Thursday’s Thirteen: Classic Horror

These bad boys of horror are the real deal, the classic that we remember.
  1. Häxan (1922)
  2. The Phantom of the Opera (1925)
  3. The Unknown (1927)
  4. Frankenstein (1931)
  5. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931)
  6. Freaks (1932)
  7. King Kong (1933)
  8. The Invisible Man (1933)
  9. Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
  10. The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939)
  11. The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941)
  12. Dead of Night (1945)
  13. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

I don’t know why ‘The Fly’ wasn’t on the list I found but I’ll let it be my bonus movie:

This is the scene where the fly was caught in the web saying “help me help me,” sent me right over the edge when I was thriteen. My mom had to put me to bed.

I haven’t been quite the same since, lol.

No I don’t like horror, but classic horror is okay. I just can’t take the new stuff now that I’m all grown up and then some.

Thursday’s Thirtenn: Early Horror Movies

Banner Maker

In honor of Halloween that’s coming up this month, here is a list of thirteen early horror movies you might not ever hear about.

Popular horror movies didn’t start in the 1940’s look these over and see if you recognize any (I got these from Wikipedia) .

  1. The first depictions of supernatural events appear in several of the silent shorts created by film pioneers such as Georges Méliès in the late 1890s, the most notable being his 1896 Le Manoir du diable (aka “The House of the Devil”) which is sometimes credited as being the first horror film[2].
  2. Another of his horror projects was 1898’s La Caverne maudite (aka “The Cave of the Demons”, literally “the accursed cave”).
  3. [2] Japan made early forays into the horror genre with Bake Jizo and Shinin no Sosei, both made in 1898.[3]
  4. In 1910, Edison Studios produced the first film version of Frankenstein, thought lost for many years, film collector Alois Felix Dettlaff Sr. found a copy and had a 1993 rerelease.[4]
  5. The early 20th century brought more milestones for the horror genre including the first monster to appear in a full-length horror film, Quasimodo, the hunchback of Notre-Dame who had appeared in Victor Hugo‘s novel, “Notre-Dame de Paris” (published in 1831).
  6. Films featuring Quasimodo included Alice Guy‘s Esmeralda (1906), The Hunchback (1909), The Love of a Hunchback (1910) and Notre-Dame de Paris (1911). [5]
  7. Many of the earliest feature length ‘horror films’ were created by German film makers in 1910s and 1920s, during the era of German Expressionist films.
  8. Many of these films would significantly influence later Hollywood films. Paul Wegener‘s The Golem (1915) was seminal.
  9. in 1920 Robert Wiene‘s The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, with its Expressionist style, would influence film-makers from Orson Welles to Tim Burton and many more for decades.
  10. The era also produced the first vampire-themed feature, F. W. Murnau‘s Nosferatu (1922), an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. [6]
  11. Early Hollywood dramas dabbled in horror themes, including versions of The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) and The Monster (1925) (both starring Lon Chaney, Sr., the first American horror movie star).
  12. His most famous role, however, was in The Phantom of the Opera (1925), perhaps the true predecessor of Universal’s famous horror series. [7]
  13. It was in the early 1930s that American film producers, particularly Universal Pictures Co. Inc., popularized the horror film, bringing to the screen a series of successful Gothic features including Dracula (1931).