Greatest and Scariest Film Scenes
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Title Screen
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Movie Title/Year and Brief Scene Description |
Screenshots
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Rabid (1977) (aka Rage)
Canadian writer/director David Cronenberg's unconventional,
low-budget horror vampire film (his second commercial feature film,
and similar to his first body-horror film, Shivers (1975))
starred ex-porn film star Marilyn Chambers.
[Note: She was the
ex "Ivory
Snow Girl" who
became an adult film star in the Mitchell Brothers' Behind
the Green Door (1972) and
then became one of the first adult stars to cross over into a mainstream
film. It was her first non-pornographic film role.]
Its tagline was:
You can't trust your mother, your best friend, your neighbor
next door... One minute they're perfectly normal, THE NEXT...RABID.
Pray it doesn't happen to you.
Chambers took the lead role of Rose, a mutant
predator with vampirish blood cravings following plastic surgery
(and an experimental skin graph). Critically-injured, she had been
treated following severe burning and bleeding suffered in a motorcycle
crash with her boyfriend Hart (Frank Moore). In the Keloid Clinic,
she underwent a new technique performed by Dr.
Keloid (Howard Ryshpan) involving the neutralizing
of skin tissue - grafted skin from her thigh was removed, treated,
and then applied to injured areas of her body. After a month of
remaining unconscious, she awoke, removed her nutrient IV tube,
and temporarily escaped from the clinic.
Unable to digest food regularly following the accident,
Rose realized that she required human blood to survive. And she noticed
a grotesque phallic-shaped organ that burst out of her armpit. In
a memorable scene, she found shelter in a barn where she put her arm
around a black and white heifer. She attempted to suck blood from the
cow (rather than from humans) - but her attempt failed and she threw
up.
A drunken farmer (Terence G. Ross) forced himself
upon her while calling her "Honeypie" and
suggesting:
"I got somethin' you can drink off of, and it ain't no whiskey
neither" when he knelt in front of her. He noticed her bloody
mouth and then she punctured his eye with the organ in her armpit.
Later, the farmer died of an infectious rabies-like virus in a diner.
Upon her
return to the clinic, Rose attacked blue bikini-clad patient Judy
Glasberg (Terry Schonblum) in a hot tub and drowned her. Her frozen
body was later found hidden in a freezer in the clinic's basement.
Dr. Keloid (Howard Ryshpan) also became infected from her bite,
and then was performing surgery in an operating room with his wife
nurse Roxanne Keloid (Patricia Gage) assisting. Inexplicably after
she passed him a pair of scissors, he cut off her finger and sucked
the bleeding stump. Foaming at the mouth, and with green eyes,
he was taken away in the back of a police van.
Rose's feeding scenes contained symbolic sexual
imagery - since her blood-sucking bites came from a pair of vulgar,
phallic-shaped (and also clitoral-shaped), stinger-like appendages
from inside a vaginal-like slit or orifice in her armpit.
After escaping from the clinic, Rose visited
in the Montreal apartment of her best friend Mindy Kent (Susan
Roman), where she suffered severe pain and sweating on the floor
of the apartment's bathroom.
In the film's creepiest scene set in a red-light
district, she found another nourishing victim, credited as Man
in Cinema (Miguel Fernandes) in the Eve adult porn theatre (showing
Party Swapers and Models For Pleasure) - whom she
allowed to sit next to her. The soundtrack of the film corresponded
to the seductive wishes of the naive male patron who began fondling
her. His closeness aroused her, and her needle-like stinger emerged
from her armpit. She left the theatre alone after fulfilling her
insatiable, mosquito-like appetite for human blood. The dead man
had a bloody entrance wound on his right palm.
Rabid Infection in a Theatre - Death to Man in
Cinema
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Her
bloodlusting bites would infect her victims with a highly-contagious,
venereal, rabies-like disease that transformed them into manic,
consuming flesh-and-blood consuming zombies. The
bite was akin to unprotected sexual intercourse via promiscuity that
was also linked to rampant, rabid infection - a new outbreak threatened
the entire city of Montreal.
Mindy witnessed a rabid woman attack
a man on a subway train. During the establishment of martial law,
chaos ruled - exemplified by the accidental careless murder of
a Santa Claus in a mall - shot by an officer.
Fearing that she was possibly accountable for the
health crisis after feasting on her friend Mindy, Rose allowed
herself to bitten by one of her zombified victims, credited as
Young Man in Lobby (Allan Moyle) so she would suffer the same fate.
The nihilistic film ended with Rose's stiff, open-eyed
body, found on a trash pile in a Montreal alley, being indiscriminately
tossed into the back of a garbage truck by a sanitation crew. |
Rose (Marilyn Chambers)
Dr. Keloid (Howard Ryshpan)
Dr. Roxanne Keloid (Patricia Gage)
Rose in Mindy's Bathroom
Rabid Woman Attack on Subway
Ending: Rose's Body on a Trash Pile
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Raiders
of the Lost Ark (1981)
The spectacular, cliff-hanger, breathlessly-paced,
non-stop action/adventure film of the early 1980s was this immensely
successful summer box-office hit. The scary
scene in the fiery finale when the Ark of the Covenant was opened
was reminiscent of the opening of the Great Whatsit box in the
climax of Kiss
Me, Deadly (1955). Retribution from
the horrors of hell (God's vengeance) was released upon the rival,
religious artifact-obsessed French archaeologist and his Third
Reich Nazi cohorts.
