Sunday, July 16, 2017

Confirmation? Who Really Directed POLTERGEIST?


This week on the latest episode of Shock Waves, we were fortunate enough to be joined by WISH UPON and ANNABELLE director John Leonetti! But before he was behind the camera as a director, he was a cinematographer on a slew of well known films, including CHILD’S PLAY 3, Chuck Russell’s THE MASK, episodes of TALES FROM THE CRYPT and a stretch of 5 movies with James Wan including INISIDOUS and THE CONJURING.
But even before that, he came from a family of technically savvy camera people in the industry. His brother is cinematographer Matt Leonetti, who among many, many films in his resume, was the Director of Photography on the original POLTERGEIST! John was assistant camera on POLTERGEIST, pulling focus, which means he was there for literally every single shot of that film.
Once the subject came up during the podcast, we couldn’t help but ask the long debated question that is still talked about to this day.
Who directed POLTERGEIST?
Advertisement
article continues below

Tobe Hooper is credited as director, but the film feels much more in line with producer Steven Spielberg’s aesthetics. Our co-host Elric Kane didn’t even beat around the bush, he just flat out asked!
Leonetti answered, “The really cool thing about POLTERGEIST – I’ll never forget the very first time I walked on the shooting set, there were 4 x 8 foam core boards with 8 ½ by 11 storyboards on them, and I’d never seen anything like that before. It was a very intense, very fun, very technical movie to work on. There’s a lot going on. And candidly… Steven Spielberg directed that movie. There’s no question. However, Tobe Hooper – I adore. I love that man so much. But, had I known you were going to ask me that question, I would’ve brought this one picture I have, which is the whole movie in one shot!” 
“It’s the scene where the tree comes in to grabs the boy, and we have two cameras set up. In the foreground on an apple box is (an excited) Tobe, standing right behind him is Spielberg pointing. Next to him was my brother on camera and me.”
The photo in question? This behind-the-scenes shot from the set of POLTERGEIST!
Photo: POLTERGEIST (1982) Warner Brothers
When asked about the general atmosphere on set, Leonetti told us, “It was both fun and intense. Spielberg, after work was the nicest guy on the planet. We’d even go to his house in Beverly Hills and watch dailies. On the set, he was very intense.”
“Hooper was so nice and just happy to be there. He creatively had input. Steven developed the movie, and it was his to direct, except there was anticipation of a director’s strike, so he was “the producer” but really he directed it in case there was going to be a strike and Tobe was cool with that. It wasn’t anything against Tobe. Every once in a while, he would actually leave the set and let Tobe do a few things just because. But really, Steven directed it.”
There you have it! Listen to the full interview of Shock Waves embedded below! The POLTERGEIST talk starts at the 1 hour 4 minute mark!

Thursday, February 9, 2017

We Almost Got a ‘Poltergeist’ Prequel All About Reverend Kane?!

You’re gonna die in there! All of you!
Whether you revisited Poltergeist 2 on Scream Factory’s brand new Blu-ray this week or you haven’t watched it since you were a kid, I’m willing to bet you have a vivid memory of the film’s antagonist, Reverend Henry Kane. Played by Julian Beck, who was dying at the time the sequel was shot (he was diagnosed with stomach cancer two years before production began), Reverend Kane is undoubtedly one of the most bone-chilling villains in the entire history of the horror genre; and now that he’s in high-def, he’s surely giving the world nightmares all over again.
But did you know that Reverend Kane almost got his own prequel?
As relayed in Poltergeist 2, the backstory of Reverend Kane is nothing if not an interesting one. A reverend/cult leader in the early 19th century, Kane led his followers underground by telling them that the apocalypse was near, but it was all a lie. Kane’s real plan? To kill them all and then himself, allowing him to harvest their souls and, in the process, gain supernatural powers. Sort of like Freddy Krueger, Kane was so evil that in death he did indeed obtain otherworldly powers, transforming into the inhuman “Beast”… the nightmarish apparition in the original Poltergeist.
As it turns out, Kane’s doomsday hideout was directly underneath the Freeling family’s home, which serves to explain why Kane targeted Carol Anne across the three films in the Poltergeist franchise; he sensed her supernatural abilities and planned on using her to draw more souls to himself and become even stronger. Cause ya know, I’m pretty sure that’s how that all works.
It’s all compelling stuff from a storytelling standpoint, and according to an industry insider by the name of Macklin Crux, Kane’s backstory was at one point going to be given its own film.
As relayed by Poltergeist 3: The Website, Crux says it was being developed in the early ’90s:
I was at Universal in the early ’90s and I heard about Poltergeist 4. Someone told me about a new script that was being developed about the pre-story: Kane and his followers. Kane was a healer (like an exorcist), a good-looking man who was a preacher who had fallen and was going to go to California to rid himself of the “demons”. We were on the “western” lot when it came up. I remember “a Psychological thriller with less effects”.
He also notes that Kane’s backstory was going to tie him directly to Carol Anne:
The development would make some sort of connection to the Freeling family of the future. Carol Anne was the great-great grand daughter or something equally ridiculous. I don’t remember if someone suggested it or if it was part of the original story but the “Freeling Family” of the past escaped Kane at the end and were the only survivors. They were protected by an Indian medicine man. Sound Familiar? It should! This was originally part of the original Poltergeist property and elements (Kane, Indian medicine man, Family Clairvoyance, etc) were incorporated into Poltergeist 2.
Horror fans tend to have an aversion to origin stories, as they mostly accomplish the undesirable goal of making villains less scary, but if you’re asking me, a Reverend Kane prequel would’ve been an interesting way to breathe new life into the franchise. The character is the most compelling aspect of Poltergeist 2, and his backstory is certainly meaty enough to warrant its own film.
Alas, the idea seems to have been killed before a script was ever written.
poltergeist-kane

