Ten great films about horror
     I do not do movie lists. Period. Full stop. I make annual "best film" lists, and that's it. I do not do lists of the best Christmas or Halloween movies, the best love stories, the best thrillers, and so on. No lists. Done with lists.
When people ask me, I reflect that I have more than 325 Great Movies essays online. Is it just possible that among them are ten love stories, ten musicals, ten whatever?
This year at Halloween time, driven mad by requests for my favorite Halloween films, I said to hell with it. To prove my point i would go to my Great Movies page and find the first ten horror films to catch my eye.One qualification: They must have full-length versions online that were free and legal. I would embed them on this page. Then I'd be performing a good deed, instead of inflicting yet one more idiotic list upon the world.
I realize, sadly, that many of those who have requested such a list don't really care about what's on it. They're simply waiting to pounce on me for the titles that aren't on it. What! No Freddy! This may call their bluff. Not only no Freddy, but no Jason, no Saw, no slashers in general.
Every film here is more than 60 years old. And every film here should probably be seen by anyone who takes movies seriously.
This is not a list.
 
 
 
"The Third Man," by Carol Reed. Read my review.
 
 
 
"The Beauty and the Beast," by Jean Cocteau. Read my review.
 
 
 
"Frankenstein," by James Whale
 
|
 
 
"Detour," by Edgar G. Ulmer. Read my review.
 
 
 
"The Fall of the House of Usher," by Jean Epstein. Read my review.
 
 
 
"M," by Frtiz Lang. Read my review.
 
 
 
"Nosferatu," by F. W. Murnau. Read my review.
 
 
 
"The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari," by Robert Weine, Read my review.
 
 
 
"Un Chein Andalou," by Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali. Read my review.
 
 
 
"Dracula," by Tod Browning. Read my review.
 
 
 
More than 150 of my special pages are linked in the right column.  
 
