One of the best because it 'went there.'
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — When a Stranger Calls
Engelhaft — 18 years ago(February 23, 2008 05:13 PM)
Let me explain what I mean by saying that it "went there."
For the past eighteen years , or so , the horror/suspense/thriller genres have suffered because they've been too "politically correct." They always stop short of delivering the goods , so to speak.
possible spoilers
Rarely in recent films do you see children being murdered. They're usually saved at the last minute or totally off-limits of being killed at all because it seems too shocking for the audience.
This film "went there" because of the fact that the children were actually murdered and that made this movie very "real" and truly horrific.
It's things like this that makes a horror movie a horror movie , not a predictable , watered-down , formulaic movie that we see all of the time nowadays.
I also like how I couldn't really predict what was going to happen next. I can always figure out what's going to happen next in the horror films of today because the directors have studied and copied from the horror films of the past instead of being original.
I haven't seen the remake but , let's just say I'd rather see a "real" film with great acting as opposed to the latest teeny-bopper actress wearing a pound of lipgloss and talking like a valley girl.
Everything about this film is great. The music is on point and the acting is fantastic.
Man kann auch ohne Hund leben, aber es lohnt sich nicht. -
Engelhaft — 18 years ago(April 02, 2008 01:58 AM)
Thanks welshy.
One just doesn't see this caliber of film anymore , certainly not in the horror genre which , I'm sad to say , in my opinion , has been suffering greatly for a while. I don't mean that it's been suffering economically but , in terms of quality and originality.
I haven't seen the re-make of this but , I think it's probably a safe assumption that it doesn't hold water to this version.
Man kann auch ohne Hund leben, aber es lohnt sich nicht. -
Bub_the_zombie — 17 years ago(April 26, 2008 11:28 AM)
Haute Tension - 2003 feature a child getting killed via shotgun blast offscreen. Even tho it's off screen, we see the killer chasing after the kid, the camera only cutting towards the petrified mother's face as he shoots. The whole film disturbed me for days and that's not an easy feat. The 'head with the severed head scene' disturbed the beep out of me.
"You can't triple stamp a double stamp. You can't triple stamp a double stamp." -
novastar_6 — 17 years ago(May 19, 2008 02:05 PM)
Agreed, in the remake it got a PG-13 rating partly because the kids survivedthey weren't hurt at all. But in all honesty, I don't think this movie got an R rating because the kids were killedmaybe it was for the language, but maybe not, maybe it was for the 'nudity', maybe it was all things consideredbut I don't see this movie as an R rated movie, Halloween yes, Nightmare on Elm Street, yes, Black Christmas, surebut this movie? It doesn't seem to gelhowever as movies like House on Haunted Hill and Cape Fear from the 50s and 60s have proved, you don't need an R rating to be scary, you just need to use your head. That's what the writers did, they gave us a realistic situation of a homicidal maniac who kills children and stalks women, far more realistic than a guy who kills babysitters but won't put a finger on the children.
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Mithrandir-Olorin33 — 14 years ago(November 08, 2011 11:43 AM)
The killing of the Kids isn't shown at all, and kids Are killed off screen in the Remake, just not the one's Jill's watching, so there is no logical reasons for that to effect the ratings.
The only thing Halloween 1978 has that When a Stranger Calls 2006 doesn't is nudity. -
andy_cookie — 17 years ago(September 09, 2008 12:46 PM)
Bingo.
I was just flicking through the channels looking for a film to watch and 'lo and behold' I saw 'When A Stranger Calls'.
Not realizing that a remake had been done I was quite pleased as this film holds great, chilling memories for me (I haven't seen it for years).
I switched it on and quickly realized that it was a remake.
I was disappointed but thought that I'd give it a chance anyway.
Wrong.
Firstly, they prolonged the entire first twenty minutes of the original and stretched it out into a whole movie!
Secondly, everything was predictable. If you had even glimpsed a recent 'teen slasher' flick then you would have yawned your way through this one.
Thirdly, the kids survive. Somehow, they manage to hide from a psycho killer and evade him with little effort - wow! Scary that isn't it?
Your point is SO well made Engelhaft. Who would expect kids to be murdered in any box-office horror flick made by Hollywood today? As soon as you see kids in danger in movies these days you KNOW that they'll get away safe and sound. Where's the tension in that? If you want to sample a bit of real tension in horror/thriller movies these days you have to rely on independents or non-US movies instead (thank the heavens there are plenty of those!).
They also missed out the entire detective hunt and the parts revolving around the killer (which IMO were great - I remember feeling a little sorry for the killer - which HORRIFIED me considering that he was a child murderer!).
Finally, they did away with the tense ending from the first film (the years later bit when she gets the call at the restaurant). How could they do that? This film was classic because the bookcase suspense scenes were both chilling and unpredictable. Why choose only to concentrate on and expand the first scenes and completely ignore the closing scenes? As far as I was concerned they were just as awesome.
Anyway, rant over. Just wanted to vent because I'm disappointed.
I might as well avoid remakes full-stop. They all tend to disappoint me.
Cheers.
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smerd_70 — 17 years ago(January 29, 2009 08:07 AM)
'Who Can Kill A Child?'(1976) "went there" far more effectively than When A Stranger Calls. Same for the original Assault on Precinct 13.
I collect dead pigeons then I press them between the pages of a book.