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The 10 Most Controversial Horror Films?

Freaks I guess it's that time of year when everyone makes Halloween horror movie lists.  Today, Canada's CTV is out with its 10 Most Controversial Horror films. This particular itemization strikes me as being a lot closer to the real deal than that Vampire list I put up yesterday. I mean, this one deals with serious old school films from back in the day, so a fair amount of research and thought went into it. It's not perfect, but check this out:

Le Chien Andalou (1929) -- I never thought of the Dali movie as horror.  But then there's that razor to the eye: perhaps this shocking nightmare of art is the original slasher film.

 Freaks (1932) -- Another good choice. Freaks even has been written about by the late, lamented essayist Leslie Fiedler.

 Peeping Tom (1959) -- I'd completely forgotten about Michael Powell's powerful terrorfest.  Check out the trailer.

The Exorcist (1973) -- Maybe the most controversial horror film ever made -- at least as far as the Catholic Church was concerned.

Zombie 2 (1979) -- Not sure I'd agree here, even though the eye scene is tough to watch.

I Spit On Your Grave (1978) -- Not the best film ever made, but so brutal, it got an X-rating and nearly made critic Robert Ebert ill.

Cannibal Holocaust (1981) -- So realistic that the director was accused of making a snuff film. It was supposedly banned in 50 countries.

Silent Night Deadly Night
(1984) -- Not sure I agree, but for the time, a killer Santa was pretty over the top.

House of a 1000 Corpses (2000) -- Zombie told me the studio suits freaked out at a screening when the crowd cheered at a gory moment and, hence, they wouldn't release the movie. Don’t know that a studio shelving qualifies as controversy, though.

Hostel (2005) -- We have this sadistic series to thank for torture porn.  But controversial?  Only to the Slovakian tourist board.

I would add Texas Chainsaw Massacre, a number of Japanese horror films like the hard-to-watch Audition and The Faces of Death series.

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Filed under: Classic Horror
Tags: exorcist, saw, vampires, zombie

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I definitely agree that "Freaks" would be controversial. We're being shown that these sideshow people are just normal humans, but at the end, they do something worse than murder to that deceptive woman. And mutilating someone to the point that they pray for death is just...inhuman. So I just don't know what to make of them after that.

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there are a few others i would throw in too. espically psycho. not only for the gore and violence at the time but did you know the ratings board was ready to throw away the film and not release it just for using the word "transvestite".

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Blair Witch seems tailor made for this list.

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"Traces of Death" made "Faces of Death" seem like the old days of Saturday morning t.v.

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