49 Comments
Leave a comment
The Webby Awards
Person of the Year
Best Blog: Natl. Soc. of Newspaper Columnists
One of the year's best blogs -- Time
Year's best blog: Am. Assn. of Sunday and Feature Editors
Roger Ebert
Search
About this Archive
Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.
Buy from Barnes & Noble
Buy from Borders
Buy from Indiebound
___________________
Read intro and buy
___________________
Buy from Amazon.com
Buy from Barnes & Noble
Buy from Borders
___________________
Tweet / Facebook
Pages
- "No Robots:" A film about the human future
- A Monty Python Christmas
- Angel on My Shoulder
- Do NOT attempt this Cinnamon Challenge foolishness
- Google Doodle celebrates modern Origami
- Hydroponic greenhouse farms at or near supermarkets
- If you love The Daily Illini, it needs your help
- Intro: "A Horrible Experience of Unbearable Length"
- Introduction to Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2012
- Jean Dujardin, Kristen Wiig and Zooey Deschanel on Saturday Night Live
- Meet Anthony Pisano. He lives here.
- Michael Caine talks like this
- Oscar-worthy B-rated trailers
- Parents want to euthanize texting teenager
- Pat Robertson calls for pot to be legalized
- Public Edition #9
- recent Two Thumbs Up® reviews
- Romney, Santorum backers fight it out in Montana
- Ron Paul's straight talk on Rush's apology
- Six of Herzog's less-known documentaries, streaming
- The Best B-Rated Movie Trailers Ever!
- The birthday of the cinema
- The Cormac McCarthy Pictionary
- The first draft of Woody's "original" screenplay
- The Golden Globes Tribute to Scorsese
- The Kirk Cameron film Piers Morgan didn't ask about
- The poster of the 2012 Cannes Film Festival
- the Your Movie Sucks™ files
- Three little pigs arrested for murder
- Top 16 movies involving parakeets
- Wait! Is that 2011 Playmate of the Year Claire Sinclair in the "related" celebrity shot?
- Who does video boobs best? PS3 or 360?
- Who goes there? A map of science-fiction
- Will Ferrell sings bastante bien in Spanish
- Wingsuits. So much faster than climbing down.
- Woman makes Guinness Book, talks about it
- Women not nominated for the Oscars
- 3D
- Animation
- Archives
- Art in many forms
- "I don't know anything about architecture, but I know Brutalism when I see it"
- "In the Morning," a short fim inspired by Edward Hopper
- First five minutes of Soderbergh's "Haywire"
- Gregg Toland, cinematographer
- Have you ever seen a Tintin story?
- Is The Phantom the only sexually-active superhero?
- Outta da way of this steampunk wheelchair!
- Painting with water
- Pogo's lament on Earth Day
- The most incredible card trick I've ever seen
- The world's largest indoor photo in 360 degrees
- This is not a page about Rene Magritte
- Being here
- "Best Society," by Philip Larkin
- A photo of a little girl, and memories of two beloved aunts
- Hitchens is eloquent in the face of death
- How to be alone
- Jean Shepherd reads his original "A Christmas Story"
- Let's get together and feel all right
- My master thinks this is art
- To be young and mixed in America
- Werner Herzog meditates on The Bear
- West Virginia 8th grade test in 1931
- Why was the dog swimming so far from shore?
- C'est moi
- "Memory." How my memoir "Life Itself" opens
- Best films 1967-2009: Siskel & Ebert & Scorsese
- Helicopter crashes in our house!
- I didn't notice that was Ron Galella. Is he everywhere?
- I have no arms and I must play
- I read these in my bedazzed youth. Now it's the covers I love.
- I will never, ever, ever, do this
- I'll be honest and fight sqare
- If you were a kid in the 1950s, you remember...
- It's hard to believe it's been 12 years, Gene. I miss you.
- It's like so uncool to like sound like you know what you're like talking about
- Matinees and horse manure
- My drinking days, recalled in a noirish oil
- My other neighborhood on Red Arrow Highway
- My talk at TED 2011
- Portrait of the critic at home
- Siskel & Ebert and Howard Stern
- Cooking
- CyberWorld
- Directors
- A conversation with Atom Egoyan
- Claude Chabrol, RIP. The master at midpoint
- Herzog looks ahead to the Cave
- Jason Reitman in conversation
- Louis Malle: A do-it-yourself interview
- Manuel de Oliveira is 102: A tribute
- Scorsese on Elia Kazan: Watch the documentary
- The heart of the world and other organs: The singular cinema of Guy Maddin
- The secret of Jacques Tati
- Ebert Club
- Ebert Presents
- Ebert presents at the movies
- Ephemera
- Film Festivals
- Film classics
- Funny
- A personal letter from Steve Martin
- Aid rushed to movie overdose victims
- An economist makes it all perfectly clear for you
- At this point, we all need a good laugh
- Attack of the Second-Rate Monsters
- Avengers Assemble! Superheroes need health care
- Buddy Hackett: Up at drama, down at comedy.
- Dan and Dan: The Daily Mail Song
- David Mamet's "Lost Masterpieces of Porn," with your host, Ricky Jay
- Do the Creep!
- Down memory lane: Nic Cage goes batshit
- Dr. Tongue's Evil House of Wax in 3D
- George W. Bush and Mike Tyson in "The President's Speech"
- Harpo Marx, the most articulate brother