Friday, October 28, 2016

Film Review: Poltergeist by Collin Brennan on May 22, 2015, 10:30am

Ghosts in the ‘80s had it so much easier. If you’re a malevolent spirit trying to get by in 2015, you might wax nostalgic for the days when a dash of TV static was all it took to scare people out of their wits. I almost feel sorry for the poltergeists in Poltergeist, a reboot of the iconic Tobe Hooper film that first brought ghosts into the suburban tract home. When they’re not trying to find a way to make the iPhone 5 terrifying, they’re staring quizzically at a drone-mounted camera and wondering how in the hell it got into their netherworld. But technology waits for no one, least of all the dead.
If you came to this review with one burning question, it was probably, “Did the world really need another Poltergeist?” As you might have suspected, the answer is, “No, it most certainly did not.” The original film struck a nerve with the American public because it brought supernatural horror into a recognizable space. It convinced people that hauntings were not confined to castles and creaky old mansions—that nowhere, not even your own boring housing development, was safe. Three decades later, those housing developments remain just as boring and just as recognizable, which is partly why Hooper’s (and, yes, Steven Spielberg’s) vision has held up so well.
The new film contains a decent amount of scares, sure, but it’s mostly afraid of itself. It knows that it has no good reason to exist, and so it attempts to justify its existence with an orgy of technology that unmistakably belongs to the 21st century. The very first shot we see is a close-up of a zombie video game, and much of the film’s narrative exposition seems aimed at exploring the question of, “Hey, what would it look like if the original Poltergeist had drones and Macbooks and other kinds of cool new gadgets?” It’s an innately superficial question that doesn’t need answering, especially when there are films out there (Blumhouse’s Unfriended, for one) better equipped to tackle the thorny nest of techno-anxiety.
Even so, I’m tempted to look past all those annoying gizmos and give Poltergeist 2.0 the benefit of the doubt. After all, Sam Raimi’s behind this thing, and the last franchise reboot he produced was the wickedly fun, maybe-even-borderline-great Evil Dead in 2013. Here, Raimi has entrusted the directorial reins to relative newcomer Gil Kenan, but his sly humor still peeks through cracks in the script. Early in the film, parents Eric and Amy Bowen (Sam Rockwell and Rosemarie DeWitt) get a brief moment alone while touring their prospective house. “You have to try to like this,” Amy tells her husband. “Okay, I’ll try,” he sighs in resignation. I could almost feel the filmmakers reaching out to me, attempting to squash my cynicism before it sent me sprinting for the exit. “Okay,” I whispered under my breath, “I’ll try.”
But try as one might, it’s hard not to succumb to the fatigue of repetition here. The plot of Poltergeist is largely a rehash of the first film, with enough minor details changed to justify the “revisionist” tag. Pint-sized ghost whisperer Carol Anne has been swapped out for six-year-old Maddy (Kennedi Clements), a gregarious child to whom the dead are equally attracted. Clements strikes just the right balance between cute and creepy, and one could argue that she’s a slight improvement over predecessor Heather O’Rourke. The same can’t be said for her older siblings. The teenaged Kendra (Saxon Sharbino) is alternately reduced to screams and smart-ass remarks, while younger brother Griffin (Kyle Catlett) is a stiff, awkward kid who’s afraid of everything and thus destined to play the role of reluctant hero. The most welcome newcomer may well be Jared Harris as Corrigan Burke, a ghost hunter with an Irish brogue and his own reality show. Harris seems to understand the general ridiculousness of the plot, and he has fun skewering the legions of fake “ghost hunters” that have haunted late-night cable in recent years.
Remakes—or, excuse me, “revisionist reboots”—are only worth as much as the new ideas they bring to the table. We saw the good side of this a couple of years ago with Evil Dead, which smartly subverted gender roles and found some glorious new ways to kill off its cast. What the new Poltergeist lacks, aside from any real sense of purpose, is an iconic scene to call its own. There are plenty of callbacks to the first film, but nothing to rival the timeless terror of that evil tree scene, which remains the strongest piece of propaganda in favor of Amazonian deforestation. Even the clowns feel lazy and perfunctory here, though one scene involving a drill bit generates a good amount of tension before succumbing to 3D gimmickry.
Poltergeist’s obsession with such gimmicks, of course, stems from its near-pathological desire to feel “new.” It doesn’t feel new, and the sad irony is that, 30 years from now, this film will likely feel hopelessly dated. At that point, some cynical studio executive will probably order yet another remake, because why the hell not? I just can’t help but sympathize with the ghosts, doomed to stay the same kind of dead even as the world of the living evolves. Maybe we could learn a thing or two from them. Everything dies, after all, but not everything is needlessly brought back to life.

