From his book
-
Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Horror
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 28, 2025 04:19 AM)
From his book
Danse Macabre
. Of note is the fact that he includes Kubrick's adaptation of
The Shining
, which would seem to signal that he does (or at least did) recognize it's merits as a horror film despite famously considering it a poor adaptation of his novel. Also, the book's scope is limited to examining horror within various mediums during King's life up to that point, so there is nothing older than the 1950s.
The Abominable Dr. Phibes
(1971, Robert Fuest)
Alien
(1979, Ridley Scott)
Asylum
(1972, Roy Ward Baker)
The Bad Seed
(1956, Mervyn LeRoy)
The Birds
(1963, Alfred Hitchcock)
The Bird with the Crystal Plumage
(1970, Dario Argento)
Black Sunday
(1960, Mario Bava)
The Brood
(1979, David Cronenberg)
Burnt Offerings
(1976, Dan Curtis)
Burn, Witch, Burn
aka
Night of the Eagle
(1962, Sidney Hayers)
Carrie
(1976, Brian De Palma)
The Conqueror Worm
aka
Witchfinder General
(1968, Michael Reeves)
Creature from the Black Lagoon
(1954, Jack Arnold)
The Creeping Unknown
aka
The Quatermass Xperiment
(1955, Val Guest)
Curse of the Demon
aka
Night of the Demon
(1957, Jacques Tourneur)
The Day of the Triffids
(1963, Steve Sekely)
Dawn of the Dead
(1978, George A. Romero)
The Deadly Bees
(1966, Freddie Francis)
Deep Red
(1975, Dario Argento)
Deliverance
(1972, John Boorman)
Dementia 13
(1963, Francis Ford Coppola)
Les Diaboliques
(1955, Henri-Georges Clouzot)
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965, Freddie Francis)
Don't Look Now
(1973, Nicolas Roeg)
Duel
(1971, Steven Spielberg)
Enemy from Space
aka
Quatermass 2
(1957, Val Guest)
Eraserhead
(1977, David Lynch)
The Exorcist
(1973, William Friedkin)
The Exterminating Angel
(1962, Luis Buñuel)
Eye of the Cat
(1969, David Lowell Rich)
The Fly
(1958, Kurt Neumann)
Frenzy
(1972, Alfred Hitchcock)
The Fury
(1978, Brian De Palma)
Gorgo
(1961, Eugene Lourie)
Halloween
(1978, John Carpenter)
The Haunting
(1963, Robert Wise)
The H-Man
(1958, Ishirō Honda)
Horrors of the Black Museum
(1959, Arthur Crabtree)
Hour of the Wolf
(1968, Ingmar Bergman)
The House that Dripped Blood
(1971, Peter Duffell)
Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte
(1964, Robert Aldrich)
I Bury the Living
(1958, Albert Band)
The Incredible Shrinking Man
(1957, Jack Arnold)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1956, Don Siegel)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1978, Philip Kaufman)
I Saw What You Did
(1965, William Castle)
It Came from Outer Space
(1953, Jack Arnold)
It! The Terror from Beyond Space
(1958, Edward L. Cahn)
Jaws
(1975, Steven Spielberg)
The Killer Shrews
(1959, Ray Kellogg)
Lady in a Cage
(1964, Walter Grauman)
Last Summer
(1969, Frank Perry)
Let's Scare Jessica to Death
(1971, John D. Hancock)
Macabre
(1958, William Castle)
Martin
(1977, George A. Romero)
The Masque of the Red Death
(1964, Roger Corman)
Night Must Fall
(1964, Karel Reisz)
The Night of the Hunter
(1955, Charles Laughton)
Night of the Living Dead
(1968, George A. Romero)
Not of This Earth
(1957, Roger Corman)
No Way to Treat a Lady
(1968, Jack Smight)
Panic in the Year Zero
(1962, Ray Milland)
Picnic at Hanging Rock
(1975, Peter Weir)
The Pit and the Pendulum
(1961, Roger Corman)
Psycho
(1960, Alfred Hitchcock)
Rabid
(1977, David Cronenberg)
Race with the Devil
(1975, Jack Starrett)
Repulsion
(1965, Roman Polanski)
Rituals
(1977, Peter Carter)
Rosemary's Baby
(1968, Roman Polanski)
Salem's Lot
(1979, Tobe Hooper)
Seance on a Wet Afternoon
(1964, Bryan Forbes)
Seizure
(1974, Oliver Stone)
The Seventh Seal
(1957, Ingmar Bergman)
Shivers
(1975, David Cronenberg)
Sisters
(1972, Brian De Palma)
The Shining
(1980, Stanley Kubrick)
The Shout
(1978, Jerzy Skolimowski)
Someone's Watching Me
(1978, John Carpenter)
The Stepford Wives
(1975, Bryan Forbes)
Strait-Jacket
(1964, William Castle)
Suddenly, Last Summer
(1959, Joseph L. Mankiewicz)
Suspiria
(Dario Argento, 1977)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
(1974, Tobe Hooper)
Them!