- Haven't I seen him somewhere before?
- Helen Mirren's breasts are the answer to everything
- Henny Youngman: "Doctor, it hurts when I do this!"
- How Michael Caine Speaks
- How to get a guy to notice you during sex (nsfw)
- I don't know WTF it's saying, but thumbs up!
- I know every single word. So do you.
- I love it when I'm quoted correctly
- Push the dragon's head, and the marble runs down here, and...
- The 1982 Tron Holiday Special
- The helpful Robert Benchley
- Walken the Walk, by Walkin' Walken
- When Harry met Sally 2, with Billy Crystal and Helen Mirren
- Who cut the cheese?
- Yes! I won the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest!
- Literature
- "Fight Club," by Jane Austen
- "In Love with Raymond Chandler," by Margaret Atwood
- "The Premature Burial," by Edgar Allan Poe
- Gatsby in Scott Fitzgerald's handwriting
- In memory of the memories of W. G. Sebald
- Jack Kerouac: 3/12/22 - 10/21/69
- Kurt Vonnegut's chalk talk on the shape of a story
- Let's hear it for the Oxford Comma!
- On 4/13/1906, Samuel Beckett started waiting
- Some bookstores just feel this way
- Stephen Colbert reads "The Lie," by T. C. Boyle
- Studs and Algren and Patterson, N.J.
- The Black Mask Boys
- The books everyone should read
- The enigmatic case of the oddly persistent mystery writer
- Vladimir Nabokov meets Gregor Samsa
- Walt Kelly, an immortal
- Werner Herzog reads "Go the F**k to Sleep"
- Why is film criticism important?
- London
- Meaning of it All
- Movies
- "As Penny Chenery's youngest son..."
- "Man in a Blizzard," by Jamie Stuart
- "Rosebud" was a rather tawdry device
- "The most beautiful film ever made"
- "Whose birthday, Lou?" "Yours, Bud!" "Mine?!? Waitaminit! You were born before me." "That's why your birthday is first." "Who's second?" "You. I was born first."
- "Why, you rotten SOB! Take that!" (Slaps him)
- "You just don't get it, do you?"
- 100 Great Moments in the Movies
- 36 Hitchcock death scenes all at once
- A blind film critic reviews "Scre4m"
- A double feature every day!
- All of Hitchcock's cameos
- Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!
- How Tom Cruise shot the skyscraper scene
- I could watch a Fellini film on the radio
- Jeff Bridges: The Starman within
- Marni Nixon: The secret voice of Hollywood
- Nick & Nora's hangover cure
- Revenge on "Revenge of the Sith"
- Richard Harris: Don't let it be forgot
- Robert Duvall: "Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that"
- Rock Hudson's secret
- Street scene: Movie theater, snow, rain, promise
- The 100 greatest movie threats of all time
- The Akira Kurosawa Song
- The Bechtel Test
- The Blanche DuBois Death Match: Vivien Leigh v. Woody Allen
- The Duke on Rooster: "My first good part in 20 years"
- The Kowalski Smackdown: Marlon Brando v. Diane Keaton
- The magic of Hugo: A behind-the-scenes featurette
- The shower scene
- When Lynch met Lucas & Werner saved Joaquin
- Why Pauline Kael never saw a movie twice
- Movies free online
- "Alma," award-winning short by Rodrigo Blaas
- "Breathless:" Modern movies begin here
- "Cyrano de Bergerac" (1950)
- "Inspired by Bret Easton Ellis," by Matthew Ross
- "Love Serenade"
- "Out of Sight." A magical anime
- "Plan 9 from Outer Space," by the Worst Director of All Time
- "Sita Sings the Blues"
- "The Bat." When it flies, someone dies
- "The Big Combo"
- "The Corporation"
- "The Kid," by Charlie Chaplin
- "The Whales of August"
- Buster
- Chaplin: "The Circus," "The Kid" and "The Gold Rush"
- Cocteau's "Beauty and the Beast"
- Dante's "Inferno," a 1911 Italian film with music by Tangerine Dream
- Freddie Mercury: The Untold Story
- Harold Lloyd in "An Eastern Westerner"
- Harold Lloyd: A rare early short and an interview
- John Huston's "Beat The Devil"
- Pauline Kael's favorite film: "Menilmontant"
- Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Richard Lester's "The Bed-Sitting Room"
- Rene Clair's "And Then There Were None"
- Sherlock Holmes: Dressed To Kill (1946)
- Sherlock Holmes: The Woman in Green
- Ten great films about horror
- The BBC's 1954 adaptation of "1984"
- The Haunted World of Ed Wood, Jr.
- The Kennel Murder Case
- Thomas Edison's "Frankenstein" (1910)
- Music
- "Chanda Mama" around the world
- "Gimme Shelter" by Playing for Change
- "Making Giant Hands," by Dog and Panther
- "Redemption Song" around the world
- "Swan Lake" by the Great Chinese Circus
- "What'll I do?" by Julie London
- A Farm Aid concert from 1985
- A Labor Day concert
- A new Mozart? 12-year-old composer hailed as genius
- A xylophone in a forest
- Bob Marley: One Love around the world
- Concert for an uncertain world
- Did Leonard Cohen save my life?
- Ella: It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing
- Esperanza Spalding. Yes.
- Four-year-old Jonathan conducts conducts the Chandler Symphony Orchestra
- Freddie Mercury vs. the Platters & Wayne's World
- George Shearing, 1919-2011
- Hallelujah Chorus, by the Kuinerrarmiut Elitnaurviat 5th Grade, Quinhagak, Alaska
- Happiness is being on the road again
- Hazel Dickens, the Rebel Girl
- I could listen to Ronnie play guitar all day long
