than someone who loves hot sauce telling you something is “not that spicy” and setting you up for failure. The same goes for scary movies. Thrillers are fine by me. Gothic romance is encouraged. I can handle a couple of jump scares per film. I won’t be happy about them, and may look them up in advance; but they won’t ruin the movie for me. I don’t seek out franchises like Saw, The Conjuring, Paranormal Activity, Smile, and/or Scream. Those artsy “elevated horror” movies that are popular these days? I take those on a case-by-case basis. Finally, I’m not ashamed to read the Wikipedia summary first and get spoiled if I’m feeling anxious.

    The truth of the matter is that some great cinema lies in the horror genre and I don’t want to deprive myself of those experiences. So, without further ado: please accept these recommendations.

    The Shining (1980)

    Shelley Duvall in
    (Warner Bros.)

    The benefit to shuffling your feet and waiting too long to watch classic horror movies is that you often end up absorbing the scariest parts through cultural osmosis. Going into The Shining, I already had a sense of the horrors Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) was going to induce on his family. I knew about some of the bloody visuals. There are a couple of jump scares, but none so bad that I couldn’t handle it. Ultimately, the scariest thing about this movie is how misogynistic its villain is even before he gets possessed. Watch this as an important piece of adaptation/the Stanley Kubrick canon and so that you can then watch Mike Flanagan’s delightful and safely spooky Doctor Sleep!

    Jaws (1975)

    man looking straight ahead on a boat
    (Universal Pictures)

    Another benefit to waiting around to watch horror movies is that the special effects are, in the 21st century, hokey enough that you can remove yourself if you really want to. I’m not saying the special effects are bad. Yes, the whole *thing* about Jaws is that Spielberg and his crew found the scary by not showing the shark. And it is a scary movie. Just not the type of scary I can’t handle.

    Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)

    Leatherface swinging his chainsaw during sunrise in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
    (Bryanston Distributing Company)

    This is probably, in my humble opinion, the scariest film on this list. I was required to watch it in graduate school and not happy about it. So, imagine my surprise when I actually enjoyed myself. The original film about teenagers on a road trip who encounter a family of cannibals and a chainsaw-wielding villain called Leatherface, directed by Tobe Hooper, is worth it. It uses a funny framing device that falsely claims it’s based on a true story. Because I was in a classroom, I started taking note of the tropes that have become synonymous with the slasher subgenre and started in this movie. That kept me from getting too scared. Finally, there’s a genuinely funny scene in the middle that perfectly parodies the American nuclear family. If I hadn’t sucked it up and watched the film, I would have missed out!

    The Cabin in the Woods (2011)

    Dana in Cabin in the Woods.
    (Lionsgate)

    Speaking of tropes and jokes, The Cabin in the Woods is so meta that you’ll forget to be scared for laughing. Even the jump scares break the tension in a way that when your heart rate returns to normal, it’s funny. The film is a parody of slasher movies, like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, about a group of young people getting picked off one by one. Certain plot developments explain why this is happening and why the young people are making such poor choices in harm’s way. The film critiques why audiences are so obsessed with watching hot young people get tortured on screen. Since this isn’t my favorite genre to begin with, I appreciated the commentary. Finally, it doesn’t hurt that the characters are so lovable!

    Get Out (2017)

    daniel kaluuya as chris in Get Out
    (Universal Pictures)

    Jordan Peele’s directorial debut had such good word-of-mouth that I had to see it in theaters. There wasn’t a world in which I missed out on that cultural moment. For the most part, the viewing experience is more uneasy than scary. I can handle sitting in a pool of dread and microaggressions that feel like little drops of acid. The fact that there’s so much to chew on thematically is the icing on the cake. It’s funny too and the cast is killer. Quick storytime about scaredy cats like me: because I loved Get Out, I watched and adored Nope. But I’m still a little too scared to see Us, even though I know it will probably be fine. Something we have to reckon with when it comes to choosing which horror movies that do and don’t work for us is that sometimes the reasoning is irrational.

    The Dead Don’t Die (2019)

    Austin Butler as Jack in The Dead Don't Die
    (Focus Features)

    This horror comedy is my zombie entry on this list. You’re probably already familiar with zombie comedies like Shaun of the Dead and Warm Bodies. Check out this one next! Director Jim Jarmusch, who is also responsible a melancholy vampire hang called Only Lovers Left Alive, knows how to keep it weird. The humor is dry as a bone, and another meta element that creeps in over time and helps distance you from the gore and destruction going on everywhere.

    The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

    Jodie Foster in The Silence Of The Lambs
    (Orion Pictures)

    The Silence of the Lambs is a psychological thriller with some tense sequences and a few bloody moments. You can handle it. It’s mostly the story of a female detective working against the clock to solve a mystery with the help of a serial killer who respects her intellect. It’s about people who are good at their job. That kind of movie can be comforting, even if the characters are going through the horrors. And if you love that Hannibal Lecter guy, have I got a canceled-too-soon series for you.

    Alien

    Sigourney Weaver as Ripley holds Jonesy the cat in 'Alien'
    (20th Century Fox)

    What’s this science fiction movie doing here? WRONG! The first Alien is a textbook horror movie. It’s basically about a haunted house. Just replace “house” with “spaceship” and “haunted” with “stalked by a killer extraterrestrial who wants nothing more than to kill and/or impregnate you” and you get this movie. Characters get killed off, one by one, in a confined space. That’s a horror movie! Ripley, the icon played by Sigourney Weaver, is a final girl. The alien itself is plenty scary, so I do reccommend looking up the plot for this one beforehand if you’re not spoiler averse. However, IMHO the scariest thing about Alien is the crew’s unwillingness to listen to a woman who is right. They lowkey deserve what they get!

    Sinners

    a man fighting
    (Warner Bros.)