When the gold lid was removed by two
Nazi soldiers, French archaeologist Renee Belloq (Paul Freeman)
reached in to discover only fine grains of sand within. (Had the
stone tablets of the ten commandments disintegrated?) But then
the Ark unleashed electrical energy and charges, zapping all electrical
lights, apparatus and machines in the arena. Things turned dark,
and then a loud humming noise emanated from within the Ark.
Inside
the box itself, there was a wondrous, brilliant light, and a white
smoke undulated out of it and blanketed the ground. Nearby tied
to a pole together, Indy (Harrison Ford) warned Marion Ravenwood
(Karen Allen) to look away (similar to the Biblical story of Lot
warning his wife not to watch the destruction of Sodom, or Adam
and Eve's knowledge of the forbidden fruit and subsequent loss
of innocence in the Garden of Eden):
"Don't
look at it. Shut your eyes, Marion, and don't look at it, no matter
what happens."
Belloq had an obsessed, transcendent look on his
face - he believed that the blinding light in the Ark was beautiful.
Ghostly spirits hypnotically zoomed around everyone - but apparently,
God's wrath had been summoned, as the forms changed from wondrous
to deadly visions. Belloq was besieged by the ghostly images and
screamed in horror - the interlopers were punished by a lethal
dose of death for breaking the sacred taboo.
The villain was consumed
by flames, and piercing firebolts and shafts of fire zapped the
rest of the Nazis through the heart. One firebolt actually traveled
through one of the movie cameras, destroying the visual evidence
of the event! Major Arnold Toht's (Ronald Lacey) head, along with
the heads of several other commanding Nazis, including Colonel
Herman Dietrich (Wolf Kahler) melted into dripping ooze by the
extreme heat, while Belloq's head exploded.
The climactic firestorm created a rushing vacuum
of wind and a rising plume of fire above the island. Suddenly,
the blinding fire in the heavenly sky reversed itself, and the
fire was sucked and swallowed up by the Ark. When the forces were
returned inside the Ark, the lid slammed down tightly and neatly
shut and sealed itself, and covered up the divine powers.
Only
Indy and Marion survived the holocaust because of their humility
and reverence for the awesome forces. |
Renee Belloq (Paul Freeman)
Colonel Herman Dietrich (Wolf Kahler)
Major Arnold Toht (Ronald Lacey)
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Re-Animator (1985)
#69
Director Stuart Gordon's gory, cult-classic comedy
was about re-animated dead people - a combination mad zombie and
mad scientist film (and a retelling of the original Frankenstein
films). There were two sequels to follow by director Brian Yuzna: Bride
of Re-Animator (1990) and Beyond Re-Animator (2003).
It had a number of clever taglines, such as:
"...It will
scare you to pieces"
AND
"Herbert West has a good head on his shoulders...and
another one on his desk."
The twisted film was based on an H.P.
Lovecraft serial tale, Herbert
West - Reanimator.
It was shot in only a little over two weeks, and told the outrageous
tale of a demented medical student who was experimenting
on regenerating dead bodies.
In this grisly horror tale (and black comedy), the
film opened as university student-scientist Dr. Herbert West (Jeffrey
Combs) was doing "independent research" in Zurich, Switzerland,
behind a locked lab room where screams were heard. When the door
was broken into and unlocked by guards with guns drawn, there was
the terrifying scene of West leaning over professor Dr. Hans Gruber
(Al Berry) with a hypodermic syringe and insisting he had to get
the man's vital signs. Gruber was screaming in agony, then stood
up as his head turned purple, and his skin and eyes bulged outward
- with blood spewing everywhere. Gruber then collapsed dead to the
floor. Dr. West explained how a life-resurrecting dosage was lethal:
West: "Of course he's dead. The dosage was too large."
Female: "You killed him."
West: "No, I did not. I gave him life."
Third year student Dr. West transferred to the US
(at Miskatonic Medical School in Arkham, Massachusetts), and became
friends and roommates with co-partner/fellow student Dan Cain (Bruce
Abbott). Cain's secret girlfriend/fiancee was Megan Halsey (scream-queen
Barbara Crampton), the daughter of the Dean of the medical school
Dr. Alan Halsey (Robert Sampson). Cain was discreetly having sex
with Megan, since her puritanical father would object. One of the
eminent professors at the school was megalomaniac Dr. Carl Hill (David
Gale), specializing in brains (and brain death), one of Dr. West's
research competitors.