How the Poltergeist Curse Continues to Haunt People in Real Life

Poltergeist may be even more terrifying off-screen than it is on-screen. The horror franchise—launched in 1982—birthed two sequels (in 1986 and 1988) as well as a recent reboot (out May 22), starring Sam Rockwell. But what's even scarier than the premise of angry ghosts haunting an innocent family is the strange real-life occurrences that happened around the filming of the original trilogy.
Whether or not you believe in curses, and particularly this one—famously dubbed the Poltergeist Curse—you have to admit the odd happenings are more than just a little eerie. Young actress Heather O'Rourke, who played Carol Anne (a.k.a. the little girl sitting in front of the TV in the iconic image), met her maker too soon, when she died at the age of 12 from cardiac arrest caused by septic shock. She passed away on Feb. 1, 1988, just four months before Poltergeist III, her final film, was released. Dominique Dunne, who played Carol Anne's older sister in the first Poltergeist, was strangled to death by her ex-boyfriend five months after the release of the film. In 1985, actor Julian Beck, who played Kane, the evil reverend in the second Poltergeist, died of stomach cancer, while Will Sampson, who played Taylor the Medicine Man, passed away in 1987 from post-operative kidney failure. Between 1982 and 1988—the six years during which the three films released—the Poltergeist franchise saw four deaths from its cast members.
Though not often cited as part of the Poltergeist Curse, the gruesome death of actor Lou Perryman, who had a small part as Pugsley in the original Tobe Hooper/Steven Spielberg film, reignited interest in the curse in 2009. He was murdered with an axe in his own home. It's not unusual for a movie 33 years old to have cast member deaths, but the abnormal manner of Perryman's death was worthy of note among the unfortunate events surrounding the film. 
Many people have cited the skeletons in the film for the curse—later revealed to be real dead bodies, because they were apparently cheaper than fake ones. In an effort to cleanse the set of evil spirits, actor Will Sampson (who is also a shaman) performed an actual exorcism after shooting one night. Actress JoBeth Williams, who plays the mom, Diane Freeling, has said that during filming, she would always come home to find pictures on her wall crooked, even if she'd straighten them every day. Spooky, right?
With the release of the new Poltergeist, horror buffs are wondering, Is the curse back? Was it ever real, or all just terrible coincidence?