    For whatever reason, I find vampire movies more palatable than other spooky scary creatures. Maybe it’s because, after growing up with Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Twilight, True Blood and the 1994 Interview with the Vampire made me feel like an expert in the lore. I’m prepared for anything. Until 2025, that is! Ryan Coogler’s Sinners was a phenomenon when it was first released in April 2025 and will hopefully get some love at the Oscars in 2026. The film is gorgeously shot. I know that even though I got scared and looked down a few of times. That’s what second and third viewings are for! The soundtrack is perfection. Coogler uses the vampire as a metaphor for cultural appropriation and assimilation into society, and that barely scratches the thematic surface of the film or reveal who the *real* enemy is by the end.

    American Psycho

    A wall street business man wrapped in plastic contemplates an axe in "American Psycho"
    (Lionsgate)

    You might not know it by the way some people, namely men, idealize Patrick Bateman, but this is a satire. I personally found it impossible to be scared during this movie because I was laughing at the ridiculousness of the yuppie lifestyle that American Psycho sends up in every scene. Now that we live in a society that is desperately trying to be the conservative, capitalist, consumerist 1980s once again (largely thanks to a certain leader who Bateman himself idolizes in the film and Brett Easton Ellis’ original book) this movie hits especially hard.

    Crimson Peak

    Tom Hiddleston and Mia Wasikowska in a scene from 'Crimson Peak'
    (Universal Studios)

    If you’re digging Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, you have to watch Crimson Peak. Drop everything and queue it up. This is one of those movies that got kind of buried because it was marketed as something that it was not. It’s not a traditional horror movie, and therefore early audiences and some critics got mad. But it’s an excellent gothic romance that’s spooky, sexy, and feminist. It’s all kinds of thrilling, basically. The film Jennifer’s Body is another great example of feminist horror that was tragically misunderstood when released. Why don’t people know what to do with scary movies for the girlies?!

    Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022)

    Four friends in Bodies Bodies Bodies.
    (A24)

    Bodies, Bodies, Bodies on the other hand did seem to find the right audience. This black comedy directed by Halina Reijn (also responsible for Babygirl) plays with slasher flick conventions and class commentary. “Eat the rich” movies were especially popular around that time in recent history. The Menu did a similar thing in 2022, and might have been a skosh more popular in certain cinephile circles. The Menu is also a skosh scarier! Stick to Bodies, Bodies, Bodies for some Gen Z violence and dark chuckles.

    Trap (2024)

    Josh Hartnett in 'Trap,' the new thriller from M. Night Shyamalan'
    (Warner Bros.)

    As a scaredy cat, I mostly appreciate M. Night Shyamalan as a filmmaker from afar. There are a lot of his films that I’m avoiding for a reason, and prefer to read about rather than check out. I don’t like to be scared and I don’t like to be tricked. Treats only, TYSM! But once I got wind that Trap was a hoot and a half, I was sold. And it is! What if a serial killer was trying to be a good dad? How long can you justify rooting for him instead of against him? It’s such a fun ride, and scary only when it really needs to be.

    (featured image: Universal Pictures/Lionsgate/Warner Bros./Bryanston Distributing Company)

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    Image of Leah Marilla Thomas

    Leah Marilla Thomas

    Leah Marilla Thomas (she/her) is a contributor at The Mary Sue. She has been working in digital entertainment journalism since 2013, covering primarily television as well as film and live theatre. She’s been on the Marvel beat professionally since Daredevil was a Netflix series. (You might recognize her voice from the Newcomers: Marvel podcast). Outside of journalism, she is 50% Southerner, 50% New Englander, and 100% fangirl over everything from Lord of the Rings to stage lighting and comics about teenagers. She lives in New York City and can often be found in a park. She used to test toys for Hasbro. True story!

    Leah Marilla Thomas

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  • The Best Fall Activities To Do While High

    The Best Fall Activities To Do While High

    Just because there is a change in the weather during autumn, doesn’t mean you can’t have a fun time – and if you add in a little marijuana, it can get even better!

    Autumn is great time of year, it is not to hot and there is a wide assortment of things to do inside and out. While the swim suits and sunscreen are packed away, there is a wide variety of things to engage the mind and body. Here are the best fall activities to do while high.

    Movie marathon

    As the days get shorter, cozying up with a movie marathon becomes increasingly appealing. Choose classic horror films or feel-good comedies, and pair them with some cannabis-infused snacks for an elevated viewing experience. This is perfect for those chilly fall evenings when staying in feels just right

    Board games

    Photo by Flickr user John Morgan

    Board games can always be made better with the help of a little weed, and you can add to all of this enjoyment by scheduling your board game play sessions among friends during this time of the year, which is perfect for staying in and cozying up. The list of board games you can play while high is endless, from something chill and easy-going like Monopoly, to something more in-depth, like a Dungeons and Dragons session that can be made all the more real and entertaining with marijuana. Plus, most games allow you to snack while engaging your competitor.

    Apple Picking

    How To Smoke Marijuana Without Rolling A Joint
    Photo by Suzy Hazelwood via Pexels

    RELATED: Need Relief From Stress & Anxiety? Try Watching A Horror Movie

    Apple picking is a quintessential fall activity that becomes even more enjoyable while high. The crisp air and vibrant colors of the orchards create a beautiful backdrop for a leisurely day. Plus, you can savor the fruits of your labor by making delicious edibles or cider at home

    Hiking

    https://unsplash.com/photos/JOoOPt8tTPY
    Photo by Eddy Billard via Unsplash

    Hiking is one of the best fall activities in the world, lending itself perfectly to the fall weather. By adding weed into the mix, you’ll be contributing a deeper appreciation for your surroundings and nature. You’ll enjoy the exercise more, as well as the colors and the smells. Just make sure to choose a hike that’s not too crazy; you don’t want to get high and then get lost.