Deceased Cat Rufus Stored in the Refrigerator
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Re-Animated Cat - Now Dead a Second Time
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Reinjecting Rufus With
The Green Serum
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Rufus Briefly Back to Life a Second Time
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Dr. West conducted
his first attempt at reanimation in his apartment's basement, after
he alleged that Dan's black housecat Rufus had
accidentally died of suffocation (and then was stored in the refrigerator
in West's room), along with a glowing green substance. When Dan asked
about the green fluid, West suggested blackmail when he retorted
that it was none of his business:
"...just as it's
none of my business that you’re sleeping
with Dean Halsey's daughter."
The cat was revived in the basement, although it
became hyper-crazy and screeched, and both Dan and Herbert tried
to kill it with a baseball bat and croquet mallet, respectively.
When Dan heaved the cat against the wall and broke its back, West
began laughing hysterically. Then the incorrigible researcher admitted
what he had done - he had attempted to reanimate the recently-deceased
creature by injecting it with a luminous green flourescent goo, reagent
or serum - a substance designed to bring back the dead (he bragged: "I
conquered brain death").
To prove he could regenerate the dead animal again, he reinjected
it a second time - and the cat briefly howled and twitched.
When Dan told Dr. Halsey about Dr. West's regenerative
experiments, the strict administrator expelled Dr. West from the
medical school for conducting experiments that were unauthorized
and "beyond the scope of...legitimate studies." And Dan was required
to submit a written apology, and his student loan would be rescinded
(effectively ending his studies). Dan continued to aid
Dr. West to salvage both of their careers - he wheeled Dr. West (under
a sheet) into the medical school's autopsy room filled with corpses.
There were a number of scary scenes as West's bizarre
experiments went awry in the basement of the medical school:
- The
first awakening of an autopsy room patient from a slab and the ensuing
struggle with the superhuman zombie, who in the melee attacked
Dr. Alan Halsey - who had arrived to accuse them of trespassing.
The zombie was killed by Dr. West applying a surgical
buzz bone-saw to its back and emerging from its chest. The dead
Dr. Halsey, now the "freshest body" available, was now
reanimated as an undead zombie ("We can bring him back to life").
Soon after, Dr.
Hill became the "guardian" of
the zombified, strait-jacketed Dr. Halsey (held in a padded observation
cell/office). To investigate the cause of death by exploratory
surgery, Dr. Hill secretly performed a lobotomy on his boss, and
discovered that Halsey had been reanimated.
- The scene of the murder of Dr. Hill by an enraged
Dr. West, who feared that Hill would soon plagiarize his research
(Hill had already plagiarized Dr. Gruber's work) when Hill threatened:
"I want your discovery." Dr. Hill's head was crushed
when a shovel was swung at it, and then severed from his body at
the neck. Dr. Hill's decapitated head was then placed within a
silver tray, and West injected reagent into both parts - the head
and the body. In retaliation, Hill's reanimated, headless body
grabbed Dr. West from behind and knocked him unconscious. Using
mind control, weirdly-obsessed Dr. Hill sent a reanimated Dr. Halsey
to kidnap his own daughter Megan ("Alan, it’s time for
you to come out now..."). Megan was brought to the lab
by Hill's body (with an anatomical model of a head propped on its
neck stem, and Hill's head in a bag). She fainted, was
stripped and her left arm was strapped onto a metal lab table
next to Hill's head in the tray.
Severed Head Sexual Attack
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- The next scene was an outrageously humorous
and horrifying scene - the film's most famous over-the-top, perverted
sequence - "rape-by-severed-head." Decapitated
competitor Dr. Carl Hill's disembodied, reanimated 'head' was aroused
by the sight of a naked Megan while she was restrained and bare
on the laboratory gurney next to him. After
Dr. Hill's body (with the anatomical model head propped on the neck)
massaged both of her breasts, Megan kicked off his fake head. Hill's
body picked up his own head in the tray, then leaned over her with
his disembodied head (held by his own body) and managed to speak
in a gravely voice to her, while trying to kiss her breasts:
"I've
always admired your beauty, my dear. I think I've always loved
you. (She screamed and attempted to push him away.) And you will
love me. You will!"
As she protested and screamed: "Please
stop, let me go," he
attempted to provide oral sex ('head') to Megan, but was interrupted
by West:
"I must say, Dr. Hill - I'm very disappointed
in you! You steal the secret of life, and then here you are trysting
with a bubble-headed co-ed. You're not even a second-rate scientist."
Megan was rescued by Dan from the table, and the two
escaped, as all the other corpses (reanimated by Hill's body with
a new laser-drill lobotomizing procedure) in the room were commanded
by Hill to come to life. West was held down on a metal lab table
and was beginning to be laser-drilled in the head, but was interrupted
when Halsey grabbed Dr. Hill's disembodied head. He squeezed it
and gouged out its eyes, and tossed it into the hallway - then, was
torn to pieces and had his head ripped off by the other zombie-corpses.
To
destroy Hill's body, Dr. West injected it with a large overdose
of the reagent from two syringes, while he cried out for his
work to be saved. Hill's body fought back, attacked, and began to
mutate (and grabbed West with twisted parts of its intestines).