In a recent Reddit AMA, director Gil Kenan of the new Poltergeist detailed some unnerving events during filming: "The location for the house, during shooting, I chose because it had a strange and unnecessary field that the houses of this particular community were built around," he wrote. "And we found—throughout production—that we had persistent and repeatable equipment field only on that strange plot of land. For instance, lights that could turn on anywhere else in the neighborhood would blow out the second you'd try to light them on this plot." It's unclear whether this is spooky for reasons other than something totally normal and logical. Plus, considering Kenan has been "trying to catch a curse since [he] was 11," it's possible some of the oddities have been amplified in his head.
But here's the scariest and latest chapter of the mysterious curse: Just last month, a family in Sacramento claimed to have experienced horrifying events after purchasing the Cabbage Patch Doll that once belonged to Heather O'Rourke. The details of the case can be found here, along with the email the couple sent paranormal investigator Paul Dale Roberts (co-owner of Halo Paranormal Investigations). The husband, Dusty, said that since he and his wife Jamie-Lynn are huge fans of Poltergeist, they excitedly bought the doll off eBay, but terrible things started happening shortly thereafter:
The doll arrived on the 30th of October. We were in awe. Halloween day, we left for our anniversary trip to Reno. Our anniversary is Nov 1. While in Reno, we got a call that my wife's step brother had been in a terrible accident while playing soccer. He ended up with a ruptured spleen and broken ribs. Due to internal bleeding, he was hospitalized for 5 days. 3 days later, my father-in-law became ill. Within 2 days, he was in a coma. He was diagnosed with encefalitis. He remained in a coma for 5-6 days and we almost lost him. Miraculously, he woke up and was released after a 9 day stint. He is still in rehab for brain damage. We thought we could be back to our lives after a very trying few weeks. On Dec 2nd, my wife found out her childhood friend, John had committed suicide by gunshot. Dec 8th, our good friend Dawn died of heart failure...she was 33. Shortly after, my mother was having agonizing pain in her hip. She ended up having surgery. On Jan 7th, my wife's Uncle Jeff (not a blood relative, he was her best friend's father who took my wife in on more than one occasion as a child) passed away from a heart attack. He had no known medical conditions. January 26th, my wife was hospitalized for the night with a rare intestinal infection. The end of January, I left my job for a new company. On Feb 12, I was let go. Feb 14th, we had to put our dear dog, Zeus down. Early March, our 4 year old Pomeranian lost a tooth.
Shortly after, my wife was told something was wrong with her heart and they suspended her driver's license. She has had to wear heart monitors for 24 hours twice and they still don't know what is wrong. On March 27th, due to an error, Kern County Child Support levied my account right before a bunch of debit purchases and auto drafts cleared. This left us with a negative account balance of almost $2,000. My car broke down two days prior. Last week, the doctors notified my mother that her surgery not only failed, she had a fracture in her hip. She had a hip replacement April 8th. On top of all of this, my wife and I have not gotten along. There is constant tension in the air and the topic of divorce has come up more than once.

I called up the paranormal investigator on this case to hear his take on this curse, and if there have been any follow-ups with the doll owners. Paul Dale Roberts has worked on thousands of cases since he started in 2006, and he does indeed believe the Poltergeist Curse exists. "Yeah, I believe that negative energy can be thrown upon something. It can be thrown upon any inanimate object and stay there. When a person gets around this negative energy, something bad could happen to them. They may get sick, someone close to them can get sick, there can be a death."
He believes the doll was responsible for Dustin and Jamie-Lynn's recent misfortunes as well. He explained: "There was some type of curse on it. I mean, it has the history. It goes all the way back to The Poltergeist movie. Steven Spielberg supposedly used human bones from India, which upsets the spirit world, which caused the curse. So yeah I believe that the curse was manifesting from the doll and when it was trying to prevent the cleansing, which caused me to become dizzy." He and his wife Deanna Stinson, a psychic, work on cases together; she confirmed an evil spirit attached to the doll.
When he tried to cleanse the household, he felt a resistant spirit. "I felt very, very dizzy," he says. "I fell off-balance. It was almost like something was trying to prevent me from cleansing the doll." He believes the cleansing was successful though. The couple still owns the doll, but now keeps it in a blessed glass case. "Things are calm now," he says.
So is the latest Poltergeist in danger? Roberts doesn't think so. "No, even though this movie is a remake of Poltergeist, I don't think it has a connection to the curse," he tells Complex. "I think everybody is relatively safe." Whew. Perhaps we can all go see the new Poltergeist without fear of IRL repercussions.