- I went to school with Andy Cohen
- I'll never smoke weed with Willie again
- If Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries" had been a tango
- Jammin' cellos: Stjepan Hauser and Luka Sulic
- Joan Baez: There is a clearing where one is almost happy
- John Prine: A concert in Ireland
- John Prine: American Legend
- Jonathan is three and loves great music
- Joni MItchell: "Big Yellow Taxi"
- Julie London: The torch is burning
- New Year's with Steve: In tribute to a great heart
- Que sera, sera
- Sing a song of newspapers
- Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
- Still Bill: The life and songs of Bill Withers
- Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring" and "Firebird"
- Sunglasses and jazz on a summer's day
- Sweet Dreams, Baby: For Patsy Cline
- The Platters perform "The Twist"
- The night Hank Williams came to town
- The triumph of the day-fly
- The ukulele orchestra of Great Britain
- Tom Waits serenades New York harbor
- We need Punk Vaudeville. Jarmean?
- Won't you ride in my little red wagon?
- Yankee Doodle Dandy: Born on the Fourth of July
- Your Christmas morning concert
- ♫ Deck us all with Boston Charlie, Walla Walla, Wash., and Kalamazoo! ♫
- ♫ Don't know much about history... ♫
- ♫ My funny valentine, sweet comic valentine, you make me smile with my ♥
- ♫ Nestor Torres and the spirit in the music
- New Yorker captions
- News
- Newspapers
- O'Rourke's magazine
- Oscars
- Pages for Twitter
- People
- "By the age of 50, every man has the face he deserves."
- "It's not like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Cher said.
- Bill Mauldin, American
- Bob Hope: Thanks for the memories
- Bronson: Coming of age in Scoop Town
- Dorothy Dandridge: In Memory
- Falling in Love Again: Marlene Dietrich
- Farewell, First Lady of the Air
- Keanu thought his two years were running out
- Kirk Douglas: I've killed so many Romans, so many Vikings, so many Indians...
- Lars von Trier, meet Klausi Kinski
- Leslie Nielsen, RIP. "And don't call me Shirley"
- Liza, when all was still ahead
- Mae West and Rock Hudson: "Baby, It's Cold Outside!"
- Maria Schneider comes to America
- Orson Welles sells peas
- Pete Postlethwaite: 1946-2011
- Robert Mitchum remembers Marilyn Monroe
- Susannah York, 1939-2011
- The last days of Tiny Tim
- Werner & Erroll & the mystery of Ed Gein's grave
- What Oscar Wilde taught Stephen Fry
- Who is Billy "Silver Dollar" Baxter?
- Woody Allen interviews Billy Graham
- Zuppke of Illinois: A football coach
- Photos in need of a caption
- Photos in need of comment
- Poetry
- "Hell is a Lonely Place," by Charles Bukowski
- "Hollywood Jabberwocky," by Frank Jacobs
- "Love 20¢ the first quarter-mile," by Kenneth Fearing
- "Nirvana," by Charles Bukowski
- "Poetry Readings," by Charles Bukowski
- "Portrait of a Lady," by T. S. Eliot
- "The Charge of the Light Brigade," by Tennyson
- "The Day the Saucers Landed," by Neil Gaiman
- "The Machines Mourn the Passing of People"
by Alicia E Stallings - "The Perfect High," by Shel Silverstein
- "This Be the Verse," by Philip Larkin (nsfw)
- "You being in love," by e. e. cummings
- 'Twas the Night Before Pogo
- A nursery rhyme for our times
- All the world's a stage
- Dylan Thomas goes not gently
- Emily Dickinson's life closed twice before its close
- Evening Prayer
- Good-bye to All That
- Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"
- I love this sweet grandmother
- In Just-Spring, when the world is mud-luscious...
- Marilyn Monroe and Carl Sandburg
- Remembering Bukowski
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
- So anyway, Charles Bukowski, Errol Morris and Roger Ebert walk into this bar...
- So much depends upon a red wheel barrow
- W. B. Yeats: "Horseman, pass by!"
- Walt Whitman: I sing the body electric
- When icicles hang by the wall
- William Blake: Of innocence and experience
- e. e. cummings lives in a pretty how heaven
- e. e. cummings talks dirty (nsfw)
- Politics
- "If you think it's a socialist plot, give up your federal health care"
- Christopher Hitchens at length on BBC's Newsnight
- Pogo says it for the very first time
- Saul Alinsky pours for the Tea Party
- The Battle Hymn of the Tea Party
- The financial crisis explained (nsfw)
- The rich are waging war on America
- The smoker and the Cheshire Cat
- Update on the TSA breast milk incident
- Will Rogers on unemployment
- Willam F. Buckley was not an Ayn Rand fan
- Satire
- Science and not
- A reality far beyond my imagination
- Ants have built-in pedometers
- Do Creationists make good science students?
- If Disney had animated mushrooms
- Jeez, Dr. Feynman, I'm sorry I asked
- Our beautiful, awesome, terrifying universe
- Snakes on mathematical planes
- Starting with one cell, we arrive at Prof. Hawking
- The God Gene. A breakthrough
- The python's dinner
- We are part of all worlds
- Werner Herzog explains radioactive albino crocodiles to Stephen Colbert
- Sex and stuff
- Siskel and Ebert
- Letterman, Siskel & Ebert go door-to-door in New Jersey
- Letterman: "The lovely & talented Siskel & Ebert"
- Siskel & Ebert & Stern
- Siskel & Ebert fight over a toy train