    Crafting and DIY Projects

    Engaging in crafting or DIY projects can be incredibly satisfying while stoned. Consider making fall-themed decorations or creating your own cannabis-infused products. This not only sparks creativity but also results in tangible items to enjoy throughout the season.

    Attend Local Festivals

    Many towns host harvest festivals during the fall, featuring local produce, crafts, and entertainment. Attending these events while high can enhance your enjoyment of live music, food tastings, and community spirit. It’s an excellent way to connect with others who share similar interests

    RELATED: High Vs. Stoned: Is There A Difference?

    Stargazing

    Finally, as nights grow longer, stargazing becomes an enchanting activity. Find a quiet spot away from city lights, lay back, and enjoy the cosmos while sharing stories with friends. Cannabis can deepen your appreciation for the universe’s beauty, making this a peaceful way to end a day of fall adventures

    Anthony Washington

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  • Turn That Frown Upside Down & Watch The Creepy New Trailer For ‘Smile 2’

    Turn That Frown Upside Down & Watch The Creepy New Trailer For ‘Smile 2’

    Are you ready for Smile 2?

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    After giving audiences the creeps with his surprise smash Smile, filmmaker Parker Finn is back with Smile 2 which aims to elevate the modern Horror genre by taking the terror on tour with a global Pop star.

    Smile 2 asset

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    In Smile 2, Pop sensation Skye Riley (Naomi Scott) is gearing up for a world tour when she begins to experience increasingly terrifying events. As the horrors ramp up and the pressures of fame take their toll, Skye must confront her dark past to regain control of her life before it spirals out of control.

    Check out the creepy trailer below:

    Written and directed by Finn, the highly anticipated sequel stars Naomi Scott, Lukas Gage, Rosemarie DeWitt, Miles Gutierrez-Riley, Peter Jacobson, Ray Nicholson, Dylan Gelula, Raúl Castillo, and Kyle Gallner.

    In an interview with Julia Cunningham and Jess Cagle on SiriusXM’s The Jess Cagle Show, Gage revealed that there’s one scene that was so “gory” and “disgusting” that he threw up off-camera while filming.

    “It’s so terrifying,” he said. “It was the first time I’ve ever been on a set where I was genuinely afraid and I actually got sick to my stomach in one take.”

    “I didn’t think I would. I just, it was so gory and so disgusting,” he continued. “It’s legitimately that scary. I’m not even just lying. I’ve never been on something that truly terrified me. The crew was terrified filming because, I don’t know. Parker Finn is, he knows that genre so well.”

    Smile 2 brings its ghastly grins to theaters October 18, 2024.

    Alex Ford

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  • How ‘Practical Magic’ Pissed Off a Real-Life Witch

    How ‘Practical Magic’ Pissed Off a Real-Life Witch

    Practical Magic, a heady blend of ’90s romantic comedy, domestic violence horror, and supernatural trickery, is perhaps best encapsulated by a single moment: “You have the worst taste in men,” Sandra Bullock’s Sally groans as she helps her sister, Gillian (Nicole Kidman), bury the evil ex they’ve killed in the backyard of their magical mansion.

    Twenty-five years after the film’s release, its synopsis remains spellbindingly dense. Bullock and Kidman play sisters bound by a curse that befalls any man who falls in love with a woman in their family. After their father perishes and their mother dies of a broken heart, the sisters are raised in an enviable cliffside estate by their wonderfully wicked aunts (Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest, in roles originally envisioned for Vanessa Redgrave and Julie Christie). Sally vows to never fall in love, while Gillian flings herself toward romance.

    The sisters spend several years apart—Sally marries and has two children (Evan Rachel Wood and Alexandra Artrip) with a man (Mark Feuerstein) whose demise arrives as predicted, and Gillian gets entangled with her abusive boyfriend, Jimmy (Goran Visnjic). The pair kill Jimmy after he attempts to kidnap them, but his spirit lingers, requiring a full-on exorcism. Oh, and things are further complicated by the investigation into Jimmy’s murder by Aidan Quinn’s Gary Hallet, whom Sally discovers she’s falling in love with.

    Suffice it to say, the movie is a lot. “I remember Bob Daly, who was co-CEO of Warner Brothers—at our premiere, he sat one row in front [of me],” the film’s director, Griffin Dunne, tells Vanity Fair. “After a very lighthearted scene with girls giggling and being hilarious, [we were] having them dig up a body from a rose bush and stick needles in its eyes. He turned to the person next to him and went, ‘I wish the kid would just pick a tone.’”

    Critics tended to agree. Despite opening at number one, the film, adapted from Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel with a screenplay by Robin Swicord, Akiva Goldsman, and Adam Brooks, was deemed “too scary for children and too childish for adults,” by the likes of Roger Ebert. Entertainment Weekly called it “a witch comedy so slapdash, plodding, and muddled it seems to have had a hex put on it.”

    Dunne, son of longtime VF contributor Dominick Dunne and an actor best known for 1985’s After Hours, never helmed another studio film. But in the decades since its release, Practical Magic has morphed into a cult classic, beloved particularly by women for its enviable soundtrack (Faith Hill’s “This Kiss”! Joni Mitchell’s “A Case of You,”! Two original Stevie Nicks tracks!) and themes of sisterhood. “Dealing with several different tones in the same film is not that unusual anymore,” says Dunne. “When I did American Werewolf in London, it was the same reaction. People were really upset that there were laughs in a horror movie. Now you can’t make a horror movie without getting laughs.”