Here's A Reminder Of Everything Wrong With Poltergeist

This week sees the release of the remake of Poltergeist hitting theaters, so now is as good a time as any to reflect back on the 1982 horror classic that inspired it. However, if you have nothing but positive memories about the movie, you may want to turn away now, as this video is going to tear it a new one.



CinemaSins has launched the latest episode of its "Everything Wrong With..." series, and this time around they've taken aim at what many consider to be one of the greatest paranormal activity films ever made. There is a point in the video where the narrator admits that Poltergeist really is a fantastic movie, and actually knocks five points off the final sin score as a result, but everything before and after really does point out a lot of big problems in both the narrative and the construction of the film.

So what are the central issues of the Tobe Hooper/Steven Spielberg film? Well, the approach to the paranormal activity in the movie is certainly a one. For example, it seems like the spirits in the story do enjoy really screwing with the inhabitants of the house, but why exactly has it taken so long for them to start acting up? There are also some pretty strange inconsistencies in the degrees of their behavior, from stacking chairs and creating slip n' slides to face-ripping hallucinations. Furthermore, it's never really made clear why the Freeling family seems to be the only family being affected by the ghosts, considering it's clearly said that their house is not the only one built on a burial ground.

Poltergeist


As the video points out, though, there is a weird ace up Poltergeist's sleeve that can be used to really explain away any of the movie's many notable weird continuity mistakes or character actions: the ghosts are responsible. How did that Darth Vader poster get back up on the wall? Ghosts did it. Why did Carol Anne's entire family abandon her during all the weirdness? Ghosts did it. Why does a bottle of 409 turn into a bottle of Fantastik? Ghosts did it.

For all its issues, however, Poltergeist is still a terrific film, and the upcoming remake directed by Gil Kenan most definitely stands in a large shadow. We'll have a review of the new movie up for you later in the week, and we'll see if perhaps the new version can fix some of the original's issues

  • Actually most of the things mentioned in this video are what makes Poltergeist a classic. These are not "mistakes," but are cinematic devices that add interest and style to a movie that has appropriately achieved classic status. Poltergeist should not have been remade. Have appreciation for the true classics, Hollywood.
  • This video is complete bullshit. There are plenty of movies you do this to, but this isn't one of them. Any flaws it has are microscopic when compared with the overall quality of the film.

    the dog walking thru the house introducing the characters on by one is a movie, gtfoh.. lame ass videos

  • I've grown to really dislike these videos. It's basically throwing a group's hard work to the curb and often times tries to poke holes where there are none. The worst is when the videos point out problems that aren't even problems, but opinions on what they want it to be. A few of these I've watched and quickly disposed of a good portion of their complaints by just paying attention to the movie.

    I agree with you. I don't even watch them anymore. At all. None of them. I read the comments usually to the video, to see what others are saying -- like I did just now, and stopped by here -- but I ignore the snark-filled crapfests.

  • yeah they make them about every movie too.. lmfao like at some point who gives a fuck? ya mean?

Poltergeist


Poltergeist

Poltergeist

1982 / 114min / 35mm

DIRECTOR: TOBE HOOPER

CAST: CRAIG T. NELSON, JOBETH WILLIAMS, HEATHER O'ROURKE

COMPOSER - JERRY GOLDSMITH
STORY - STEVEN SPIELBERG
PRODUCER - STEVEN SPIELBERG & FRANK MARSHALL
The directors of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Jaws teamed up for this allegedly family-friendly haunted-house saga, utilizing cutting-edge, Oscar-nominated special effects for the tale of a middleclass California family trying to rescue its cherubic five-year-old (“Carol Anne! Carol Anne!”), who has been whisked away to another dimension by meanspirited apparitions. Any of us who saw it young will never forget it—especially the scene in which a man rips his own face off in front of a mirror. Though Poltergeist was initially given an R rating, producer Steven Spielberg sweet-talked the MPAA down to a PG, resulting in sleepless nights for children for years to come.

200° The Best Horror Movies of the 80's

Although the 80’s is well known for its terrible fashion sense, it did bring us some downright amazing horror movies.  These movies helped shake, shiver and shape a generation, with its iconic killers and memorable death scenes. Crafty from Pixelcereal.com brings you the top movies of this crazy era.

