Clips from Halloweeen night!!! Awesome song!!!
Keywords: Halloweeen, Elm, street, kim, pumpkins, Freddy
In a story, and more often screenwriting, writers have a conception they refer to as the "controlling idea". This is an idea that boils down all the complexity of a movie down to one idea, one sentence.
In Inception by Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight, Momento) he has crafted a story who's "controlling idea" is a controlling idea. That is "an idea, planted deep sufficient into a person's sub conscience, will grow like a virus and become the very center of that person's existence" which is referred to as inception. This loop of meanings is just the covering of what is a multi layered labyrinth of a plot and can become very confusing for much of the audiences this film will entertain. But if you can get past the vast complexity of the plot, where Nolen has spared no charge in giving abundance of action, suspense, and drama, you will have seen quite maybe the best Sci Fi film in ten years. I know that's a bold statement and inspecting it's very good but tame 84% rating from Rottentomatoes.com composite of critics reviews, it is still yet to be considered how it will resonate with viewers over the next few weeks. But having seen it for myself I already know someone else viewing will be valuable to fully grasp all this film has to offer and I may write someone else narrative just to explain. For now I will try to by comparison my high praise for this film and effort to apply inception that this film is not to be missed! The story follows Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) a unique data broker who specializes in the art of "extraction", which entails entering a persona's dream and stealing data directly from their mind. Cobb's quality is set against a terrible truth locked away in his own sub conscience. (no Spoiler here) He is commissioned by Saito (Ken Watanabe) a rich Japanese firm owner who wants Cobb to plant an idea inside his dying firm rival's son's mind (Inception) that will lead to the break up of his empire. The stakes are high as well as the risks. In order to achieve this Cobb must reach the deepest level of his targets mind. To do this he must assemble a "dream team" of extremely skilled removal agents who deal specifically in corporate espionage. To achieve inception, his team must take his victim into the deepest reaches of his own mind via a dream within a dream (and then another). This disorienting state that makes it difficult for the field to even realize what is real and what is the dream. The deeper inside the mind, the more dangerous and actions taken in the dream have dire consequences in the real world. But for Cobb, this is the last job he has to do before he can return to his home. But where is home exactly, he is tempted to "make" a home in his dream world but it is there where he must face his most fears and his true enemy. Only Ariadne (Ellen Page), a skilled dream maze designer and his protege, knows the truth and she joins him as he confronts his demons in the deepest reaches of his own mind.
The film has a complexity to it not seen in sci fi since the Matrix. The complexity adds layers and excites many intellectual viewers but it is also the base for its hardest critics citing it to be incomprehensible and trying too hard to fool the audience. But for an performance sci fi thriller, these are complements. Not long before Star Wars, sci fi was considered a "B" movie genre and it is rare to see a film in whether performance or sci fi that isn't full of camp and over laden with Cgi. Granted Inception is not short on unrealistic violence and none of the themes in the film are totally original, "What is real" = Matrix (1999). Dream fighting is nothing new either, = A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987). What is new is Christopher Nolan's vision and his skills in writing, directing, and producing take on these themes. After The Dark Knight, Nolan earned himself a opportunity to make a film the way he wanted and getting his way gave us a film that could suppliant his film immortality. This film functions on a high level in every area, acting particularity.DiCaprio and Ellen Page give A performances. Casting was superb even finding spots for film veterans like Michael Caine (Miles) and Tom Berenger (Browning). Camera work and extra effects are sure to be Oscar contenders next year, and the sound track by Hans Zimmer (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight) is amazing. The tension and compounding friction in the film is so good it's Hitchcockean and interwoven seamlessly with the performance reminiscent of The Matrix and the Bourne series.
The set up of this has the viewer cheering for Cobb and his team to pull off his heist of an innocent man's free will which begs the question of not only will this work but is this just? Why do we want Cobb to perfect his mission? The friction that comes from the ethics of what Cobb and his team are doing is a great example of the perplexity of this film. It is riddled and torn with perplexity and that's what makes it such hard film to "get". But you have to see it for your self and try your best to "get" this film or you just might miss the starting of a great cinematic phenomenon.
Inception: One uncomplicated Idea, Quite plainly A MasterpieceDOKKEN: Dream Warriors - guitar cover using backing track Video Clips. Duration : 4.50 Mins.1. If you are a teenager living on Elm Street what should you never do?
A. Go to sleep
B. Play with dolls
C. Go to the prom
D. Have sex
A. Go to sleep
Topics: We all know from "Nightmare on Elm Street" that your dreams can get you killed by Freddy Krueger. Written by Craven, a former English teacher, the film's premise is the request of where the line in the middle of dreams and reality lies. The villain, Freddy Krueger, exists in the "dream world" and yet can kill in the "real world".