    Fervor around the film gets particularly heightened around Halloween, Dunne says. “A little name-drop here, just two nights ago I was in my local restaurant in the Hudson Valley. Paul Rudd is one of my neighbors, and he came over and said, ‘My son’s girlfriend is obsessed with the movie. Can I bring her over? She wants to just talk to you about it.’ She joined our table and asked me the same questions you’re asking—just devoured every tiny detail about it. That was enormously satisfying.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Scott Slone’s Unveils His Latest Most Terrifying Masterpiece: “Malibu Horror Story”

    Scott Slone’s Unveils His Latest Most Terrifying Masterpiece: “Malibu Horror Story”

    Los Angeles, CA – Iconic Events Releasing and Sunny Oak Films is excited to release the spine-tingling sensation of the year “Malibu Horror Story,” the latest bone-chilling masterpiece from the visionary filmmaker, Scott Slone. This highly anticipated horror film is set to haunt theaters nationwide, promising an unforgettable and terrifying experience that will leave audiences on the edge of their seats.

    “Malibu Horror Story” is a cinematic triumph that will captivate viewers with its compelling narrative, unmatched cinematography, and outstanding performances from its cast. This heart-pounding horror film is poised to become a genre-defining landmark, reaffirming Scott Slone’s reputation as a true master of suspense and terror.

    Set in the eerie hills of Malibu, California, “Malibu Horror Story” follows a team of amateur paranormal investigators as they venture into an unresolved ten-year-old case involving the mysterious disappearance of four popular high school boys on their graduation night. As they explore a sacred cave in the region, the team encounters bone-chilling paranormal occurrences that will send shivers down your spine. As they meticulously analyze footage recovered from the missing teens’ camera, they stumble upon a horrifying discovery—an ancient curse that forces them to confront their deepest fears and unravel the sinister truth behind the boys’ vanishing.

    TO BUY TICKETS CLICK HERE

    Director, writer, and producer Scott Slone embarked on a decade-long journey to create “Malibu Horror Story,” using over 30 different cameras and various codecs to craft a visually stunning and narratively gripping experience. Slone drew inspiration from iconic films like “Paranormal Activity” and “Cloverfield” to deliver a fresh and immersive take on the horror genre.

    The film features an exceptional ensemble cast, including Dylan Sprayberry (“Teen Wolf,” “Sick”), Robert Bailey Jr. (“Nightshift,” “Emergence”), Valentina de Angelis (“Gossip Girl”), and Rebecca Forsythe (“Replace,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit”). Notably, the film showcases the extraordinary talents of contortionist and creature actor, “Twisty” Troy James (“Nightmare Alley,” “Hellboy,” “Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark”), as well as actor and stunt performer Douglas Tait (“Annabelle Comes Home,” “Hellboy,” “Halloween Kills”). The ensemble also includes Tommy Cramer, Veno Miller, Jacob Hughes, and Hector Gomez Jr.

    Scott Slone shared his vision for the film, saying, “I am a big fan of the found footage sub-genre and wanted to try and do something different with the format and structure of how a traditional found footage film is presented. Our story is told through different perspectives, timelines, and layers of media that were compiled over several years. The goal was to incorporate all of those elements and place them inside of a conventional horror movie structure that would not only appeal to found footage enthusiasts but to a broader horror audience as well.”

    Producer Andrew Williams expressed his enthusiasm, stating, “We are thrilled with the positive reception from fans and critics during our film festival run this past year, and the success has demonstrated that this is a horror movie made to be experienced in theaters. We couldn’t be happier that we finally found the right partner with Iconic Events Releasing to help us bring it to the big screen.”

    Early reviews have praised Slone’s unique structural approach, zippy pacing, and remarkable creature work, noting that “Malibu Horror Story” pushes the boundaries of the found footage genre’s evolution.

    TO BUY TICKETS CLICK HERE

    Prepare yourself for a terrifying journey into the unknown as “Malibu Horror Story” descends upon theaters nationwide. Iconic Events Releasing invites horror enthusiasts and cinephiles alike to experience the chilling and heart-pounding tale of horror that will leave you breathless. Don’t miss your chance to be a part of cinematic history when “Malibu Horror Story” hits the big screen.

    For more information, please visit https://www.malibuhorrorstory.com/

    About Iconic Events Releasing:

    Iconic Events Releasing is a renowned film distribution company committed to bringing captivating and innovative cinematic experiences to audiences worldwide. With a passion for storytelling and a dedication to excellence, Iconic Events Releasing partners with visionary filmmakers to deliver groundbreaking films that leave a lasting impact on the industry.

  • Danger, Death, and Disgust: Why You Just Can’t Look Away

    Danger, Death, and Disgust: Why You Just Can’t Look Away

    Oct. 24, 2022 — Halloween Ends? Yeah, sure. Like that’ll happen.

    The market for horror remains robust 44 years after the original Halloween movie premiered. Part of the reason (besides Michael Myers’s charm) is that we humans appear to be hard-wired to enjoy getting scared.

    Whatever happens in Halloween Ends, the latest entry in the long-running film series, you’ll leave the theater with a sense of relief and satisfaction. You had fun and survived. It feels good.

    And you and most of the rest of the world will do it again and again go to other movies, play scary video games, listen to true-crime podcasts, read Stephen King books, visit haunted houses. A survey by the Recreational Fear Lab at Aarhus University in Denmark found that 55% of Americans enjoy scary media, and 90% had dipped into the horror world at least once in the past year.

    Our penchant for fear dates back millennia. But new research is testing the theory that indulging in morbid curiosity and scary play can help us build psychological resilience, overcome phobias, and deal with genuine scares. So far, the answer is yes.

    When you scare yourself on purpose, you’re “learning your limits and learning a bit of self-reliance in the face of feelings of danger or fear or anxiety,” says Coltan Scrivner, PhD, a researcher at the Fear Lab and the author of several papers on horror.

    Our fascination extends to real life, however conflicted we may feel. “When we pass by a car accident or see a gruesome photo, our minds are compelled to attend to it and gather information,” Scrivner says. “This is the essence of morbid curiosity.”

