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-   -   Desensitized? (https://www.horror.com/forum/showthread.php?t=27001)

Brentton 01-04-2007 09:51 AM

Desensitized?
 
Does anybody believe films still have the ability to shock or scare us? What was the last movie to truly scare you?

stygianwitch 01-04-2007 09:59 AM

I chose 'unsure', i would have said no horror movies don't scare me anymore (most don't, i may see one that turns my stomach occassionally but that's not the same thing at all), however, just when i'd given up ever being scared again The Descent was released.... that one really did make me jump and got the heart pounding again

slayer666 01-04-2007 10:16 AM

Horror can still scare me, although not as often as it used to. To find scary films, I seem to have to go to Asian horror. A few of them have been very effective in delivering on the scares, however, it has been a long time since I've seen an American film that did the trick.

XtRaVa 01-04-2007 10:39 AM

Depends really. Anything can make you jump (even if you dont physically move in your seat as such) just by using a fast image or big sound. It's like if you waited behind a corner, and then yelled "arghh!" at your unsuspecting friend, the look on their face is of utter horror for a split second, so in that way horror can still "scare" you.

However, people that watch a lot of horror will find it difficult to be scared throughout the movie or have to hide behind the sofa.

Kemal 01-04-2007 11:09 AM

Yes. I'm a big scaredy cat.

Despare 01-04-2007 11:10 AM

A horror movie can still shock (if not scare) I think, even if it's just by doing something new or unexpected. It's not often but it does happen.

X¤MurderDoll¤X 01-04-2007 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kemal (Post 528988)
Yes. I'm a big scaredy cat.

answer my questions in this thread please. :)
http://www.horror.com/forum/showthre...t=26945&page=4

wufongtan. 01-04-2007 11:29 AM

I picked no. but i should have picked unsure about the desensitizing. because that depends on how you look ata movie. if you keep in the back of your mind that these people are just actors playing pretends in a make believe story> then you wont be desensitized. but if you're a moron like murderdoll who finds it hard to tell the difference between fantasy and reality then it could. And as far as scaring goes That chick from sixth sense who is in the kitchen with the cuts wrist gives me creeps. And women vampires from the old vampire movies ( 60 and 70's era) just freak me out mannnn... I have aweird phobia thing going on with them.

Roderick Usher 01-04-2007 11:32 AM

I can get scared much more easily in the theater than at home. There's something about the loss of control, being in a dark room with strangers, not being able to pause or stop the film that gives a movie a life that a home viewing (regardless of the quality of the home theater) can never replicate.

At home, everything's too safe and familiar to really get a rise out of me.

X¤MurderDoll¤X 01-04-2007 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Roderick Usher (Post 529006)
I can get scared much more easily in the theater than at home. There's something about the loss of control, being in a dark room with strangers, not being able to pause or stop the film that gives a movie a life that a home viewing (regardless of the quality of the home theater) can never replicate.

At home, everything's too safe and familiar to really get a rise out of me.

I thought the grudge was pretty scary in the theater, but I was bored out of my mind watching the DVD.


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