In the conclusion,
as Dan and Megan fled into the basement hallway, she was choked to
death by one of the re-animated corpses (a burn victim) in the elevator.
After attempting CPR, Dan wheeled Megan into a nearby upstairs emergency
room, where there were vain efforts to resuscitate and save her.
The room was cleared, but then Dan had an idea - he opened Dr. West's
medical bag (holding a syringe) and injected her in the neck with the reagent
as he told her: "I
Love you!" The screen faded to black, and then she screamed! |
Dr. West (Jeffrey Combs) With Dying Dr. Gruber
West: "I gave him life."
(l to r): Dr. Halsey, Dr. Hill, Dan Cain, Dr. West
First Re-Animated Corpse
Zombie Crunching on Dr. Halsey's Fingers
"Killing" Reanimated Zombie Corpse with Bone-Saw
Re-Animating Dr. Halsey
Halsey Detained in a Padded Cell in a Strait-Jacket
Dr. West Severing Dr. Hill's Head With a Shovel
Dr. Hill's Head
Hill Commanding Halsey to Kidnap Megan
Megan Abducted
Hill vs. West
Hill's Head Squeezed by Halsey
Intestines in Hill's Body Wrapped Around West
Death of Megan - Choked by Zombie
Reviving Megan in Emergency Room
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Rear
Window (1954)
Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954) was
an intriguing, brilliant, macabre visual study of obsessive human
curiosity and voyeurism. The opening voyeuristic
sequence was an example of efficient visual story-telling in which
the camera tracked out through the framed windows of a Greenwich
Village apartment, and introduced the setting and entire complex
- a lower courtyard and garden, surrounding Lower East Side apartment
structures; followed by a long panning camera movement to view
the lives of some of the apartment neighbors:
Some of the intensely frightening moments:
- the suspenseful scene of pretty Lisa Fremont's
(Grace Kelly) tense exploration and search of suspected wife-murderer
Lars Thorwald's (Raymond Burr) apartment
for incriminating evidence just before he returned,
while her fiancee L.B. "Jeff" Jefferies
(James Stewart) looked on helplessly from across the courtyard
- she was ecstatic when she found an alligator hand-bag, proof
of Thorwald's guilt - he must have
murdered his wife because, according to Lisa, no woman goes on
a trip leaving behind her favorite jewelry (or handbag); Jeff
nervously reacted as he watched powerlessly from
across the courtyard when she was trapped and confronted face-to-face
in the apartment by Thorwald (who called the police), when she
pointed to the wife's wedding ring on her finger
- Lars noticed her signals
and the wedding ring, and triangulated the view - spotting the
mortal threat; he looked up and discovered that Jeff, his tormentor,
was watching from the apartment window across the courtyard,
looking directly into his telephoto lens; it was the first time
he had noticed the voyeuristic spy in the apartment complex -
it was a chilling moment in the film as he saw the threatening
spectator and knew where he lived
- at the start of the exciting finale,
Jeff was left alone in his apartment, and he noticed that Lars'
apartment was dark; when his phone rang (after an earlier call
from Det. Lt. Thomas J. Doyle (Wendell Corey)), he didn't wait
to hear who the caller was, assuming it was Tom. He blurted out:
"Tom, I think Thorwald's left. I
don't...Hello..." The phone clicked off and disconnected,
and Jeff slowly realized his error - it was not Tom, his detective
friend
- when Jeff heard heavy footsteps climbing the
stairs outside his apartment, Jeff wheeled himself around to
grab his flash equipment and a long box of flashbulbs to protect
himself; then, he positioned himself in front of his rear window
so that he was darkly silhouetted by it; eventually, the dark
figure of Thorwald slowly opened the door and entered; Jeff
fought him off by flashing or firing his profession's main
instrument - his camera and its exploding flash mechanism -
once, twice, three times, and then a fourth time; each whitish-blue
flashbulb flash was followed by a red after-glow filling the
entire frame, from Thorwald's dazed perspective
- during a physical struggle,
Thorwald fought with Jeff, tried to strangle him, and then dumped
him out of the wheelchair and through the open window; Jeff was
hanging and dangling from the window ledge three floors above
the courtyard as Thorwald tried to push him to his death; detectives
grabbed Lars from behind at the last minute, but Jeff let go
and fell backward to the ground below; his fall to the courtyard
was partially broken by detectives; reunited, Jeff's head was
cradled in Lisa's arms as she heard him congratulate her: "I'm
proud of you"
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Jeff Using Flash-Bulbs to Ward Off Attacking Thorwald
in His Apartment
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Thorwald Blinded by Flashbulbs
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Physical Struggle
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Jeff Falling From Window
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Greenwich Village Apartment Courtyard
Lisa in Thorwald's Apartment - Pointing Out Wedding
Ring Behind Her Back
L.B. "Jeff" Jefferies - The Shocking Phone
Call
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Rebecca
(1940)
Hitchcock's Rebecca (1940) was a classic
gothic thriller and a compelling mystery (and haunting ghost
story) about a tortured romance. A naive, plain
and innocent (unnamed) young woman (Joan Fontaine) experienced
a quick courtship, and then a tragic marriage and relationship
with a brooding and overburdened widower
- aristocratic, moody patriarch Mr. de Winter (Laurence Olivier),
who lived in an estate called Manderley.