    Greg Siegle, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and psychology at the University of Pittsburgh, says it makes evolutionary sense. “It behooves us to pay attention to possibly threatening things. We learn very quickly, and we encode them deeply.” 

    For example: Roadkill reminds us to look both ways before crossing the street.

    This field of science seems like a bloody good time. Researchers visit haunted-house attractions and interview visitors. They show scary movies to wired-up viewers and check heart rate, eye movement, brain activity, and other measures of arousal. 

    Zombies even play a role. In a pilot experiment, Siegle and colleague Margee Kerr, PhD, a sociologist at the University of Pittsburgh, put actors in costumes and makeup for a virtual-reality film of zombies on a train. Subjects in VR goggles “enter” the train car to find zombies, but at the end, the actors strip away the makeup and everyone has a laugh.

    It’s a 21st-century reboot of exposure therapy, the 70-year-old technique in which patients are exposed to something that makes them anxious until they can deal with it. “The problem with exposure therapy is that it’s horrible,” Siegle says. “People drop out rather than be exposed to their fears. What if we made it fun?”

    Everyday moviegoers are doing a “home-brewed method” of exposure therapy, Scrivner says. “Morbidly curious horror fans spend time sitting with those feelings in a playful context,” he says. “They have a bit more experience feeling afraid or feeling anxious, and learn how to regulate those feelings.”

    The benefits are becoming clear.

    You’ll Become More Resilient

    Scrivner and others grabbed a chance to indirectly test this theory during the pandemic. It turned out that horror fans showed “greater preparedness for and psychological resilience” about the pandemic, they wrote in a 2021 study. They found that “exposure to frightening fictions” can help people “practice effective coping strategies that can be beneficial in real-world situations.”

    Our inborn fondness for play-acted fear and surprise can be seen in peekaboo with a baby, or hide-and-seek and playing tag with young children. “They’re out to get you, or you have to run from them,” Scrivner says. “To a kid, that’s a pretty scary concept.”

    Scrivner cites the work of Helen Dodd, PhD, a child psychologist in the U.K. who found that children who engage in risky, thrilling play “tend to have kind of an inoculation against anxiety in adolescence.”

    “It’s young kids listening to scary stories, riding their bikes too fast, climbing up too high in trees, teenagers watching horror movies or listening to true crime stories,” says Mathias Clasen, PhD, director of the Fear Lab and author of A Very Nervous Person’s Guide to Horror Movies.

    “The idea is that they’ve played with fear, or played with scary instances, played with anxiety, and presumably built some tools for dealing with those feelings,” he says.

    You’ll Feel Better

    Scary media is fun because it allows people “to engage with difficult feelings like anxiety or fear in a safe and playful setting,” Scrivner says. “You can draw your attention away from your cycle of rumination.” And you’re in control: You can turn the sound down and the lights up, cover your eyes, and know it’ll end in 90 minutes.

    Scrivner, Clasen, and others examined three types of horror fans in a 2022 paper. Adrenaline Junkies seek maximum stimulation and feel great during the excitement. White Knucklers tolerate the fear but enjoy learning something about themselves. And Dark Copers get the mood boost and the self-enlightenment. 

    Some people find horror an excellent head-clearing experience, says Kerr, author of Scream: Chilling Adventures in the Science of Fear. In her research, people who go through a haunted-house attraction show “a global decrease in brainwave activity.” 

     

    That’s a positive thing in this context. Their mood was boosted, they felt more confident, and they were able to “shut down or turn down inner thoughts,” she says. “This gives an idea as to why people like to experience these scary activities.” When our sympathetic nervous system is amped up, and hormones and neurotransmitters surge, it can lead to a euphoria akin to a runner’s high. “Also the feeling of achieving something ‘We’re still alive!’” 

    Kerr and Siegle co-authored a paper in the journal Emotion subtitled “Why we like to be scared.” It said the improved mood was especially notable among “tired, bored, or stressed” people.

    Siegle points out that it’s hard to tell the difference, physiologically, between “high positive” and “high negative emotion.” (“High-fear faces and orgasm faces” often look the same, he says.)

    “So what if we crave these high-arousal experiences?” says Siegle. “That’s what puts us in a flow state. That’s what makes us giddy. We could get it through some ecstatic positive emotion like dancing with a partner you love. Or we could get it with a haunted house.” 

    Or a crime scene photo or a graphic medical show. “Disgust is an emotion that raises arousal,” Siegle says.

    People seem to find a personal “sweet spot” for their frightening and morbid experiences: not too scary, not too boring, Scrivner says. (Makers of adaptive video games use research from the Fear Lab to calibrate a game’s fright factor.)

    The closer you can get to your sweet spot, the more you’ll get out of the experience, Scrivner says. “You want something that puts you near your limit, so you can test the waters.”

    You’ll Get to Know Yourself Better

    “Surviving” a haunted house or horror movie helps you become more attuned to your body, the researchers say. Part of that, Clasen says, is improving your “interoception” skills – perceiving and understanding bodily responses like a racing heart or sweaty palms. An anxious person feels that happening and becomes more anxious. Triggering those responses in a safe setting like on your couch may help break that cycle.

    Scary films indeed are triggering. When scientists showed people horror movies and measured brain activity with functional MRI, their “threat response network” lit up as though they were in danger, a study in Neuroimage showed.

    You may even gain insight into your personality. Scrivner has a fun quiz on his site to measure morbid curiosity. The questions cover four domains: the minds of dangerous people, the paranormal, body violation, and violence. You’re asked to rate your level of agreement with such statements as: 

    1. I am curious about the minds of violent people. 

    2. I think the supernatural is an interesting topic.

    3. If a head transplant was possible, I would want to watch the procedure.

    4. If I lived in ancient Rome, I would be interested in attending a gladiatorial fight.

    A strong “yes” to all of those, according to Scrivner, means you’ll probably score well above average for morbid curiosity. Statistically, you’re “a little more likely to have elevated levels of traits like openness to experience, rebelliousness, and anxiety.”

