Stalk and Slash: The Top 50 Slasher Movies of All Time PT II

Advertisements

And our countdown of the best slasher movies of all time continues. Here, in Part II, we cover Numbers 40 to 31 with movies spanning the early 1970s to the late 2010s. We’ve got a couple of remakes from the 2000s as well as a classic early Giallo, a couple of grimy exploitation 80s slashers, and creepy mannequins. Even Death itself makes an appearance on this portion of the countdown to Number 1.

40 – House of Wax (2005)

Of all the horror movie remakes of the 2000s, House of Wax was maybe the most unlikely candidate. The original movie was a 50-plus year old classic from a bygone era featuring horror icon Vincent Price. In response to the pressure of remaking a classic, director Jaume Collet-Serra made the controversial decision to turn the property into a standard slasher. Aside from the premise of a killer turning victims into wax model, the 2005 remake bares no resemblance to its predecessor. But if you can get past these issues, the House of Wax remake is a surprisingly effective slasher featuring some brutal kills. It’s a little on the long side, but it does kill Paris Hilton.

39 – Tourist Trap (1979)

Tourist Trap is an interesting entry on our list. When it was released, the slasher subgenre didn’t technically exist yet. Specifically, the rules were still in flux. And Tourist Trap’s premise of telekinetically-controlled mannequins stalking travelers at a roadside attraction was an early mix of supernatural with ‘stalk-and-slash’. On one hand, Tourist Trap feels pretty formulaic for a movie that precedes the formula. Nonetheless, it benefits from a creepy atmosphere, interesting (if not bizarre) premise, and bleak ending.

38 – Haunt (2019)

A more recent entry on this list, Haunt was among several horror movies exploiting public interest in haunted attractions. Though it didn’t enjoy the same wide theatrical release as the similarly-themed Hell Fest, Haunt is by far the better slasher. Yes, its premise and setting have been done. Nonetheless, Haunt injects some fresh creepiness into the premise. What you get here are good production values alongside an indie horror vibe. It’s gruesome while still putting an emphasis on tension over cheap jump scares. Best of all, Haunt stands up to multiple viewings.

37 – Maniac (2012)

Either the original 1980 Grindhouse house cult classic Maniac or its 2012 remake deserve a spot on this list. Both versions follow the same story – a disturbed and psychosexually disturbed man hunts and scalps women at night. While the original was a grimy, sleazy exploitation flick, the remake hedged closer to art-house horror with slick production values. Elijah Wood represents a significant upgrade over Joe Spinell. And director Franck Khalfoun’s (P2) decision to film the entire movie from a POV perspective subverts the misogynistic violence by putting the audience in the killer’s shoes. It’s hard to imagine anyone outdoing Tom Savini’s original FX work. Fortunately, Maniac is equally as disturbing and graphic as its predecessor.

36 – Alice Sweet Alice (1976)

A hidden gem from 1976, Alice Sweet Alice quietly contributed to the slasher’s evolution. Alternatively titled Communion and Holy Terror, the 70’s thriller famously introduced a young Brooke Shields to movie fans. Perhaps Alice Sweet Alice is too subdued for modern audiences – more emphasis is placed on the mystery than the deaths. There’s also an interesting subtext here with Alice Sweet Alice critically dissecting the Catholic Church’s waning influence in Western society. The religious thriller also quietly bridged a gap between 70’s and 80’s horror styles. To a lesser extent then a movie like Halloween, Alice Sweet Alice paved the way for Friday the 13th and the imitators it spawned.

35 – Sleepaway Camp (1983)

On one hand, Sleepaway Camp is an unremarkable slasher movie. For much of its runtime, it feels likes yet another ‘don’t go in the woods’ camping horror movie with more tepid kills. However, as the movie progresses, the tone grows increasingly nasty. Ultimately, it’s the twist ending that defines Sleepaway Camp. Though its gender-bending finale wouldn’t fly today, it remains one of the more disturbing finales in horror history. And for that reason alone, it earns a spot on this list.