- Siskel & Ebert on home video in 1988
- Siskel & Ebert on how to be a film critic
- Siskel & Ebert recommend great summer movies
- Siskel & Ebert's 1980s Holiday Gift Guides
- Siskel & Ebert's animated appearance on "The Critic"
- When Siskel & Ebert were on "Sneak Previews"
- Strange
- "The Tell-Tale Heart," by Edgar Allan Poe
- At last, a trailer that doesn't give away the whole story
- Do I dare to eat a peach?
- Fifteen minutes of my life, gone forever
- Sigmund Freud's friendly couch
- Take my hand, I'm a stranger in Paradise
- The Man Who Foretold the Future
- This bike path is just plain batshit
- Top 10 reasons I want to be cremated
- Television
- Jack Benny, 1894-1974: The man who was funny just by standing there
- Jones, Jonze, Spike & Co.
- OK, already! I PLAYED a video game! Now are you happy?
- The Orson Welles Program
- Tom Shales lunches with Siskel & Ebert
- When television had a brain in its head
- Young Jon Stewart interviews George Carlin (1997)
- Trailers
- Videos
- "La Vie en Rose"
- Australians are so much better at this
- By Arnold: The most literal DVD commentary in history
- Comeback of an underdog dog
- Filmography 2011: 230 films in 4:58
- Idiot with an iPhone
- Michael Shannon as you've never seen him
- Star Feud: William Shatner vs. Carrie Fisher
- Tarantino vs. the Coen Brothers
- The flooding of Paris
- Why, you...I oughta slap yer face!
- Woody Allen meets Jean-Luc Godard
- You feel uneasy in this ominous audience
- What could go wrong?
Categories
- 3D (5)
- Best film lists--and worst (15)
- Books and reading (5)
- Books and such (3)
- Cannes 2009 (10)
- Cannes 2010 (10)
- Darwin, My Hero (9)
- Deeper into movies (36)
- Film festivals (3)
- Just for Twitter (1)
- My Life and Times (47)
- My Old Gang (13)
- People (23)
- Political (32)
- Popular entries (17)
- Specific films (27)
- Supposedly funny (13)
- The Immensity (32)
- The Seasons (3)
- The Webopolis (8)
- The show (9)
- Toronto 2009 (11)
- Toronto 2011 (6)
Monthly Archives
- March 2012 (3)
- February 2012 (5)
- January 2012 (4)
- December 2011 (8)
- November 2011 (7)
- October 2011 (4)
- September 2011 (11)
- August 2011 (6)
- July 2011 (6)
- June 2011 (4)
- May 2011 (6)
- April 2011 (3)
- March 2011 (4)
- February 2011 (4)
- January 2011 (7)
- December 2010 (6)
- November 2010 (4)
- October 2010 (7)
- September 2010 (12)
- August 2010 (5)
- July 2010 (5)
- June 2010 (5)
- May 2010 (13)
- April 2010 (6)
- March 2010 (5)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (7)
- December 2009 (9)
- November 2009 (4)
- October 2009 (7)
- September 2009 (15)
- August 2009 (9)
- July 2009 (7)
- June 2009 (6)
- May 2009 (13)
- April 2009 (7)
- March 2009 (7)
- February 2009 (10)
- January 2009 (6)
- December 2008 (5)
- November 2008 (8)
- October 2008 (6)
- September 2008 (6)
- August 2008 (6)
- July 2008 (4)
- June 2008 (5)
- May 2008 (11)
- April 2008 (4)
Great list! You should do more of them :P
But seriously, these movies are free?!? I thought copyright was 75 years? Are they downloadable free or are they only on YouTube? Are there many more? Where can I find a list of all of them?
Done with fish.
Great list! What, no Freddy? :)
Nothing beats the old classics. Nosferatu has been my all-time favorite film for as long as I can remember, and Caligari's not far behind.
Joe Barlow
www.cinemaslave.com
You've also selected a couple of movies for TCM. I know you mentioned it before. Do you mind if I ask whether you're making an appearance discussing the films on TCM or did you just select the movies? I believe it's tomorrow night. Thanks.
I'm surprised by the selection of Tod Browning's "Dracula," given that the Spanish version is far more dynamic. Lugosi is, of course, the most iconic Dracula in cinema, so I still dig it. I finally saw "Nosferatu" and wow! Max Shreck was genuinely terrifying in his nine minutes on screen. As for "M," I found it completely compelling especially as someone who opposes the death penalty; I found myself rooting for the mob and was stunned and shamed for doing so by the brilliant ending of the film.
Thank you for the non-numbered arrangement of great films in this genre. A good deed indeed! We'll look for more.
thank I’m not such an expert when it comes to this. Useful read, appreciate your posting this.
This is inspired, and there are more than enough movie lists available for the fans and geeks. You could fill a hole the size of Europe with available internet movie lists, particularly focused on horror. Cinemassacre.com does a great October marathon in which a horror film is discussed every day, going in chronological order. Everything from Nosferatu to Mystics in Bali, never with any concern over what the "best" is, just presenting a love for movies, even an offhand kind of love for the sincere but goofy films, just as I think most horror fans would appreciate.
I admit that at first seeing The Third Man, one of my favorites, on this list triggered confusion, but the heavy influence of German Expressionism, the monster that is the villain of the film, and the somber mood really sit comfortably with these other films. I hope someone discovers it here and gives it a chance.