    That’s right – “Morbidly curious people are somewhat more likely to be higher in anxiety,” Scrivner says. “A core aspect of anxiety is vigilance toward threats. Events or situations that pique our morbid curiosity are often threatening events or situations we can safely explore.”

    It’s important to note that that strong agreement “doesn’t mean that there is something pathological or unhealthy about their curiosity.”

    Horror fans aren’t sickos, in other words. “There are people who score really high in empathy and in compassion who also love torture porn and slasher movies,” Scrivner says. The movie Hostel, for one grim and graphic example, contains several scenes that focus on the victims’ suffering, not the sadist’s pleasure. “That’s a very powerful tool causing you to empathize with the victim,” he says. 

    At the very least, Kerr says, a voluntary scary experience can stir self-reflection, feelings of growth and competency, and that can improve our “cognitive flexibility.” That flexibility helps us regulate our emotions and spurs us to engage with other people and new experiences – all of which promote well-being, she says. 

    And though you’re not likely to face zombies, “Maybe you get better at handling a job interview, or a presentation at your company, or a date,” Clasen says.

    That boost in emotion-regulating ability comes up in a 2016 paper in the scholarly journal Preternature (peer-reviewed articles about spooky stuff). The paper, titled “Grotesque Gaming: The Monstrous in Online Worlds,” examined “how players enjoy landscapes of the monstrous and the grotesque in order to engage with and tentatively conquer our inner fears and anxieties.”

    “It is our human nature to be attracted to the horrific and obtain pleasure from encountering it, because this is how we gain a partial and temporary victory over ourselves,” the paper said.

    “That these games exist shows that we need horror.” 

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  • Danger, Death, and Disgust: Why You Just Can’t Look Away

    Danger, Death, and Disgust: Why You Just Can’t Look Away

    Oct. 24, 2022 — Halloween Ends? Yeah, sure. Like that’ll happen.

    The market for horror remains robust 44 years after the original Halloween movie premiered. Part of the reason (besides Michael Myers’s charm) is that we humans appear to be hard-wired to enjoy getting scared.

    Whatever happens in Halloween Ends, the latest entry in the long-running film series, you’ll leave the theater with a sense of relief and satisfaction. You had fun and survived. It feels good.

    And you and most of the rest of the world will do it again and again go to other movies, play scary video games, listen to true-crime podcasts, read Stephen King books, visit haunted houses. A survey by the Recreational Fear Lab at Aarhus University in Denmark found that 55% of Americans enjoy scary media, and 90% had dipped into the horror world at least once in the past year.

    Our penchant for fear dates back millennia. But new research is testing the theory that indulging in morbid curiosity and scary play can help us build psychological resilience, overcome phobias, and deal with genuine scares. So far, the answer is yes.

    When you scare yourself on purpose, you’re “learning your limits and learning a bit of self-reliance in the face of feelings of danger or fear or anxiety,” says Coltan Scrivner, PhD, a researcher at the Fear Lab and the author of several papers on horror.

    Our fascination extends to real life, however conflicted we may feel. “When we pass by a car accident or see a gruesome photo, our minds are compelled to attend to it and gather information,” Scrivner says. “This is the essence of morbid curiosity.”

    Greg Siegle, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and psychology at the University of Pittsburgh, says it makes evolutionary sense. “It behooves us to pay attention to possibly threatening things. We learn very quickly, and we encode them deeply.” 

    For example: Roadkill reminds us to look both ways before crossing the street.

    This field of science seems like a bloody good time. Researchers visit haunted-house attractions and interview visitors. They show scary movies to wired-up viewers and check heart rate, eye movement, brain activity, and other measures of arousal. 

    Zombies even play a role. In a pilot experiment, Siegle and colleague Margee Kerr, PhD, a sociologist at the University of Pittsburgh, put actors in costumes and makeup for a virtual-reality film of zombies on a train. Subjects in VR goggles “enter” the train car to find zombies, but at the end, the actors strip away the makeup and everyone has a laugh.

    It’s a 21st-century reboot of exposure therapy, the 70-year-old technique in which patients are exposed to something that makes them anxious until they can deal with it. “The problem with exposure therapy is that it’s horrible,” Siegle says. “People drop out rather than be exposed to their fears. What if we made it fun?”

    Everyday moviegoers are doing a “home-brewed method” of exposure therapy, Scrivner says. “Morbidly curious horror fans spend time sitting with those feelings in a playful context,” he says. “They have a bit more experience feeling afraid or feeling anxious, and learn how to regulate those feelings.”

    The benefits are becoming clear.

    You’ll Become More Resilient

    Scrivner and others grabbed a chance to indirectly test this theory during the pandemic. It turned out that horror fans showed “greater preparedness for and psychological resilience” about the pandemic, they wrote in a 2021 study. They found that “exposure to frightening fictions” can help people “practice effective coping strategies that can be beneficial in real-world situations.”

    Our inborn fondness for play-acted fear and surprise can be seen in peekaboo with a baby, or hide-and-seek and playing tag with young children. “They’re out to get you, or you have to run from them,” Scrivner says. “To a kid, that’s a pretty scary concept.”

    Scrivner cites the work of Helen Dodd, PhD, a child psychologist in the U.K. who found that children who engage in risky, thrilling play “tend to have kind of an inoculation against anxiety in adolescence.”

    “It’s young kids listening to scary stories, riding their bikes too fast, climbing up too high in trees, teenagers watching horror movies or listening to true crime stories,” says Mathias Clasen, PhD, director of the Fear Lab and author of A Very Nervous Person’s Guide to Horror Movies.