34 – The Final Girls (2015)

Horror and comedy are tough genres to mix. And The Final Girls faced the added challenge of finding a new way of subverting slasher conventions. Both a spoof and homage to slashers, The Final Girls puts the daughter of a legendary ‘Scream Queen’ in one of her mother’s classic movies, Camp Bloodbath. In addition to a stellar cast, The Final Girls almost perfectly balances gross-out horror with some hilarious slasher references. Most importantly, our Number 32 entry on the list remembers that audiences invest more in a movie when they care about its characters.

33 – Final Destination (2000)

Slasher movies have endured in part because filmmakers have found clever ways to re-imagine the basic tropes of the subgenre. Among the more clever entries on this list, Final Destination positions ‘Death’ itself as the killer in this pseudo-slasher. When a teen experiences a vision of a horrific plane explosion spares his life and his classmates, Death stalks the survivors one-by-one in the order in which they were intended to die. Boating some wonderfully inventive death scenes and a cast of up-and-coming stars, Final Destination kickstarted a lucrative franchise.

32 – Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)

Equal parts exploitation movie, equal parts slasher, Silent Night, Deadly Night earns its spot on the list just by virtue of the controversy surrounding it. After all, this was the slasher movie that prompted calls for bans due to it featuring a killer Santa Claus. Like a lot of slasher movies from the late 70s and early 80s, Silent Night Deadly Night boasts a convoluted Freudian backstory for its psychosexual killer. But what stands out are the brutal death scenes – now fully restored on Blu-ray editions – boasting some impressive practical effects. This is a grimy exploitation flick that’s earned its cult status.

31 – Bay of Blood (1971)

Acclaimed Italian horror director Mario Bava, along with Dario Argento, is often credited with giving birth to the American slasher film. His 1971 giallo thriller, A Bay of Blood, alternately known as Twitch of the Death Nerve or Carnage, is frequently cited as directly influencing Friday the 13th. It never reaches the heights of Suspiria, Deep Red, or Blood and Black Lace. And the plot is more convoluted than most gialli. With its rotating roster of killers and schemers, A Bay of Blood often functions more like a murder and special effects highlight reel than a cohesive film. Nonetheless, Bava’s flair and style are undeniable and its fingerprints are clearly all over Friday the 13th.

Buy a Ticket for Admission to the … House of Wax

Advertisements

On April 25 1953, Warner Bros Studios released House of Wax. It was the first Hollywood color film to use 3-D technology. Additionally, it marked Vincent Price’s first foray into the horror genre. What followed was a legendary career for the horror icon. Its story of a brilliant wax sculptor, driven mad by betrayal and disfigurement, who uses real human bodies to create his wax figures horrified audiences in the 1950’s.

Sixty-five years later, critics still still embrace House of Wax as a classic. is still embraced by critics and older horror fans as an atmospheric classic of its era. For this edition of Re-Animated I take a look at the original horror classic and the inevitable remake that followed 52 years later.

House of Wax Still Terrifies

A box office hit for Warner Bros Studios, House of Wax marked an interesting transition for horror. By the 1950’s, alien invaders and atomic monsters had replaced Universal Studios’ Gothic Monsters. With its 1890’s New York setting and winding, shadowy streets, House of Wax embraced Gothic horror. Yet its deformed, tragic killer anticipated the human monsters that Psycho would later popularize.

With its 1890’s New York setting and winding, shadowy streets, House of Wax embraced Gothic horror. Yet its deformed, tragic killer anticipated the human monsters that Psycho would later popularize.

Director Andre DeToth created a taunt, atmospheric horror movie. He makes full use of its Gothic setting and haunting wax figures. The disfigured Jarrod’s pursuit of Phyllis Kirk’s Sue Allen through dimly lit New York streets still elicits suspense. DeToth’s choice to reveal the killer’s scarred face so early reduces some the shock of the climatic final reveal, but it still delivers a dramatic punch. As the first colorized Hollywood film to employ 3-D technology, DeToth’s integration of the technique is still surprisingly good. Whether it’s a street performer launching a paddle ball at the audience or a killer’s shadow running out of the screen, the 3-D in House of Wax  feels fun and innovative.