Where the hell is Night of the Living Dead? It's a great movie and is in the public domain now, so you have no excuse for excluding it.
One of the first films I can remember seeing as a young boy was "The Third Man" I really don't know why I found it so horrifying but I did. Should it be classified as a "horror" film? Well if it scared me so much, I guess it should. I can't explain why it scared me so. Perhaps because we don't get to see Harry Lime until nearly the end of the film but we felt his presense all the way through it (at least I did)...felt him lurking in the shadows, around dark corners, expecting him to jump out any minute to do...what? Saw this film several times over the years and it still scares me. Harry Lime..scarier than Frankenstein and we don't even get a glimpse of him until the film is nearly over.
Mr. Ebert, you are the man! Every time I take the time to read a column, a review, or in this case a list from you, it always brings a smile to my face and I inevitably learn something new. In this case I'm going to get to watch a few films I've heard of but have never seen. Thank you for taking the time to put this together!
I love your this-is-not-a-list list. With the exception of "The Fall of the House of Usher," by Jean Epstein I have seen them all and they all treat fear and inspire it amongst its viewer! Horror seems to have lost all its grimness over the years...
Wow, I didn't realize some of those are available free. I've been wanting to check out "The Third Man" for a while. Another decent movie that could make the list for me (just IMO) would be Michael Powell's Peeping Tom. It's on YouTube in a pretty nice format from Lionsgate: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMCt76OVHfw
Ebert: I wanted to include it but embedding was disabled.
The Third Man is not a horror movie. I have no reason to believe it is so. It is a mystery/thriller at the most. Why have categories and definitions at all or any words if the meaning of them is not actualized or implemented in their use? Beyond that: introducing people to these films is a wonderful service to your readers, great job!
I think it would help if you put the genre next to the title of the names in your "Great Movies" essays/lists...especially the drop down list on the website: I know this might be hard to implement, but it's a bit of a task to put in a great movie into google and get a feel of the movie without having it spoiled for you and your earlier reviews were practically just you spoiling the movie: you've gotten better at it with time
Ebert: Switched corpses...phony penicillin killing children...a chase through a sewer...
Thank you for these. Anyone interested in horror should see Nosferatu - the grandfather of all vampire movies. M is one of my favorites. I saw it on PBS when I was a teenager and it has haunted me ever since.
Mr. Ebert:
I truly enjoyed your audio commentary to Dark City. Would you consider doing an audio commentary for Whale's Frankenstein and posting it here so we could listen to your insights at the same time as we watch the film, especially since it's the one without a review posted for reading?
This is the most unfair movie collection ever. No ants, flies, spiders, mosquitoes, wasps, scorpions, cockroaches, grasshoppers, killer bees, alien bugs, or centipedes.
Surely one insect themed horror movie would qualify? Most of the classics are now in the public domain. Is it possible the famed critic is anti-arthropod?
An interesting list, but mine's different:
1.) Rosemary's Baby
2.) An American Werewolf in London
3.) Throne of Blood
4.) The Hunger
5.) The Ninth Gate
6.) Demon Seed
7.) Dracula
8.) Faust (Silent Version 1926)
9.) The Innocents
10.) The Shining
Ebert: But...it's not a list!
I would like to take this opportunity to say that I'm 28 years old, and I've been readin' ur reviews since 1989. I have every book u have ever written. Great compilation of films, gotta say I'm suprised u classify Detour as horror.
http://saturdaynightscreening.wordpress.com/category/spooktoberfest/
I'd question The Third Man's status as a horror movie, but overall, very good... group... of movies. Couldn't find Night of the Hunter online for free?
Interesting..."non-list", but I'd heartily recommend Universal's Spanish language "Dracula" over Browning's stodgy American version. Technically it's the same script, but the shot selection and performances both feel much more modern than the Lugosi/Browning take (and Lupita Tovar is MUCH sexier than boring old Helen Chandler).
@Edgar: Night of the Living Dead has not yet found its way into Ebert's Great Movies archive. That's why.
they showed us fall of the house of usher in, i think, fourth grade. i don't think i've slept since that day. ::shudder::
Generally, I don't care for genre classifications (because movies often blur the boundaries of genre), but lists (or faux lists such as this one) of horror films that include non-horror films always bug me. I mean, can we really call a movie a horror film if it doesn't scare or intend to scare? Okay, so the "about" in your post title takes care of that a bit. This is a great group of films, no doubt, but I don't know just how many of these films we can call horror. Still, I value your faux list regardless of my own issues with horror lists.