2. If you are up on your movie lore, then you also know that you should never accept what job on Halloween?
A. Hotel clerk
B. Baby sitter
C. Camp counselor
D. Traveling salesman
B. Baby sitter
Topics: Halloween (also known as John Carpenter's Halloween) is a 1978 American independent horror film set in the fictional Midwest town of Haddonfield, Illinois on Halloween. Originally titled The Babysitter Murders, the film centers on Michael Myers' escape from a psychiatric hospital, his murdering of teenagers, and Dr. Loomis's attempts to track and stop him.
3. What should tip you off to a bad motel to check in to?
A. No one else has checked in for weeks
B. The clerk talks too much about his mother
C. The clerk's name is Norman
D. You are a thief
B. The clerk talks too much about his mother
Topics: At the end of the film, a forensic psychiatrist, Dr. Fred Richmond (Oakland), explains to Lila, Sam and the authorities that Bates' mother, though dead, lives on in Norman's psyche. Norman was so dominated by his mother while she lived, and so guilt-ridden for murdering her eight years earlier, that he tried to erase the crime from his mind by bringing his mother back to life.
4. If you are seeing for a job on Crystal Lake what offer should you not accept?
A. Mailman
B. Truck driver
C. Camp cook
D. Camp counselor
D. Camp counselor
Topics: In Friday the 13th, we learn it is a bad job to be a counselor at Camp Crystal Lake where the counselors die highly bloody deaths at the hands of an unseen killer who turns out to be the cook whose son Jason drowned 25 years earlier while neglected by romancing counselors.
5. British actor Boris Karloff created a cinematic icon when he played the role of what monster?
A. Dracula
B. Werewolf
C. Frankenstein
D. Alien
C. Frankenstein
Topics: British actor Boris Karloff played the role of the monster in the 1931 film "Frankenstein". The ghoulish makeup he wore and the lurching walk he adopted in the film have come to be conventions, even cliches, of horror films. And beyond the personel techniques Karloff used when playing the role of the monster, he created a feeling of condolement for the character, a technique that has since come to be a more normal trait of thriving horror films, whose monsters often gain intensity by lively audiences as well as repelling them.
6. Béla Lugosi was a Hungarian/American actor best known for his portrayal of what monster?
A. Dracula
B. Werewolf
C. Frankenstein
D. Alien
A. Dracula
Topics: Béla Ferenc Dezso Blaskó, good known as Béla Lugosi, was best known for his portrayal of Count Dracula in the American Broadway stage production, and subsequent film, of Bram Stoker's classic vampire story.
7. In this 1970s book and novel, a mother believes her child (played by Linda Blair in the movie) is what?
A. An alien
B. The devil
C. Possessed by a demon
D. Bearing the devil's baby
C. Possessed by a demon
Topics: Novelist William Peter Blatty based his 1971 best-seller on the last known Catholic-sanctioned exorcism in the United States. Blatty transformed the wee boy in the 1949 incident into a wee girl named Regan, played by 14-year-old Linda Blair in the 1973 movie. Suddenly prone to fits and bizarre behavior, Regan proves quite a handful for her actress-mother, Chris MacNeil (played by Ellen Burstyn, although Blatty reportedly based the character on his next-door neighbor Shirley MacLaine). When Regan gets wholly out of hand, Chris calls in young priest Father Karras (Jason Miller), who becomes convinced that the girl is possessed by the Devil and that they must call in an exorcist: namely, Father Merrin (Max von Sydow). His foe proves to be no run-of-the-mill demon, and both the priest and the girl suffer numerous horrors during their struggles.
8. In a horror movie, you should worry if you encounter a doll named what?
A. Smiley
B. Bonnie
C. Chucky
D. Dolly
C. Chucky
Topics:Charles Lee Ray, or Chucky for short is a fictional character from the Child's Play series of horror films, the primary screenplay was credited as written by Don Mancini, John Lafia and Tom Holland. He is the primary villain featured in the series. Chucky is a doll that was possessed by means of voodoo magic by serial killer Charles Lee Ray, the notorious Lakeshore Strangler. during most of his time as a doll, Chucky chased after a boy named Andy Barclay because Andy was the first man he told his real name to as a doll.
9. Movies also teach us that if your son warns of "redrum" you good distance yourself from your husband pronto. But in "The Shining" all the husband is worried about is what?
A. Working too hard
B. Playing too hard
C. Becoming a murderer
D. Being murdered
A. Working too hard
Topics: "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" -- or, rather, a homicidal boy in Stanley Kubrick's eerie 1980 adaptation of Stephen King's horror novel. With wife Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and psychic son Danny (Danny Lloyd) in tow, frustrated writer Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) takes a job as the winter caretaker at the opulently ominous, mountain-locked Overlook Hotel so that he can write in peace. Before the Overlook is vacated for the Torrances, the owner (Barry Nelson) informs Jack that a former caretaker went crazy and slaughtered his family. Settling into their routine, Jack sets up shop in a cavernous lounge with correct orders not to be disturbed. Danny's alter ego, "Tony," however, starts warning of "redrum" as Danny is plagued by more blood-soaked visions of the past, and a blocked Jack starts visiting the hotel bar for a few visions of his own. Frightened by her husband's behavior, Wendy soon discovers what Jack has unquestionably been doing in his study all day, and what the hotel has done to Jack.
