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  1. Mar 5, 2024 · Not a lot of horror movies have won Oscars, but there are a few scary standouts that have snagged a few, from The Omen to The Exorcist.

    • Alien/Aliens
    • Sleepy Hollow
    • Rosemary's Baby
    • The Fly
    • Misery
    • Jaws
    • Black Swan
    • An American Werewolf in London
    • The Omen
    • Bram Stoker's Dracula

    To truly gauge what sort of horror films a person likes, you only need to ask them this one question: "Alien or Aliens?" These films both exist in the same cinematic universe, and one follows directly after the other, but they still represent two very different sub-genres within horror. On one hand, you've got the Ridley Scott-directed claustrophob...

    Even though Tim Burton is one of the more hit-or-miss filmmakers in modern cinema, his visual appetite has always been consistent (if not spoiled at times by the abandonment of practical effects, but that's a topic for another time). When it comes to eye candy, Burton is king. Between films like Beetlejuice andBig Fish, his trademark style has neve...

    In a nutshell, Rosemary's Baby is about a woman pregnant with Satan's baby. However, where the horror trulydwells is within the characters surrounding the titular hero, Rosemary (Mia Farrow). Between her husband, Guy (John Cassavetes), and her pushy neighbors, Roman and Minnie (Sidney Blackmer and Ruth Gordon, respectively), the real terror in this...

    Of all the cringe-inducing visuals that exist in horror films, The Fly easily takes the cake. Skin is melting away, body parts are falling off, vomit is spilling out of Jeff Goldblum's mouth... It's horrendous. But at the same time, it's a cocktail of solid technical achievements. Seeing as how David Cronenberg has always been keen on audiences who...

    Misery is one of the rare Stephen King adaptationsthat actually works. Solid though his stories may be, translating King to the screen has been a recipe for disaster more often than not. With that being said, however, when his adaptations work, their success is no accident. They're products of perfect recipes, in terms of story, directing, acting, ...

    Making a movie truly scary relies on two major components: editing and sound. If the movie isn't cut together properly, it risks butchering the suspense, and if the sound isn't right, then wasted scares ultimately pay the price. With Jaws, these two components are center stage (and are in fact what earned the film its multiple Oscar wins). On the s...

    Even when Darren Aronofsky isn't making a horror film, he's making a horror film. Be it a cautionary tale about drugs or the tale of a doomed ballerina, he gets under your skin one way or another. In Black Swan, specifically, he shows audiences what obsession can look like when it's at its worst. He does this through striking, nightmarish visuals, ...

    If you didn't know any better back in 1981, you might have assumed that An American Werewolf in London was a sequel to Animal House. It's the follow-up film from the same director, it mentions a creature in the title, and it's about college students backpacking through Europe. Thing is, though, despite the sprinkled in bits of comedy, it by no mean...

    The Academy was brave to invite The Omen to the Oscars. Between gruesome deaths and satanic ties, The Omen has long been considered to be cursed. Still, the Academy rulebook doesn't say anything about curses, so... fair is fair. While The Omenworks as a masterful horror film on several grounds (creepy kid, Satan, gore), its major highlight comes fr...

    As horror films go, it shouldn't come as much of a surprise that Bram Stoker's Dracula was recognized by the Academy. Even though he's not quite regarded in the same light as he was during his prime, Francis Ford Coppola directed the film, and when you're the man who brought The Godfather and Apocalypse Nowto the screen, people pay attention. Espec...

    • Evan Jacobs
    • The Silence of the Lambs - It Won A Lot. This one took Oscar by storm. It won Best Picture, Jonathan Demme for Best Director, Anthony Hopkins for Best Actor, Jodie Foster for Best Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay.
    • Get Out – Best Original Screenplay. Jordan Peele’s race-based horror movie Get Out is a modern American classic. The film, about a preppy rich white girl (Allison Williams), who brings her black boyfriend (Daniel Kaluuya) home for the first time, is told in the language of a paranoid nightmare.
    • Alien – Best Visual Effects. Alien, a contained horror/sci-fi film, is the cream of the crop of this genre. It has such amazing character development that we truly care about all the players involved.
    • Aliens – Best Visual Effects / BestSound Editing. Basically, take the battles from the first Alien and amp that up by about 300 million degrees. Then you have 1986's Aliens.
  2. Apr 24, 2021 · Only 18 horror movies have won Oscars in the Academy Award's 92-year history. Critical and commercial successes like "The Exorcist," "The Fly," and "Misery" make the list.

    • Henry Blodget
    • Author
    • 'Rosemary's Baby' (1968) A film that encourages you to worry about your neighbors when you move, Rosemary's Baby is an iconic horror film that laid the foundations for many modern-day spins of this tale.
    • 'The Exorcist' (1973) Becoming a foundational film for the 20th-century horror genre, The Exorcist received its critical due with ten Oscar nominations.
    • 'Jaws' (1975) A creature feature with Oscar gold behind its name, Jaws remains both a horror and filmmaking classic. A sheriff (Roy Schieder), a marine biologist (Richard Dreyfuss), and a seaman (Robert Shaw) set out to capture and kill a great white shark that's been plaguing the summer tourist town of Amityville.
    • 'The Omen' (1976) The late '60s and '70s yielded some of the most iconic horror films, many earning their Oscar dues. The Omen followed in those footsteps.
  3. Jan 2, 2024 · Horror movies are finally starting to get their due at the Oscars. Scary films haven't always been considered serious cinema, but more and more, our fright favorites ar being recognized.

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  5. Oct 1, 2018 · In the Academy Awards’ 90-year history, horror films have been nominated for Best Picture just six times, out of a possible 546 nominees. Here they are: The Exorcist, Jaws, The Silence...