Ebert: A horror movie need not frighten, but it must horrify.
By the way, your Great Movies list is the greatest list in the history of movie lists. It has been fundamental in my deeper exploration of medium of film over the last ten years or so. Sure, it's more of a collection of essays than a list, but I don't like to have movies spoiled so I often use it as a list first. I typically use it to select films to add to the Netflix Queue only to read your review after I've watched the movie. The Great Movies section is my favorite part of your site and I thank you for it!
WTF man, where's I Spit on Your Grave???
I see David Lynch's Eraserhead is also free on Youtube. It's really quite spectacular to witness a filmmaker's vision come true in beautiful black and white. With a budget of only $20,000, the film took four years to make, because Lynch had to work odd jobs to pay for the film. The American Film Institute originally funded the movie, but could not extend the budget. Lynch, however, was allowed to continue shooting using equipment from AFI. Did you know that Stanley Kubrick thought Eraserhead was one of the best films he ever saw? It doesn't frighten, but it does horrify. Strange movie.
Thank you. This is great!
Got me a movie, I want you to know
Slicing up eyeballs, I want you to know
Girlie so groovy, I want you to know
Don't know about you, but I am
un CHIEN andalusia
I am un CHIEN andalusia
I am un CHIEN andalusia
wanna GROW
up to BE
BE A DEBASER!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7q5WjYjzrEQ
(and that's how I found this film.)
Hi Roger,
I wrote you yesterday...Don't know if you received it so I'll ask again since it seems appropriate for your 10 great movie horror list. In your initial review you gave Deliverance I believe two-and-a-half stars. Since then, you have mentioned it in other reviews alongside horror movie "classics". Do you now rank Deliverance as a great "horror film"?
We do a suspense/horror movie marathon every year, stretched over the month of October. So far this year we have watched:
Picnic at Hanging Rock
Rosemary's Baby
The Orphan
The Golem
Let's Scare Jessica to Death
But we've only gotten started. It's my fella's turn to pick this year, so I'm not sure what else he has in store. I'm pretty sure The Hunger is coming up. I've never seen it myself, but David Bowie as a vampire sounds delicious.
Last year we did:
The Descent
A Tale of Two Sisters
The Sentinel
Don't Look Now
Poltergeist
The Innocents
The Howling
Ginger Snaps
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
Nosferatu
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (carpenter version)
And most years we re-watch The Haunting (original of course!) and The Shining, which are my favorite horror movies. And we'll usually do some John Carpenter movies, which are his favorites.
I love October. :)
Oh, and a great movie for Halloween and for your list, but too new to be streamable:
Bug
Not horror, but totally horrifying. Terrific little film, and I can probably never watch it again. Brrrrr.
Incredible...Detour is an amazing gem, and sorely needs to be seen by more people. She: "What'd ya do, kiss him with a wrench?"
Thanks for the LIST, Mr. Ebert!
Srsly, don't the comments that start with Dear Mr. Ebert scare the heck out of you? THANK YOU FOR THE TREAT WITH NO TRICKS! U DA BEST.
Roger,
Your issue seems to be "ranking" rather than "lists". If you have 10 movies and list them, but don't use numbers, then you're not declaring that one is better than another. This is true for your list of 300 some odd great movies:
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=greatmovies_fulllist_print
Movie lists are useful. They're a great starting point for all sorts of things like:
* looking for a movie that demonstrates a certain point or situation,
* developing an opinion about a certain subject,
* making sure you don't repeat some tired cliche if you're making your own movie, or
* putting together a movie marathon to celebrate an occasion.
I do agree, though, that ranking movies is generally worthless. Saying "this is better than that" is pointless and really depends on the context.
Patrick Keys
Listening to "Rene and Georgette Magritte with their Dog after the War".
The Haunting has always stayed with me as one of the most truly scary movies I have ever seen, as a commenter at IMDB said "I slept with my hands under the covers for three years after seeing that" I got you beat, I STILL sleep with my hands under the covers. Other than that "Don't look now" had me sleeping with the lights on for almost a year. That Red Dwarf scared the ever loving treacle out of me.
What, no Freaks? I'm pretty sure that's available online...