The pathetic, bewildered
and shy bride experienced fear, pain and guilt when psychologically
dominated by the 'presence' (and memories) of the deceased first
wife (named Rebecca but never seen on screen). She was
tormented by Rebecca's blindly adoring, sinister and loyal housekeeper
Mrs. Danvers (Judith Anderson), who fondly recollected the
dead woman.
Mrs. Danvers' Torment of the 'Second' Mrs. De
Winter
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Mrs. Danvers: "You can't fight her. No
one ever got the better of her. Never. Never."
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Mrs. Danvers: "You tried to take her place"
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In the film's scariest scene, demonic Mrs. Danvers
plotted to eliminate the second Mrs. de Winter
by urging her to jump to her death from an open window - urging
that she could never be the true replacement and mistress of the
estate.
Why don't you go? Why don't you leave Manderley?
He doesn't need you. He's got his memories. He doesn't love you
- he wants to be alone again with her. You've nothing
to stay for. You've nothing to live for really, have you? Look
down there. It's easy, isn't it? Why don't you? Why don't you?
Go on. Go on. Don't be afraid!
In a trance-like state and ready to end her life,
distractions from explosive flares and shouts of the discovery
of a sunken boat ("Shipwreck! Ship on the rocks") following
a storm at sea prevented her from losing her sanity and jumping.
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Mrs. Danvers Urging Suicide: "Why don't you? Go
on. Go on. Don't be afraid!"
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Red Eye (2005)
#25
The title of the film had a double meaning - obviously,
the "red eye" late-night flight, and a shipment of "red
eye" snappers used to hide terrorist weapons. The creepy
set-up of this Wes Craven airplane thriller was a chance encounter
on a red-eye flight from Dallas to Miami - with two passengers
sitting together:
- Lisa Reisert (Rachel
McAdams), a swank Miami, Lux Atlantic
hotel manager, a recent rape victim (with a scar on her chest),
and a fear-of-flying traveler
- Jackson Rippner (Cillian Murphy) (a name-play
on "Jack the Ripper") - a handsome stranger, and creepy,
ruthless terrorist- kidnapper
He stunned her with details about her family and
her personal life, and hinted that he had plans for her: "As
fate would have it, my business is all about you." He demanded
that she do as he said. Otherwise, he
threatened to have a hitman kill her father, divorced retiree Joseph
"Joe" Reisert (Brian Cox) in Miami.
She was to assist in setting up Deputy Secretary
of Homeland Security Charles Keefe (Jack Scalia) and his family
in the hotel where
she worked. They were to be assassinated by a portable rocket missile
launched from a boat in the harbor. Rippner compelled her to orchestrate
a room-switch for Keefe by calling on the plane's JetPhone - so
that the Deputy would be changed to an ocean-side room facing the
harbor. Otherwise, Jackson's hitman partner in a silver BMW would
violently kill her father in his Miami home.
Terror in an Airplane Bathroom
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- He angrily pushed her into the airplane's bathroom
wall after he saw that she had written a warning with soap on
the mirror ("18A HAS BOMB"). He threatened her: "...these
little communiques! You know, if they'd have fallen into the
hands of a by-the-book stewardess, she'd have gone straight to
the cockpit and we'd have landed somewhere else! If that happens,
Lis, our guy in the BMW's gonna know about it, so do Dad a favor
and stop gambling with his life!"
- After he noticed a scar above her right breast,
she refused to explain the cause - and he was further angered.
He grabbed her tighter: "You know what I think? I
think you're not such an honest person. Because I've followed
you for eight weeks now and I never once saw you order anything
but a f--king Sea Breeze!"
- Later
to retaliate after the plane had landed and the fasten seatbelt
light went out, she lunged at Jackson and drove a pen
right into his throat, grabbed his cell phone and ran to the
plane exit. She had just finished telling him that the rape incident
from two years earlier "would
never happen again"
- The murder plot was thwarted - she successfully
alerted the hotel to evacuate all of the guests, and the Deputy
and others were saved just before a Javelin missile targeted
the room.
The film climactically ended with their
struggle in her father's Miami house before Jackson was killed. She
shot and wounded him in the stomach with the dead hitman's gun
- and her father shot Jackson again (with a bullet to the chest)
to save his daughter - just as the police arrived. |
Lisa With Jackson on Airplane Red-Eye Flight
Stabbing Him With Pen
Tense Moments
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Repulsion (1965, UK)
Roman Polanski's horror film (his first English-language
film) was an intense study of madness - and resultant murder. The
film's tagline described its premise:
"The nightmare world
of a virgin's dreams becomes the screen's shocking reality!!"