    “The idea is that they’ve played with fear, or played with scary instances, played with anxiety, and presumably built some tools for dealing with those feelings,” he says.

    You’ll Feel Better

    Scary media is fun because it allows people “to engage with difficult feelings like anxiety or fear in a safe and playful setting,” Scrivner says. “You can draw your attention away from your cycle of rumination.” And you’re in control: You can turn the sound down and the lights up, cover your eyes, and know it’ll end in 90 minutes.

    Scrivner, Clasen, and others examined three types of horror fans in a 2022 paper. Adrenaline Junkies seek maximum stimulation and feel great during the excitement. White Knucklers tolerate the fear but enjoy learning something about themselves. And Dark Copers get the mood boost and the self-enlightenment. 

    Some people find horror an excellent head-clearing experience, says Kerr, author of Scream: Chilling Adventures in the Science of Fear. In her research, people who go through a haunted-house attraction show “a global decrease in brainwave activity.” 

     

    That’s a positive thing in this context. Their mood was boosted, they felt more confident, and they were able to “shut down or turn down inner thoughts,” she says. “This gives an idea as to why people like to experience these scary activities.” When our sympathetic nervous system is amped up, and hormones and neurotransmitters surge, it can lead to a euphoria akin to a runner’s high. “Also the feeling of achieving something ‘We’re still alive!’” 

    Kerr and Siegle co-authored a paper in the journal Emotion subtitled “Why we like to be scared.” It said the improved mood was especially notable among “tired, bored, or stressed” people.

    Siegle points out that it’s hard to tell the difference, physiologically, between “high positive” and “high negative emotion.” (“High-fear faces and orgasm faces” often look the same, he says.)

    “So what if we crave these high-arousal experiences?” says Siegle. “That’s what puts us in a flow state. That’s what makes us giddy. We could get it through some ecstatic positive emotion like dancing with a partner you love. Or we could get it with a haunted house.” 

    Or a crime scene photo or a graphic medical show. “Disgust is an emotion that raises arousal,” Siegle says.

    People seem to find a personal “sweet spot” for their frightening and morbid experiences: not too scary, not too boring, Scrivner says. (Makers of adaptive video games use research from the Fear Lab to calibrate a game’s fright factor.)

    The closer you can get to your sweet spot, the more you’ll get out of the experience, Scrivner says. “You want something that puts you near your limit, so you can test the waters.”

    You’ll Get to Know Yourself Better

    “Surviving” a haunted house or horror movie helps you become more attuned to your body, the researchers say. Part of that, Clasen says, is improving your “interoception” skills – perceiving and understanding bodily responses like a racing heart or sweaty palms. An anxious person feels that happening and becomes more anxious. Triggering those responses in a safe setting like on your couch may help break that cycle.

    Scary films indeed are triggering. When scientists showed people horror movies and measured brain activity with functional MRI, their “threat response network” lit up as though they were in danger, a study in Neuroimage showed.

    You may even gain insight into your personality. Scrivner has a fun quiz on his site to measure morbid curiosity. The questions cover four domains: the minds of dangerous people, the paranormal, body violation, and violence. You’re asked to rate your level of agreement with such statements as: 

    1. I am curious about the minds of violent people. 

    2. I think the supernatural is an interesting topic.

    3. If a head transplant was possible, I would want to watch the procedure.

    4. If I lived in ancient Rome, I would be interested in attending a gladiatorial fight.

    A strong “yes” to all of those, according to Scrivner, means you’ll probably score well above average for morbid curiosity. Statistically, you’re “a little more likely to have elevated levels of traits like openness to experience, rebelliousness, and anxiety.”

    That’s right – “Morbidly curious people are somewhat more likely to be higher in anxiety,” Scrivner says. “A core aspect of anxiety is vigilance toward threats. Events or situations that pique our morbid curiosity are often threatening events or situations we can safely explore.”

    It’s important to note that that strong agreement “doesn’t mean that there is something pathological or unhealthy about their curiosity.”

    Horror fans aren’t sickos, in other words. “There are people who score really high in empathy and in compassion who also love torture porn and slasher movies,” Scrivner says. The movie Hostel, for one grim and graphic example, contains several scenes that focus on the victims’ suffering, not the sadist’s pleasure. “That’s a very powerful tool causing you to empathize with the victim,” he says. 

    At the very least, Kerr says, a voluntary scary experience can stir self-reflection, feelings of growth and competency, and that can improve our “cognitive flexibility.” That flexibility helps us regulate our emotions and spurs us to engage with other people and new experiences – all of which promote well-being, she says. 

    And though you’re not likely to face zombies, “Maybe you get better at handling a job interview, or a presentation at your company, or a date,” Clasen says.

    That boost in emotion-regulating ability comes up in a 2016 paper in the scholarly journal Preternature (peer-reviewed articles about spooky stuff). The paper, titled “Grotesque Gaming: The Monstrous in Online Worlds,” examined “how players enjoy landscapes of the monstrous and the grotesque in order to engage with and tentatively conquer our inner fears and anxieties.”

    “It is our human nature to be attracted to the horrific and obtain pleasure from encountering it, because this is how we gain a partial and temporary victory over ourselves,” the paper said.

    “That these games exist shows that we need horror.” 

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  • The 30 Best Halloween Movies on Netflix to Stream This October

    The 30 Best Halloween Movies on Netflix to Stream This October

    And now we reach the vibe subcategory of Halloween movies. Crimson Peak isn’t all that scary (unless you are the wuss of all wusses) but director Guillermo Del Toro is very much in his element in an amped-up Edwardian-era English manor. This is a love story as much as it is anything else, but with ghosts, penniless gentry, deteriorating buildings, lots of eyeballs, and some of cinema’s most eerily shot falling snow. Of films released in the last 10 years, this is essential stuff for anyone interested in design (perhaps even more so than Del Toro’s Oscar-winner The Shape of Water), and the performances by Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain, Tom Hiddleston, and Charlie Hunnam (underrated!) are all top-notch, too.