As a German historian, I was happy to see you reference so many films from the Weimar era. Additionally, I would highly recommend Anton Kaes' most recent book, "Shell Shock Cinema: Weimar Culture and the Wounds of War." I found it to be a fascinating book on a fascinating period of film and cultural production. In it, Kaes discusses how The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Nosferatu (as well as other noted films including Metropolis, the Nibelungen, and to a lesser extent M) are visualizations of a nation reeling from the traumas of World War I. Given the historical moment, these films can be considered truly horrifying! On a side note, M’s commentary on lynch mob justice seems particularly timely given present-day politics. One should also note the similarities between the anti-immigration rhetoric of modern Republicans and the rather disturbing nativist/racialist discourses found in Nosferatu.
Awesome list, just some more I need to watch. I love most of these movies. I think La Belle et La Bete is an odd choice and Un Chien Andalou, those are more in the vein of experimental and avant-garde than horror, but I see the angle. Anyway, great list.
i would add gigli (2003) to this non-list! it was exceptionally horrifying! i screamed multiple times, why did i pay to see this, when is this over, did i just spill my coke!
I found this article by coincidence while on google, and I've noticed it doesn't appear in your journal nor is it linked from your main site. Just curious if there are other blog entries which might not be showing up.
Ebert: I create free-standing pages I call TwitterPages, because sometimes I come across material I want to post but it isn't appropriate for a full blog. I link them all along the right-hand column of this page.
I, like aditya, found this by accident as it was listed to the right in the pages bar. I enjoyed reading it and I intend to sit down very soon and see the films above.
I have less anxiety about lists than you do, Roger. While I don't favor them, I find them interesting none-the-less. At their best they incite deep discussions about film and remind me of films I may have overlooked or forgotten. At their worst, they try and diminish the movies down to an exact mathematical configuration. The movies just won't go there, they are a vast forest with millions of branches stretching far and wide in many many directions. It is impossible to contain the best of the lot into one silly list.
What an interesting (sorry) list! I love lists. For people like me, who want to see good movies without wading through dreck, they are great places to start.
I started watching The Third Man and found it so immediately interesting that I stopped watching it and put it at the top of my Netflix queue (Bluray!). I might ask my MIL to watch it with me, since she loves older film noir, though she seems bemused by my Orson Welles twitterpation.
Roger, I've enjoyed your reviews for as long as I can remember. I find your criticism to be utterly reliable - I don't always end up agreeing with you about a film, but I can always tell from reading your review whether or not I will want to see a film. I'm viewing my way through your compilation - I've seen all of these films before, but almost none recently. I will enjoy reacquainting myself with them. Thanks again for all the years of terrific and reliable guidance.
Thanks for giving us your cherished list, Mr. Roger
Love you, and love your work
From
Sarfaraz Abbasi
Karachi Pakistan
Roger,
Horror is a coping mechanism, a mythology for those of us who have lived through things. Horror is also easily exploited, so many pearls are lost in the dreck.
You are so smart and so unpredictable. That's why I read you. But, as smart as you are, you just should stop reviewing horror.I don't think horror is your mythology. You openly mock myths I live my life by and that help me cope. You even call us geeks for watching them.
So, why not just stop viewing them? I think you're in a position now to refuse anything you wish!
Regards,
-A
People will have probably noticed it by the time they read this, but The Fall of the House of Usher and Un Chein Andalou are no longer available for copyright reasons. Maybe the title should be revised to "Eight Great Films About Horror."
It really is a great list! I have not yet seen all of these films, but I will. I agree that there is horror in The Third Man, both in its plot and in its visuals; the scene where the Welles character is trapped in the sewers, surrounded by pitch-black tunnels carrying the hasty steps and calling voices of his pursuers towards him somehow escapes from the realm of reality, becoming a scene of nightmarish, insane paranoia. The director's ability to make his audience care and hope there is some way this despicable villain will manage to have a narrow escape is awe-inspiring.
I also admire "M" and especially Peter Lorre's final scene, but I have to confess that I somehow find the mothers sniffing into their handkerchiefs in the last shot very annoying. Maybe I am a heartless wretch. But every time I see this scene, It strikes me as a display of overplaying even more pathetic than the psychiatrist in "Psycho". I would be very glad if someone could explain the scene to me.