The opening image during the title credits was a
closeup of an eyeball, followed by the slow pull-back from the
female's dead-eyed stare (paralleled at film's end with a zoom-in).
The main character was:
- Carol Ledoux (Catherine Deneuve), a sexually-repressed,
virginal, and fragile young Belgian beautician
She became progressively
more insane after she was left alone in her sister Helen's (Yvonne
Furneaux) leased apartment - who had left for a brief two-week
holiday to Italy during an affair with her married boyfriend Michael
(Ian Hendry). She was very disturbed the night before they left,
when she heard her sister's moans of orgasmic pleasure with Michael
in a nearby bedroom. Soon after, Carol began to have psycho-sexual
hallucinations of nocturnal rape, and she lashed out with two murders.
Crazed Fantasies
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Imagined Rape
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Real Rape
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Grasping Phantom Hands in Hallway
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There were many scary moments:
- the incessant sounds
of a ticking alarm clock and dripping kitchen faucet
- shots of a plate with rotting food (a dead skinned
rabbit) with buzzing flies, and three sprouting potatoes on the
kitchen counter - images of decay, death, and deterioration
- startling hallucinatory images
of cracks appearing in the wall and grasping phantom hands reaching
out at her in the hallway
- Carol brutally murdered would-be male suitor Colin
(John Fraser) by beating him over the head with a candlestick
(when his back was turned) and afterwards immersing his body
in a bathtub already full of water
Colin Appearing Through Carol's Door Peekhole
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Colin Before Shutting Carol's Door (and Removing
Possible Witness)
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Carol's Brutal Bludgeoning of Colin from his
POV
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Colin's Body in Bathtub
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- there were many disturbing scenes
of Carol's imagining and hallucinating that she was being raped;
there was also one true instance of a
sexual assault - the apartment's middle-aged, creepy, sweaty,
and lusty Landlord (Patrick Wymark) barged in to collect Helen's
rent; he complained about the filthy and dark condition of the
place and the "pigsty" look
and smell of the apartment (with the decaying rabbit carcass with buzzing
flies and the damaged, barricaded front door)
- after the Landlord called her a "poor little
girl all by herself" and a "frightened animal," he
proposed a sexual bargain to lessen her loneliness during her
sister's absence: ("I could be a very good friend to
you, you know. You look after me and you can forget about the
rent. Come on. Come on. Just a little kiss between friends, huh,
come on"); when the lecherous Landlord forced himself upon
her on the sofa and attempted to sexually assault Carol, she
fought him off; when he persisted and approached her for a kiss,
she slashed out in a retaliatory way with Michael's straight-edged
razor; she first cut him across the back of his neck, then hacked
away at him when he fell back onto the sofa, spraying blood onto
him and herself; she overturned the sofa to hide his bloody corpse
Seeking the Rent Payment, Landlord Disgusted
by Condition of Apartment
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Landlord Noticing Carol in Her Flimsy Nightgown
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Assaulting Her on the Sofa
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Approaching Carol For a Kiss
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Slashing Him Across the Back of His Neck
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Hacking at Him on the Sofa
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Carol's Slashing Murder of Lecherous Landlord
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Carol's hallucinatory delusions intensified, with
further wall cracks; she was viewed obsessively
ironing Helen’s married boyfriend’s dirty undershirt
with the iron unplugged (shown with a striking tilt-down camera
angle); she applied lipstick before reclining on her bed and having
another rape fantasy with a man who appeared next to her; she also
pretended to scribble words on a window pane with a pair of tweezers.
Upon the return of Helen and Michael after their
two-week trip, Helen was the first to be stunned by signs of upheaval,
carnage and disregard, plus a nasty smell; after she discovered
the bloody body of Colin submerged in the bathtub, Helen began
to hyperventilate in the hallway; Michael notified a neighbor to
call the police; then Helen realized that the catatonic Carol was
lifelessly lying under her own bed with her arm sticking out, and
she reacted in shock; Michael entered the room and gave Carol a
strange glance before picking her up in his arms, to carry her
away down the stairs amidst inquisitive neighbors.
In the ambiguous ending -- highlighted by a slow
panning camera motion, there was a thematic slow zoom (a reversal
of the opening zoom out) into the partially-obscured, sinister,
old family photograph with a view of the same young, mad-looking
Carol staring angrily away. The zoom ended with an extreme close-up
of her eye. In an earlier image of the full photograph, she appeared
to be glaring at her father (abusive?) seated to her left.
The Enigmatic Yet Revealing Family Photograph
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Family Photograph
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Zooming In
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Close-Up of Aloof Carol
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Opening Credits: Closeup of Eyeball Criss-crossed by Lettering
Orgasmic Love-Making Overheard by Carol Twice
Plate of Rotting Uncooked Rabbit
Crack in Wall
Suspicious Footsteps Heard Outside Her Bedroom
Fantasy - Brutish Man Entering Her Bedroom to Rape Her (Was it a Dream of Michael
Raping Her?)