(1954, Gordon Douglas)
The Thing from Another World
(1951, Christian Nyby)
The Tomb of Ligeia
(1964, Roger Corman)
Trilogy of Terror
(1975, Dan Curtis)
Village of the Damned
(1960, Wolf Rilla)
Wait Until Dark
(1967, Terence Young)
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
(1962, Robert Aldrich)
When Michael Calls
(1972, Philip Leacock)
The Wicker Man
(1973, Robin Hardy)
Willard
(1971, Daniel Mann)
X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes
(1963, Roger Corman)
X the Unknown
(1956, Leslie Norman)
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 28, 2025 12:34 PM)
It would be faster to list the ones I've not seen:
Burn Withch Burn
Curse of the Demon
The Deadly Bees
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
Enemy from Space
Eye of the Cat
Gorgo
The H Man
I Saw What You Did
Lady in a Cage
Last Summer
Macabre
Night Must Fall
No Way to Treat a Lady
Rituals
Seance on a Wet Afternoon
Seizure - this may be the only Oliver Stone film I've not seen
The Shout
When Michael Calls
X the Unknown
It's actually a pretty impressive list for a man who had spent the majority of his life to that point in small town Maine, mostly in the era before cable and home video. But I did notice a few omissions:
Black Christmas (1974)
Black Sabbath (1963)
Blood and Black Lace (1964)
Blood on Satan's Claw (1971)
Carnival of Souls (1962)
The Changeling (1980)
The Devils (1971)
The Driller Killer (1979)
Ganja and Hess (1973)
The Hills Have Eyes (1977)
House of Wax (1953)
The House that Screamed (1969)
I Drink Your Blood (1971)
The Innocents (1961)
Jigoku (1960)
Kwaidan (1964)
Last House on Dead End Street (1973)
The Legend of Boggy Creek (1972)
Maniac (1980)
Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
Onibaba (1964)
The Other (1972)
Spider Baby (1967)
Targets (1968)
Thriller: A Cruel Picture (1973)
The Town that Dreaded Sundown (1976)
Zombi 2 (1979)
I feel like I'm probably still forgetting something important, but I'll leave it there for now.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
/.ㅤ — 7 months ago(August 28, 2025 11:35 PM)
even small rural towns on the east coast had theaters playing a lot of variety (up until around the 80s when the business model started to become more about consolidation). a little less in the flyover states, but in either case, there were always people who would go and see everything religiously.
stephen was around the right age and in the right environment for them to make a big impression. -
Paul P. Powell — 7 months ago(August 28, 2025 05:29 AM)
I read '
Dance Macabre
' very carefully when it first came out –a friend of the family worked in a bookstore and often shared advance copies with us kids.
It's a fine series of linked essays; and even though some time has passed I don't feel it lacks anything at all by not being more up-to-date with newer horror.
Frankly, I don't know anything to crow about in American horror (not very much after the advent of '
The Shining
' or so).
My least favorite genre is SF but I'm almost as unmoved by –and indifferent to –horror. I feel it's largely intended for immature audiences.
Oh well. I remember this list (what I'm taking-a-long-way-around, to state).
It totals
96 titles
and I've
seen 61
. That ratio has stayed constant for a while now.
Most of the remaining 30-odd which I haven't seen yet, I have no interest in consuming.
Fun facts
:
My favorite Hitchcock movie is listed
("Frenzy").
My all-time favorite horror flick is listed
(I won't blurt this out just yet)
Anyway thanks for posting this. I 'ppreciate the energy you expended formatting each line for readability.
Paul P. Powell, Pool Player -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 28, 2025 12:37 PM)
I'm thinking it's actually the only Oliver Stone movie I haven't seen. At least of his scripted films. I probably should correct that soon.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
-
Paul P. Powell — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 03:12 AM)
Big budget horror is what turns me off. I don't mean studio-era, I mean post studio-era.
Low budget horror all the way.
But as I skim the list again I'm wondering why these omissions. Am I just not seeing them? Did I run my eyes over them once already and now am just not looking close enough?