10. You can never unquestionably go home again, or at least you shouldn't if your neighbors belong to this profession?
A. Slaughterhouse workers
B. Morticians
C. Chefs
D. Veterinarians
A. Slaughterhouse workers
Topics: Tobe Hooper's influential cult classic, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, continues the subgenre of horror films based on the life and "career" of Wisconsin serial killer Ed Gein. When Sally Hardesty (Marilyn Burns) hears that the Texas cemetery where her grandfather is buried has been vandalized, she gathers her wheelchair-bound brother Franklin (Paul A. Partain) and any other friends together to see if grandpa's remains are still in one piece. While in the area, Sally and her friends resolve to visit grandfather's old farmhouse. Unfortunately, a house of homicidal slaughterhouse workers who take their job home with them have taken over the house next door. Included among the brood is Leatherface (Gunnar Hansen), a chainsaw-wielding human horror show who wears a face mask made out of human skin. Sally's friends are rapidly exterminated one-by-one by the next-door neighbors, leaving only Sally left to fight off Leatherface and his clan.
Scary Movie Trivia Questions And AnswersMichael Myers VS. Freddy Krueger VS. Jason Voorhees: Part 3 Full Trailer Tube. Duration : 2.63 Mins.Let us cut right to the chase...or right to the screaming as many of the folks on this list would prefer! Not only am I married to a top home haunter, I have been a big fan of horror movies (also called monster movies) for years. In my experience, as a fan of the genre, here are my top ten monsters of all time!
10. Kraken (1981)
From the 1981 Clash of the Titans, this is a mammal that stirs the imagination. Although the Kraken is a mammal of myth, it is the film version that everybody remembers. Who could forget the end scene of the former Clash of the Titans where the Kraken comes for Andromeda? (What he wanted her for is not clear to me. Did he plan to eat her? request her to go for a swim?) At any rate, the Kraken was brought to life by the stop-motion animation of Ray Harryhausen, a legend in horror and fantasy movies. The image of Perseus turning the Kraken to stone is classic and so is this multi-armed monster in this writer's opinion.
9. mammal From the Black Lagoon (all versions)
There have been many movies about terrifying sea creatures, but Creature From the Black Lagoon is still the best. (Sorry, Jaws!) Released in 1954, it features a monster-like gill-man discovered on an expedition in the Amazon. Like many preeminent monsters of the silver screen, the mammal spawned sequels. The former Creature of the Black Lagoon movie is being remade for a 2011 release, according to the Imdb Web site.
8. Mummy (Boris Karloff)
Boris Karloff makes his first appearance on our list! The Mummy, directed by Karl Freund, is a 1932 horror film from Universal Studios. It starred Karloff as a revived ancient Egyptian clergyman called Imhotep. While the movie is not a drop-dead scare fest, it is a classic that is in the communal memory of our society. When population think of mummies, they invariably think of Karloff shuffling out of his sarcophagus in bandages. The Mummy was semi-remade in The Mummy's Hand (1940) but it was Karloff's version that began the Mummy movies.
7. Michael Myers (all versions)
Michael Myers is the one who started the slasher genre. He first showed up in 1978's Halloween as a young boy who murders his older sister, and then returns home years later to kill again. His fights with Jamie Lee Curtis in the first two Halloween movies are excellent examples of how scary movie chases should work. Although, I think Michael's fights with Donald Pleasence (who played Dr. Loomis) are the best parts of the Halloween films. The only negative aspects to the Halloween movies to me are the continuity issues. For instance, Halloween Iii, although not a bad movie, has nothing to do with the other installments. Also, Halloween H20: 20 Years Later almost ignores established continuity from earlier movies with no explanation.
6. Dracula (Bela Lugosi)
Bela Lugosi was a Hungarian actor, best known for playing Count Dracula in the Broadway play and classic Universal Studios Dracula films, too. The now classic Dracula that made Lugosi a star came out in 1931. Although the movie is a tiny slow and not as attractive as other Universal classics, such as the Frankenstein films, Lugosi made the film work. No matter how many vampire movies are made, too, this is the most memorable. Ask anything who is Dracula and they immediately think of Bela's Dracula. His Dracula is an icon.
5. Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund)
Robert Englund is best known for playing serial killer Freddy Krueger in the Nightmare on Elm Street film series. according to Wikipedia, he received a Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors in 1987 and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master in 1988. I am not surprised. He was excellent as Freddy. The new Freddy cannot hold a candle, or dingy red sweater, to Englund. He approached playing Freddy with a aggregate of horror and comedy. His witty banter with his victims is the stuff of legend.
4. Wolfman (Lon Chaney Jr.)
"Even a man who is pure in heart and says his prayers by night, may come to be a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is bright."
When you talk about werewolves, there is none best than Lon Chaney's Wolfman in the 1941 Universal Studios movie. From the iconic makeup to the gypsy curse, it is Chaney's Wolfman that community knows best, and with good conjecture - it is a darn good movie that stands the test of time.
3. Frankenstein's Monster (Boris Karloff)
Do I assuredly have to write that Boris Karloff's portrayal of the Frankenstein Monster is a classic mammal of the cinema? The crash of thunder, the sizzling laboratory machines, the monster's hand moving-these are the images we all have embedded in our minds. No version of the Frankenstein Monster gets best than Karloff's version from the classic 1931 horror film.
2. Leatherface (all versions)
Leatherface is the main killer in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre horror-film series. He wears masks made of his victims' skin (which is where the name Leatherface comes from) and is the character from the movie who normally carries a chainsaw. Not only is Leatherface one of the first slasher-type villains but he is drop-dead scary! While I think all versions of Leatherface are scary as heck, the best Leatherface actors were Gunnar Hansen (from the first Texas Chainsaw Massacre) and Bill Johnson (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2). I still think the scene in Massacre 2 when Leatherface runs, chainsaw roaring, out of the darkened radio middle point toward the lead female actor is horrifying.
1. Jason Voorhees (all versions)
Sure, Kane Hodder has played Jason more than any other actor, but I can't pick one Jason that is best than another. Each actor who played the undead slasher Jason Voorhees brought something new to the role. Jason Voorhees is the killer from the Friday the 13th series. He first appeared in Friday the 13th (1980); although, he was not the main villain in the first movie. Jason is a great character because of the iconic hockey mask, the creepy camp setting, and because you feel some condolence for him. He was a deformed child who was mocked by peers and ignored by camp counselors. He also loves his mommy. (Watch the movies and you will see what I mean.) Because he evokes condolence in the audience, he is a tiny like Frankenstein's Monster but by all means; of course more evil.
Agree with my choices? Disagree with me? Post a comment. And remember to watch over your shoulder when walking in the woods at night. The guys above may be stalking.
The Top 10 Best nightmare Movie MonstersFreddy Krueger Theme Song Tube. Duration : 3.58 Mins.Frederick Charles is a fictional character from the nightmare film, Nightmare on Elm Street. You may great know him as Freddy Krueger. The disfigured dream stalker who uses a glove armed with razors to kill his victims in their dreams, which ultimately results in their death in the real world. However, whenever he is put into the real world, he has general human force and vulnerability. He first appears in Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street in 1984. He was created by Wes Craven, and has been consistently portrayed by Robert Englund since his first appearance. However, in the 2010 remake, Freddy is portrayed by Academy Award-nominee Jackie Earle Haley.
Krueger has been described as undead, and can attack his victims from inside their own dreams. He is known for his disfigured, burned face, dark olive green and burgundy striped sweater, brown fedora, and trademark metal-clawed brown leather glove. He has topped numerous lists, from Wizard magazine's "Greatest Villains" to "Afi's 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Villains."
If you're a fan of nightmare films then you're familiar with the dream stalking Freddy Krueger. Whether you watched this movie as an adult or a child, it made you second guess falling asleep. Now it's inherent to come to be your beloved legendary, fictional killer with very authentic finding Freddy Costumes. This Halloween, you can make a fashion statement with fear.
You'll make habitancy never want to fall asleep again. Haunt people's dreams and send them into a dreadful trap, where there's no escape! Now it's inherent to bring this horrifying character to life. There are many variations to the Freddy Krueger Costume. But the most notable variations would have to comprise a dark olive green and burgundy striped shirt and a grotesque, disfigured, molded mask.
Another disagreement to the Nightmare on Elm Street costumes, would be the Ms. Krueger costume. Now women are getting in on the activity too. This is a sexier version of her male counterpart. With this costume, your victims won't have to fall asleep to make you their dream girl. It's so hot, it's scary and so scary it's hot!
For your next Halloween or costume party, you're sure to be a hit with an authentic Freddy Krueger or a Ms. Krueger costume. Make sure to complete your ensemble with all of the accessories. Your costume isn't complete until you have your own dark green and burgundy striped shirt with a Fedora hat and legendary glove. And of course, take it one step further with a molded mask. All of these accessories can be found in many different varieties agreeing to your budget.
nightmare on Elm street CostumesNightmare On Elm Street Soundtrack - Track 02 Video Clips. Duration : 3.58 Mins.