Carol's Crazed Look After the Landlord's Brutal Murder
Carol Maniacally Pressing Michael's Shirt With an Unplugged Iron
Reclining on Bed Before Another Rape Fantasy
Scribbling on A Glass Window Pane
Michael Carrying Carol Away and Down the Stairs After
Returning Home From Vacation
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Requiem for a Dream (2000)
Director Darren Aronofsky's harrowing, downbeat thriller-drama
(initially rated NC-17) was about addictive and obsessive self-destruction
- intoxicants that brought about addiction ranged from food (specifically
chocolate) to television, prescribed diet pills, and heroin. It told
about members of the Goldfarb family, who suffered from self-delusion
and cravings that ultimately brought about their entrapment and enslavement.
- obsessive Brighton Beach
dieter Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn), a lonely and overweight
Jewish widow, went on a diet to lose 50 pounds, in order to wear
her favorite old red dress and appear as a contestant on her
favorite self-help info-mercial TV program - "The
Tappy Tibbons Show." She became hooked on uppers and downers
(diet pills) and began to lose her grip on reality. As she
exhibited symptoms of hallucinatory dementia and psychosis, the maniacal
TV personality Tappy Tibbons (Christopher McDonald) appeared in her
apartment, exclaiming enthusiastically: "We've got a winner." Her
entire apartment had become the TV studio set with a live TV audience.
The host and his female companion danced and paraded around her
reclining chair, while everyone began chanting "Feed me Sara,
Feed me Sara." As the scene climaxed, her carnivorous refrigerator
had broken free from the wall, opened its gigantic and ravenous 'maw'
and attacked her. Afterwards, she visited the show's casting agency
office in Manhattan where she was pronounced insane, taken away in
an ambulance, and admitted to a psychiatric ward where she
ultimately received electro-shock therapy.
Sara Goldfarb's Disintegration
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- at the same time, Harry Goldfarb (Jared Leto)
was dating upper-class girlfriend Marion Silver (Jennifer Connelly),
and both dreamt of becoming owners of their own
fashion-clothing boutique; however, both spiraled downward into
addiction and self-debasement; Harry began dealing drugs and
became a heroin-addicted druggie, while Marion began to prostitute
herself to support her own habit - first sleeping with her shrink-psychologist
Arnold (Sean Gullette); she bluntly asked for money in exchange for sex: "Actually,
I have a favor to ask....I need to borrow some money"; [Note:
in her mind, when sleazebag Arnold reached out at the table and stroked
her hand, she imagined stabbing him with her fork and crying out: "You
smug f--k!"] in his apartment before sex, she requested: "Could
you turn the light off?"; afterwards, she vomited outside
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NY, drug-addicted Marion - desperate for heroin - also prostituted
herself to black pimp Big Tim (Keith David) who told her: "What
I like best about party chicks is they give good head"; he opened
his pants before she performed oral sex: "I know it's pretty, baby,
but I didn't take it out for air"; afterwards in her apartment, she
submerged her head underwater in a bathtub and screamed
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Marion Prostituted Herself to Big Tim (Keith
David) for a Drug Score
Afterwards, Marion Screamed Underwater in a Bathtub
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- in one of the film's most sickening, horrifying
scenes, Harry injected another dose of heroin into a hole forming
in his infected left arm. In a subsequent
hospital scene, Harry had his gangrene-infected arm amputated (due to repeated
intravenous injections) - with blood spurting onto his face from
the saw. Harry woke up to the reality
of his situation in a hospital after his left arm was amputated: (Nurse: "It's
alright. Don't worry, you're in a hospital"). However, he had
hoped, in a fantasy dream, that Marion was waiting for him at the end
of a long pier, but she disappeared - and he stepped back and fell
off a tall building in the fantasy.
Harry's Deadly Heroin Addiction and Infected Arm Amputation
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- meanwhile, in the film's most controversial and sequence,
Marion attended a stag party hosted by black pimp Big Tim (Keith David).
She participated in a decadent lesbian orgy to raise money to support
her addiction. It was a nasty, extremely-graphic lesbian orgy scene with
a shared anal dildo between Marion and her female partner. The two wanted
to increase their earnings in front of the frenzied crowd of party animals,
when Marion's partner asked: "So what are we gonna do now?" In
a degrading so-called "ass-to-ass" scene, Marion shared a two-headed
greased-up dildo with another female as a group of spectators watched,
tossed bills at them, and shouted as the pace quickened: "Ass-to-ass!" and "Cum!
Cum! Cum!"
Stag Party Orgy Attended by Marion to Raise
Money to Support Her Addiction
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- as the film concluded, Harry (in the hospital), Marion (in
her apartment), Harry's friend Tyrone (Marlon Wayans) (in jail) and Sara
(in a mental institution) were all curled up in fetal positions.