The Tenant (Polanski)
The Honeymoon Killers
Bad Ronald
Death Ship
Outward Bound
Nightmare Alley
The Raven
Targets
The Unknown (silent)
Eyes Without a Face
Chamber of Horrors
Shock Waves
The Clonus Horror
Funhouse
The Nanny (Bette Davis)
The Old Dark House (Karloff)
When a Stranger Calls
11 Rillington Place
Paul P. Powell, Pool Player -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 03:42 AM)
Some of those are outside of the scope of the book (King's own lifetime; I suppose Nightmare Alley is right on the edge), but I agree that Targets is a big omission as I mentioned to somebody above. I do wonder how he would craft such a list today with all of these films and more being readily available on various home video formats and cable showings (TCM, early AMC) for years.
I agree completely that low budget horror is the best. That's why the films of Corman and AIP in their prime generally still hold up very well (not Corman's later, more hands-off production work as he entered the direct-to-video and SyFy Channel market). I think there has been a revival of sorts in the genre in recent years, but things were indeed very grim for the most part in the '80s, '90s and the early part of this century with endless slasher sequels, remakes of the same and the wave of inferior American remakes of Japanese horror films.
But I think that directors such as Robert Eggers, Ari Aster, Mike Flanagan (primarily his TV work), Osgood Perkins, Panos Cosmatos, Jordan Peele, Ti West and others have breathed some new life into it. To a certain degree, a revival has occurred in the realm of horror literature as well, as I talk about elsewhere on these boards from time to time. Mariana Enríquez, Laird Barron, and Stephen Graham Jones are particular favorites of mine among recent horror writers.
It is a shame that Peter Straub, the best American horror writer of King's generation, never got to see a proper adaptation of any of his work. The 1981 version of
Ghost Story
with a truncated plot and a horribly miscast Fred Astaire certainly wasn't one.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
/.ㅤ — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 03:56 AM)
i pretty much agree.
a big budget can get you suspense or a thriller
but the big budget horror is rare because it's mostly what you don't see on the screen and needs to be things we can relate to.
it can be done though if they bothered to spend more of that money on the script and actors and didn't have too many outside influences (profit motives).
although it would probably be more like a sci fi or fantasy horror.
alien would be a good example if that could be considered horror. -
Paul P. Powell — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:02 AM)
Aye. '
Less is more
', in horror.
Whom did I just hear lecturing on this …oh! Alan Arkin talking about the technique used in
'Wait Until Dark'.
What else is there to say. Well. If anyone is interested, the famous '
chicken heart
' radio episode from '48(?) is available here:
https://archive.org/details/LightsOutoldTimeRadio
No visuals at all. See if it doesn't sweep you along, as silly as the premise may be. There's just something about it which gets under the skin.
I believe King writes about this in that same book. It is also a favorite childhood memory of Bill Cosby.
Paul P. Powell, Pool Player -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:07 AM)
I think much of the artistic failure of big budget movies today - horror or otherwise - stems from a lack of adequate hands-on training of the type that AIP, Corman's later New World Pictures, and even smaller production companies provided. Coppola, Scorsese, Bogdanovich, Cameron, Demme, etc. went on to much bigger things, but because of their experience on low-budget films, they seemed to learn how to make each dollar count. We can see the opposite approach in the same era with Michael Cimino, who began his career writing big studio productions, moved into the director's chair and went on to bankrupt an entire studio.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
/.ㅤ — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:22 AM)
i see modern big budget films as elaborate money laundering schemes these days.
and with the quest for larger audiences to extract from, they've made it so we basically cannot relate to anything culturally except other things we've seen on our screens.
anything relatable that's not the intellectual product of hollywood itself, tends to get **** all over. -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:36 AM)
I largely agree. I read books nearly every week which would make for fantastic movies, but it's unlikely that many of them will ever be adapted to the screen. Hollywood is all about riding the superhero wave until it crashes (with video game adaptations already set to take their place) and occasionally catering to nostalgia by giving people a 105-year-old Indiana Jones or geriatric Ghostbusters. A24 is among the few reasons why American cinema is still alive at all, in my view.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026 -
/.ㅤ — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:46 AM)
i also see deeper, psychological games being played as part of a larger system.
sure, we call it "nostalgia" and "superhero movies", but i wouldn't dismiss it as coincidence or merely for-profit. there is a clear direction to all of this. -
sheetsadam1 — 7 months ago(August 29, 2025 04:52 AM)
Sure, but it's a chicken and egg scenario. Is Hollywood responsible for creating the situation or are they merely meeting their audience on it's intellectual level? There are many factors at play here.
"Praise be to Allah." - President Donald J. Trump, Easter Sunday 04/05/2026