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  2. May 9, 2024 · The /Film horror team put their heads together to come up with an immense list of horror movie monsters that gave them the frights, and while desperately hoping the big shadow that just...

    • Senior Author
    • Pennywise the Clown. 'It' Series (2017-2019) Clowns are another common fear. Although they are meant to make people laugh, many find them incredibly disturbing.
    • Slender Man. 'Slender Man' (2018) Any kid or teenager growing up in the early 2010s knows exactly just how powerful Slender Man's icy-cold grip on the internet was.
    • The Pale Man. 'Pan's Labyrinth' (2006) Pan's Labyrinth isn't quite considered a horror movie, but the scene containing the Pale Man (Doug Jones) is so creepy that it nearly crosses the line into the genre.
    • The Hallow. 'The Hallow' (2015) The Hallow is similar to the Crawlers, with a few notable exceptions; whereas the Crawlers developed a sort of bat-like appearance, the Hallow resembles a deep-sea fish, especially an angler fish.
    • The Wendigo in Antlers. Scott Cooper's "Antlers" is the most recent movie on this list. The Wendigo isn't new to cinema (see: "Wendigo," "Dark Was the Night," or even video games like "Until Dawn"), though it has never been as gloriously realized as it was in Cooper's Pacific Northwest creeper.
    • The Changeling in The Hole in the Ground. A24 did not do well by "The Hole in the Ground." Sure, it's no "The Witch" or "Hereditary," but it's still a "supremely scary" horror movie that, with the right backing, could have been part of the discussion alongside the company's most noteworthy horror efforts.
    • Fairies in Don't Be Afraid of the Dark. As a producer, Guillermo del Toro has a clear proclivity for the kinds of projects he chooses to back. He wants childhood trauma and lush, grand, Gothic settings.
    • Joulupukki in Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale. Santa Claus is conventionally depicted as a jolly, happy fellow. Some (read: Megyn Kelly) are almost pathologically compelled to defend his mythos and all of the traditional trappings.
  3. King Kong. 1933 1h 40m Approved. 7.9 (92K) Rate. 92 Metascore. A film crew goes to a tropical island for a location shoot, where they capture a colossal ape who takes a shine to their blonde starlet, and bring him back to New York City. Director Merian C. Cooper Ernest B. Schoedsack Stars Fay Wray Robert Armstrong Bruce Cabot. 3. Alien.

    • Katie Rife
    • "Godzilla" (1954) Over the years, Godzilla has evolved to become a protector of humankind, a beloved pop-culture icon, and even a friend to children. But in director Ishirō Honda's original film, he's terrifying — the massive, volatile personification of the nuclear bombs that leveled Japanese cities less than 10 years earlier.
    • "Bride of Frankenstein" (1935) Pioneering director and gay horror icon James Whale outdid himself with The Bride of Frankenstein, a stark Gothic horror film that's enlivened with electric jolts of wit.
    • "Frankenstein" (1931) It's the film that set the standard for all the movie monsters that would come in its wake. The look and tropes of James Whale's original 1931 Frankenstein have become so iconic that even those who haven't seen it are familiar with its imagery of mad scientists, hunchbacked assistants, and villagers waving pitchforks.
    • "King Kong" (1933) Although his screen debut arrived in the midst of the Universal monster boom, King Kong was actually the creation of a rival studio, RKO Pictures.
  4. Oct 20, 2023 · Movie monsters have been a very important part of Hollywood, and more specifically, horror movies wouldn't be where they are today without the earliest imaginings of...

  5. Oct 9, 2023 · Movies Lists horror movies. ! When you hear the term “monster movies,” you might think you know what to expect. A giant, irradiated bug stomping all over a modern metropolis, perhaps, or an...