Remember first time watching?
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herbsuperb — 10 years ago(March 23, 2016 07:30 PM)
I wish that about many films. 'Empire' most of all. I still do remember first seeing Se7en. The 'Sloth' scene was genuinely frightening, and I'm not often scared by movies. Especially horror movies with a supernatural element. Nightmare on Elm Street, Friday the 13'th, Halloween. That's not scary. Psycho was scary. Texas Chain Saw Massacre was scary. Silence of the Lambs was scary. Those things could really happen. For all anybody knows there could be somebody that twisted and that demented out there. Therein lies true terror.
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BubbaDank80 — 9 years ago(July 03, 2016 08:44 AM)
The media did a great job of not spoiling the killer secret in the commercials. Also, the internet isn't what it is now. I was shocked when KS was outted as John Doe. Made me look at him differently. Took me a couple of years to like him as an actor again. The movie really freaked me out. Saw it in the cinema.
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danickster — 9 years ago(July 20, 2016 09:35 PM)
The sloth scene was terrifying upon first viewing, when it moved!
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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uhyfVEVY_oQ
"I am I am I said I'm not myself. I'm not dead and -
Monknificent — 9 years ago(August 23, 2016 04:14 PM)
Hah! I too saw it at my Uni cinema club (London art college) but I'm guessing we didn't go to the same Uni, as my 60-odd seat cinema room was almost empty - maybe 8 other people? - which made it all the more spooky, tense and engrossing. I chose to go on my own, too, so no friends around to distract me. Pretty much the perfect viewing experience for a film like this - you want the big screen, you want the cinema setting, but you don't want to be totally alone, yet you don't want to be "with" people exactly either, so the intimacy of the tiny audience made it utterly sublime, a priceless memory.
I also remember looking at the opening titles with a half-critical eye, the visual artist in me thinking "that's a really good job they did with that".
The rest was even better, of course.
"It's too late Always has been, always will be
Too late." -
T-Rex1 — 9 years ago(October 20, 2016 02:35 PM)
This was undoubtedly the best first time movie watching experience I've ever had. I'm a sucker for a great plot twist ending, and they don't get much better than this. It's also a rich enough movie, that a second, third, fourth viewing are still very enjoyable even after you know how it ends.
Among the best modern movies made, and perhaps the finest murder mystery ever made, in my opinion. -
Rogo-9 — 9 years ago(February 03, 2017 12:45 PM)
I had an extremely visceral reaction to this movie, it was insanely powerful, I recommended it to all my friends but nearly twenty years later I have still not watched it a second time.
Only other movie to get to me like this was "Audition" Japanese movie that starts lightheartedly creepy then goes WAY dark. -
ranc1 — 6 months ago(September 21, 2025 07:24 PM)
It was during my compulsory army service, back in 1998, it's been a week of holding sentry in a remote rural woodland area. It was scary to go at night after watching this.
The scenes of murders were very graphic and not seen before in the movies. -
AnthonySocksss — 6 months ago(September 21, 2025 08:03 PM)
I caught the ending on tv when they’re in the car driving to the desert and had no idea what was going on.
Melton1 Wanted for Pedophilia:
https://i.ibb.co/6cnPmJVr/IMG-0830.jpg
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/Zjxk307CND0 -
MissMargoChanning — 6 months ago(September 21, 2025 09:01 PM)
There are so many of these types of movies I wish I could watch for the first time. This is one of them.
You asked a pretty question; I've given you the ugly answer.
Fasten Your Seatbelts….
It's Going To Be A Bumpy Night!