The Shining (1980):

Jack Torrance becomes a caretaker at an isolated hotel in Colorado, over the winter. Hoping to cure his writer’s block, he settles in along with his wife, Wendy (Shelley Duvall), and his son, Danny. Danny soon becomes plagued by psychic premonitions of the past and future. As Jack’s writing goes nowhere and Danny’s visions become more disturbing, Jack discovers that the hotel harbours some dark secrets. He soon begins to unravel into a homicidal maniac and starts terrorising his family. I don’t think anyone could forget the famous line “Heeeereees Johnny.”

Why it Made the List:

Jack Nicolson is an amazing actor and to see him in his younger years going bad shit crazy… Well, who wouldn’t want to see that.

The Thing (1982):

A group of American scientists are disturbed at their base camp by a helicopter shooting at a sled dog in remote Antarctica. They take the dog into their camp, where it brutally attacks both humans and other dogs. they discover that the beast can assume the shape of its victims. This 80’s movie classic was a huge gore fest and I still get a little freaked out when the guys head falls off and sprouts legs.

Why it Made the List:

This movie was super scary back in the day and still is. It is full of amazing, gory effects that will stick in your mind forever.

A Nightmare on Elm Street (1985):

In this classic slasher film, the teenagers of Elm street fall prey to Freddy Krueger, a disfigured killer who preys on the teenagers in their dreams, and in turn, kills them in reality.

Why it Made the List:

There has never been a horror movie killer more terrifying to me than Freddy, everything about the way he looks is scary as s**t. Let’s not forget he’s a killer who can get you in your dreams… And Let’s face it everyone has to fall asleep at some point.

Evil Dead 2 (1987):

Ash Williams once again battling horrifying demons at a creepy cabin in the woods. After discovering an audiotape left by a professor that contains voices reading from the Book of the Dead. Ash’s girlfriend Linda becomes possessed by evil that is awakened by the voices on the tape. Ash soon discovers there is no escaping the woods. This horror comedy is an amazing watch and you can’t help but laugh along as Ash loses his mind and the house begins to laugh.

Why it Made the List:

With it’s over the top gore and humorous scenes, why wouldn’t this movie make the cut?

Poltergeist (1982):

Strange things start happening in the home of the Freeling family (Steve, Diane, teenaged Dana, eight-year-old Robbie, and five-year-old Carol Ann) when ghosts communicate with them through the television set. Initially playful, the spirits turn menacing, and, when Carol Ann goes missing, Steve and Diane turn to an exorcist for help. This movie to me is terrifying and the line “there here!” has always stuck in my mind.

Why it Made the List:

Where do I start? This Movie scares the life out of me from the creepy tree to the bodies popping up in the pool. Most of this movie is watched from behind my fingers. Yeah, I’m a wimp… Get over it!

The Lost Boys (1987):

Teenage brothers Michael and Sam move to a small town in northern California with their mother. While the younger Sam meets a pair of  geeky comic-book nerds Edward and Alan, Michael soon meets a vicious gang of vampires. Sam and his new friends must save Michael from the clutches of the undead.

Why it Made the List:

This is one of my favourite movies of all time and it started off my crazy, vampire obsession. The Vampires were hot and of course, they didn’t sparkle. The acting was amazing and the soundtrack legendary.

Halloween 2 (1981):

After failing to kill stubborn Laurie in the first Halloween movie, Michael Myers has followed her to the Haddonfield Memorial Hospital, where she’s been admitted after Michaels attempt on taking her life. Michael Myers Is not happy about failing so her cuts, stabs and slashes his way through the hospital staff to reach his favourite victim.

Why it Made the List:

Another amazing horror movie icon who still hits our cinema screen to this day. Michael Myers is a cold, cool force of nature and won’t let anyone or anything get in his way.

Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986):

The chainsaw-wielding Leatherface is up to his tricks once again, along with the rest of his twisted cannibal family. This time, the masked killer has set his sights on pretty disc jockey Vanita, who teams up with a Texas lawman to stop the maniac and his family in their tracks.

Why it Made the List:
Leatherface wouldn’t think twice about chopping you into pieces and wearing your face on his as if it were a new fashion accessory.

Friday the 13th (1980):

Crystal Lake’s history of murder doesn’t stop counsellors from setting up a summer camp in the area. Locals warn against it, but they pay no attention to the old-timers superstitons. They soon find themselves stalked by a brutal killer, as they get killed off one by one.

Why it Made the List:

This movie was the birth of Jason Vorhees, the unkillable, machete-wielding killer of Camp Crystal Lake.