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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 6:22 am
by Cameraman Jenn

Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 6:30 am
by lucimay
did i mention

Image

Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 7:09 am
by Lord Zombiac
lucimay, that one just made me feel creeped out and violated! ugh!

Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 5:51 pm
by Cagliostro
sindatur wrote:The house of Yes is pretty bizarre and fairly coherent. Starring Parker Posey, who's always fun to watch.
And there is such great dialogue in that movie.

Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 11:45 pm
by Vader
Everything Cronenberg

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2011 12:42 am
by Cambo
Pathology www.imdb.com/title/tt0964539/

Wasn't a very good movie, but definitely dark, strange and weird. Graphic autopsy scenes, murder games, some very kinky S and M sex...the rating sums it up nicely: "Rated R for disturbing and perverse behavior throughout."

Posted: Fri Aug 12, 2011 8:31 pm
by Vader
lucimay wrote:did i mention

Image
I love everything Cronenberg. Videodrome ... eXistenZ ... Naked Lunch ... all pretty weird.

Clive Barker and the first two original Hellraiser movies should also be mentioned.

Brazil (by Terry Gilliam) is a disturbing though through and through ingenious movie.

If you're talking about weird stuff (not dark) don't get me started on Galactic Gigolo.

Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 1:08 am
by Lord Zombiac
Vader wrote:Everything Cronenberg
agreed, especially videodrome

Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 5:48 pm
by deer of the dawn
In the 80's I found myself for a short time residing in a battered women's shelter. One of the counselors there and I became friends (I didn't realize at the time how unprofessional that was on her part) and one night she rented Looking for Mr Goodbar. Having recently nearly been beaten to death myself, the last scene made my blood run cold. I actually ran from the room and could hardly speak to her for a few days.

I'm not a real fan of psycho horror (never seen Silence of the Lambs, Clockwork Orange, Eraserhead) because quite frankly I don't need that in my life. But I do like weird once in a while.


Mephisto was darkly strange without corroding a hole in one's soul. As was Papillon, which I saw when I was 12 and it became one of my lifetime favorite films. But those films both had a measure of truth, it wasn't just gratuitously "how dark can we get".