House of Wax Gifted Us Vincent Price

One of the most significant aspects of House of Wax was its introduction of Vincent Price to the horror genre. Prior to the release of House of Wax, Price’s Hollywood career was in decline. Despite finding early success with supporting roles, Price had yet to find a breakout starring role. Following the success of House of Wax, Price would go on to enjoy a long, successful career in horror films including The House on Haunted Hill and The Abominable Dr. Phibes. Today, critics and fans alike consider him a horror icon.

House of Wax Remake Promises A Different Attraction

First, Jaume Collet-Serra’s House of Wax is not really a remake of the Vincent Price classic. Yes, the remake keeps the title and its wax figurine-making killer. Nevertheless, Collet-Serra’s House of Wax feels more like a spiritual remake of obscure 1979 film Tourist Trap. Psychopathic twin brothers replace Price’s disfigured, tortured artist. And their targets – unsuspecting lost travelers stumbling into their abandoned rural town. Slasher movie ethics and a little ‘hillbilly’ horror displaces Gothic haunts.

Slasher movie ethics and little ‘hillbilly horror’ displaces Gothic haunts.

While critics were unimpressed by the 2005 House of Horror , it’s actually not a terrible film. In fact, Collet-Serra’s distancing the remake by adopting slasher film tropes was probably a smart decision. Even in 2018, Price’s original movie holds up quite well. Certainly, it deserves its status as a classic. Adopting a different approach while trading on name recognition wasn’t a bad idea. Collet-Serra also has an eye for staging effective thrillers with a filmography that includes The Shallows and Orphan.

House of Wax Remake Ditches the Gothic for Slasher Tropes

Like most remakes, a House of Wax do-over was unnecessary. But Collet-Serra commits and goes all in with the concept.  Slasher film fans will get exactly what they expect. It’s a slickly made horror film with a few good jumps and some surprisingly effective death scenes. Watching a character trying to peel wax off of an encased, still-living victim, is particularly gruesome. In addition, the killers’ “creation” of their living wax figure also deliver on the creepy factor. In fact, the set designs in the abandoned town far exceed expectations for this type of film.

Watching a character trying to peel wax off of an encased, still-living victim, is particularly gruesome.

To be clear, the House of Wax remake falls squarely in the “guilty pleasure” category. It’s pretty much a ‘cookie cutter’ slasher movie from plot points to the casting of “young”, “attractive”, and “it” actors from the time period. Elisha Cuthbert, Chad Michael Murray, and Jared Padalecki are all fine in their roles. Each delivers a performance that is better than what you would normally find in this type of movie. Even Paris Hilton is better than expected. Perhaps the biggest complaint about the House of Wax remake is its length. The film clocks in at just under two hours. Nothing about the remake justifies that length.

The Original House of Wax is Still Worth the Price of Admission

Younger horror fans will probably gravitate towards the remake, which is unfortunate. The original House of Wax is still worth the price of admission. It’s a tightly paced, genuinely suspense movie with a fun premise. That being said, the 2005 remake is far from a terrible film. While it doesn’t offer much new to the slasher formula, it executes all the usual tropes with some flair. Bottom line – the 2005 remake has all the hallmarks of a “guilty pleasure”.

Vincent Price – The Best Movies of the Horror Icon

Advertisements

On October 25th, 1993, we lost a horror icon – Vincent Price. Baby boomers grew up watching Price in Roger Corman’s B-movie adaptations of Edgar Allan Poe. For horror-obsessed Canadian kids like me who grew up in the 1970’s and 1980s’, Vincent Price was Dr. Anton Phibes and the host of Hamilton-produced kids show, The Hilarious House of Frightenstein. Younger horror fans may know Price as the narrator from Michael Jackson’s Thriller. Regardless of where you first saw Vincent Price, there is no denying his status as a horror legend. His name belongs among stars that include Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney Jr., Christopher Lee, and Peter Cushing. For this edition of The Chopping Block, I take a brief look at Vincent Price’s best work.

Vincent Price is ‘The Last Man on Earth’ (1964)

The Last Man on Earth was the first attempt to translate Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend to the screen. At first glance, Vincent Price may not seem to fit the source material compared to a Charlton Heston or Will Smith. Nevertheless, this 1964 movie may actually be the best version. Contrary to most of his horror output, Price gets to play an ‘everyman’ in The Last Man on Earth. Some of the action and horror elements haven’t aged well. But the movie still manages to haunt with its ‘end of the world’ atmosphere. And Price convinces as a man struggling with to find meaning in emptiness.