    Deliverance (1972)

    From the Everett Collection.

    This box office sensation that garnered three Academy Award nominations (best picture, best editing, and best director for John Boorman) is not regularly associated with Halloween. If anything, it seems like a summer movie, what with a group of people taking a canoeing trip. But it is a survival horror picture, with some still-shocking acts of violence throughout. Burt Reynolds, Jon Voight, Ronny Cox, and Ned Beatty are four Atlanta businessmen who find themselves grossly out of their element among the locals, whose landscape is about to be severely changed due to a coming dam. If only the gang split after their nice banjo encounter!

    Eerie (2018)

    This often-overlooked movie is just one of the many foreign language gems tucked away deep on Netflix’s servers. Filipino director Mikhail Red leans in to the title with a chilling tale of a Catholic girls’ school haunted by a past suicide. The location mixes modernist architecture with classic religious iconography, and while there isn’t too much gore (though there are plenty of jump-scares), it’s the tone that does wonders here. Flickering candles, shadows, lots of eyeballs (what’s creepier than eyeballs?), and disorienting nightmares add up to an unusual sensation of dread.

    The Fear Street Trilogy (2021)

    From Netflix/Everett Collection.

    Vanity Fair

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  • Why We Love Scary Movies

    Why We Love Scary Movies

    Halloween is nigh, and along with the parade of adorable elves and fairies knocking on your door come some more disturbing phenomena: scary haunted houses, wild parties and, perhaps most jarringly, a new onslaught of ghastly horror films. 

    If you’re not a horror movie fan, you may be puzzled about why some people love watching such movies. Behavioral researchers even coined a phrase for it: the “horror paradox.”

    “No doubt, there’s something really powerful that brings people to watch these things, because it’s not logical,” says Joanne Cantor, PhD, director of the Center for Communication Research at University of Wisconsin, Madison. “Most people like to experience pleasant emotions.”

    Defenders of these movies may say they’re just harmless entertainment. But if their attraction is powerful, Cantor says, so is their impact. 

    Scary Movies: The Fear Is Real

    Is the fear you feel when you watch someone being chased by an axe-wielding murderer any different from the fear you might feel if you were actually being chased by an axe-wielding murderer?

    You’re not really in danger when the violence is on a screen. But your body does get jittery.

     When people watch horrific images, their heartbeat increases as much as 15 beats per minute, Sparks says. Their palms sweat, their skin temperature drops several degrees, their muscles tense, and their blood pressure spikes.

    “The brain hasn’t really adapted to the new technology [of movies],” Sparks says. “We can tell ourselves the images on the screen are not real, but emotionally our brain reacts as if they are.”

    When Sparks studied the physical effects of violent movies on young men, he noticed a strange pattern: The more fear they felt, the more they claimed to enjoy the movie. Why? Sparks believes scary movies may be one of the last vestiges of a rite of passage.

    “There’s a motivation [that] males have in our culture to master threatening situations,” Sparks says. “It goes back to the initiation rites of our tribal ancestors, where the entrance to manhood was associated with hardship. We’ve lost that in modern society, and we may have found ways to replace it in our entertainment preferences.”

    In this context, Sparks says, the gorier the movie, the more justified the young man feels in boasting that he endured it.

    Morbid Fascination

    There are other theories to explain the appeal of scary movies. James B. Weaver III, PhD, says many young people may be attracted to them merely because adults frown on them. For adults, morbid curiosity may be at play — the same kind that causes us to stare at crashes on the highway, suggests Cantor. Humans may have an innate need to stay aware of dangers in our environment, especially the kind that could do us bodily harm, she says.

    Yet another theory suggests that people may seek out violent entertainment as a way of coping with actual fears or violence. Sparks points to a study that showed that shortly after the murder of a college student in a community, interest in a movie showing a cold-blooded murder increased, both among women in the student’s dormitory and in the community at large.

    One popular explanation for the appeal of scary movies, expressed by novelist Stephen King, is that they act as a sort of safety valve for our cruel or aggressive impulses. The implication of this idea, which academics dub “symbolic catharsis,” is that watching violence forestalls the need to act it out.

    Media researchers disagree. They point out that violent media is more likely to make people feel more hostile, to view the world that way, and to be haunted by violent ideas and images.

    In an experiment, Weaver showed violent films (with stars like Chuck Norris and Steven Seagal) to college students for several nights in a row. The next day, while the students took a simple test, a research assistant treated them rudely. Those who had watched the violent films suggested a harsher punishment for the rude assistant than students who had watched nonviolent films. 

    “Watching these films actually made people more callous and more punitive,” says Weaver, a researcher at Emory University’s department of behavioral sciences and health education. “You can actually prime the idea that aggression or violence is the way to resolve conflict.”
     

    Lingering Effects

    For some people, scary movies are just too much – especially children.

    In surveys of her students, Cantor found that nearly 60% reported that something they had watched before age 14 had upset their sleep or waking life. Cantor has collected hundreds of essays by students who became afraid of water or clowns, who had obsessive thoughts of horrible images, or who became disturbed even at the mention of certain movies, such as Nightmare on Elm Street. More than a quarter of the students said they were still fearful.

    Cantor suspects that the brain may store memories of these films in the amygdala, which plays an important role in generating emotions. She says these film memories may produce similar reactions to those produced by actual trauma — and may be just as hard to erase.

    For more on this topic, listen to “Why We Love Fear,” an episode of WebMD’s podcast, Health Discovered.

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