So, it's been ages since I watched it, but I remember being genuinely disturbed by
8mm. I also recall at least one scene that was done rather poorly, but the overall effect did leave me mulling over the themes explored.
I'm also apparently somewhat of an oddball, in that I actually quite liked
Signs (maybe I'm just terrified of Joaquin Phoenix? Food for thought). Or, more specifically, I'm in love with a specific scene from said... the closet TV scene. Here we have something that flies in the face of standard horror cinema by building up and hyping up an event, something you
know is going to happen (both intuitively and explicitly), and then after all that build-up it
actually gives it to you... And it
still freaks you (well, me) the fuck out. For that scene alone, I can look past the film's other shortcomings. Damn thing had tween me checking corners for a month.
Lately, when the ladyperson is out of the house for a night, I'll tune out and have a little fun browsing the schlocky horror picture show side of Netflix. Cheesier the better.
Through this, I've seen some interesting titles... including the surprisingly-good-for-a-B-movie
Below, good-start-but-fell-flat Cabin in the Woods (hyperlinking on a phone is an exercise in patience and obsession that I don't have), the not-actually-horror-(except-for-the-philosophical-implications) He Never Died, and whatever Babadook was (aside from a reminder that I don't want kids).
Most recent one was
The Ritual, which had a lot of good things in it. Overall it's not a particularly good movie, as it suffers terribly from an inability to make us care about the characters properly outside of the protagonist, and it gets confused about how it wants to deal with the protag's inner demons. Worth looking out for are the really cool creature design (naturally only really visible during the final 15 minutes) and a rather clever scene where the creature is actually partially shown in the middle of the shot, but you don't notice until it moves to conceal itself.
All in all, just a bit disappointing because they deal with a lot of troubling and scary aspects with huge potential, but it all just kinda falls flat in a muddle. It might have been better to take a more clichéd approach and just not dealt with or shown the creature directly, but they had some actually really cool monster design and surprisingly decent CGI for an indie flick... So it's a toss up.
RE: Junji Ito. Uzumaki is a great example of "whoa dude, shit's creepy". The story has some neat aspects, it gets really campy and silly towards the middle, and the end pissed me right the fuck off. Great illustrations though.
I don't recall what it's called, but the short one with the endless dreamers was really unsettling, right up until it went balls-out blargalargl and violently expelled all subtlety in a slurry of half-digested ooze at the end.
Worth a read.