Highlight: The final moments when Price discover that he is in fact the monster and not the vampires he has been hunting.

‘Theatre of Blood’ (1973) is Vincent Price at His Campy Best

Critics often accused Price of being ‘hammy’. Well, in Theatre of Blood, Price obliges his critics with an intentionally over-the-top performance. Price plays Edward Lionheart, a failed Shakespearean actor, taking revenge agains the critics who humiliated him. A spiritual sequel to The Abominable Dr. Phibes, Price is clearly having a blast with his tongue-in-cheek performance. Theater of Blood also benefits from a uniquely staged narrative. The death scenes are imaginative and grandly staged. Movies like Saw and Se7en have a bit of Theatre of Blood in their DNA.

Highlight: A disguised Lionheart tricks a critic to eat his ‘babies’, a pair of poodles, baked into a pie, a la Titus Andronicus.

The Masque of the Red Death (1964) Marks a Shift for Vincent Price

In yet another Roger Corman adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s work, Price excels as the tyrannical Prince Prospero. While townsfolk suffer from the ‘Black Death’, Prospero, a Satanist, throws a lavish ball in his palace. Throughout the evening, Prospero is haunted by a figure cloaked in red. The Masque of the Red Death is a more artistic, eccentric movie compared to some of Price’s other work. Several scenes have more in common with a nightmare than structured narrative. Arguably, there is probably only one other movie where Price shined this much as the villain as he does here.

Highlight: The ‘dance of death’ as the figure in read, Death itself, arrives at the ball and unleashes the plague upon Prospero’s guests.

Price Plays ‘The Pit and Pendulum’ (1961)

The Pit and and the Pendulum was the second Edgar Allan Poe-inspired movie Vincent Price did with Roger Corman and American International Pictures (AIP). An English nobleman visits his brother-in-law, played by Price, to learn how his sister died. It’s a delightfully old-fashioned, gothic thriller. An old castle, ghostly sounds in the night, hidden passageways, and dark secrets – it’s all here in this movie. Price delivers a sad, haunting performance. While it lacks contemporary big budget special effects, the climatic scene with Francis Barnard strapped to the table with the pendulum swinging above him remains breathtaking.

Highlight: The final scene where we discover that Elizabeth is in fact alive, locked in the Iron Maiden, and sealed to her doom.

‘House of Wax’ (1953) Introduces Price to Horror Fans

House of Wax marked Vincent Price’s transition from supporting actor in dramas to bona fide horror star. It’s an atmospheric thriller with a premise that stood out as unique at the time of its release. This time around, Price plays a more tragic horror figure as compared to some of the more outright villainous characters that would later define his career.

Highlight: House of Wax’s climatic finale as Price looks to create his newest wax figurine.

Witchfinder General (1968)

British-American historical thriller, Witchfinder General, was a very different type of movie for Price. Typical of his other movie, Price plays yet another sadistic and villainous character. But Witchfinder General was a much more serious and brutal movie than his usual work. Perhaps fitting of this distinction, Price delivered a more restrained performance as witch-hunter Matthew Reeves.

Highlight: Price describing the test for witchcraft is haunting stuff, even after 50 years.

The Abominable Dr Phibes (1971)

I named the site after this film, so it should come as no surprise that I’ve included at the top of my list. Like Theatre of Blood, Phibes is a campy 70’s revenge horror film. Price plays the titular Dr. Phibes. A horribly disfigured man believed to be dead after a fatal car crash. He uses the plagues Moses visited upon Egypt in Exodus to take revenge against the doctors who failed to save his wife. Though Price doesn’t have much dialogue, he’s convincingly menacing with his glaring expressions. This is an utterly 70’s piece of filmmaking with several idiosyncratic bits. It’s also an utterly watchable movie that has influenced countless horror movies.

Highlight: Phibes coats a nurse with a syrup from a hole in the ceiling, and then releases a swarm of locusts to feed on her.