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Marion (Jennifer Connelly)
Harry (Jared Leto)
Candy- and TV-Addicted Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn)
TV Show in Sara's Apartment - With a Ravenous Refrigerator
Prostituting Herself with Psychiatrist Arnold
Four Fetal Positions
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Reservoir Dogs (1992)
Director Quentin Tarantino's violent crime drama,
his debut film, was a dark, noirish cult hit (and independent film)
that broke many of the rules of conventional crime films. The male-oriented,
testosterone-fueled tale was about a group of cigarette-smoking,
shades-wearing, code-color-named Los Angeles criminals (including
director Tarantino as ill-fated Mr. Brown), and others involved
in a jewelry heist (off-screen), such as:
- Mr. White/Lawrence Dimmick (Harvey Keitel), a
career criminal
- Mr. Blonde/Vic Vega
(Michael Madsen), crazed
- Mr. Blue (Edward Bunker)
- Mr. Orange/Det. Freddie Newandyke (Tim Roth),
a newcomer
- Mr. Pink (Steve Buscemi)
The gang of tough guys began to mistrust each other
and suspected a rat amongst them when the robbery plan was foiled
and everything went awry.
- in the infamous, violent, shocking and menacing
ear-slicing torture scene following the jewelry robbery, suspicious,
psychotic gang member Mr. Blonde - while dancing to the music
of Stuck in the Middle
With You by
Stealer's Wheel - excised (off-screen) the right ear of chair-bound,
duct-taped cop-hostage Marvin Nash (Kirk Baltz) with a straight-edged
razor. He then threatened to douse him with gasoline. Before
he could ignite him, Mr. Orange shot and killed Mr. Blonde
- Eddie's (Chris Penn) father Joe Cabot
(Lawrence Tierney) arrived and confronted Mr.
White over the loyalty of Mr. Orange; after Joe accused Orange
of being a cop ("That lump of s--t's
workin' with the LAPD") Mr. White
tried to defend Orange to Joe: ("Joe, trust me on this.
You've made a mistake"), but Joe was adamant ("The
cocksucker tipped off the cops and got Mr. Brown and Mr. Blue
killed...Dead as Dillinger"); the scene evolved into a violent
Mexican Standoff as all three (Joe, White, and Eddie) drew their
guns and Eddie shouted out:
"You stop pointin' that f--kin’ gun at my Dad!";
all three seemed to fire at one time - although White actually
got off two shots and both Cabots were killed, but White was also
injured
- in the film's violent conclusion -- the uninjured
Mr. Pink fled with the stashed diamonds; as Mr. White cradled
dying Mr. Orange in his arms, he heard Orange's simple confession
that he indeed was a cop: ("I'm a cop...I'm so sorry");
as the police stormed the warehouse after arresting Mr. Pink
outdoors (he was faintly heard surrendering off-screen), Mr.
White was ordered to put his gun down: ("Freeze!...Drop
the gun, man!...We're gonna blow you away!") but disobeyed
and possibly shot Mr. Orange in the head (off-screen) - and then
collapsed during more gunfire
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The Death of Mr. Orange From An Abdomen Gunshot
Wound
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The Ear-Slicing Torture Scene
Mr. Blonde's Threat to Douse Marvin with Gasoline
Mr. Blonde Shot and Killed by Mr. Orange
Guns Drawn: Mexican Stand-Off
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The Ring (2002)
#20
Director Gore Verbinski's remake horror film followed
the Japanese film of the same name (Ringu (1998)).
The film's enigmatic tagline
explained what the film's title was all about:
"Before you die,
you see the ring."
It told
about Seattle
investigative reporter Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) who was looking
into the deaths of individuals who viewed a bizarre and cursed videotape.
As per the recent deaths, anyone who watched the videotape died in
seven days. Time ticked away for Rachel herself after she viewed
the tape. She learned about a horse ranch on a remote island owned
by horsebreeder Anna Morgan (Shannon Cochran) and her husband Richard
(Brian Cox), and their 'adopted' daughter Samara (Daveigh Chase).
As she delved into the mystery, Rachel visited the
Morgan ranch, where she found out that the horses went mad and drowned
themselves, and that Anna had committed suicide. The unloved and
feared Samara had apparently been a problem child.
A flashback
scene revealed Samara's murder. Coming up from behind
Samara, her mother Anna Morgan partially suffocated
her sleeping-gowned daughter with a black plastic bag. Then,
she pushed her daughter down into the deep circular water well. Samara
watched from below - her final sight, as the well was sealed with
a stone cover, was a corona-like ring above her. She survived for
seven days before dying. Later,
Shelter Mountain Inn, specifically Cabin 12 (the site responsible
for the first four deaths in the film) was built over the site of
the well.
Samara's Murder in the Well - Seen as a Ring From
Below
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The cursed videotape was created or caused
by the spirit of Samara, who had an unusual ability, known as nensha (projected
thermography). With her mind, she was able to thermographically imprint
her thought images onto specific
surfaces (ie, the VHS tape). The tape's surrealistic
series of random objects and haunting images were actually aspects
of Samara's short life. The curse along with the tape was also specifically
designed by Samara - either copy the tape and pass it on, or suffer
your own death in seven days (the length of time that Samara survived
down in the well). In all, seven individuals viewed the tape, and those
that died watched the tape, but did not copy the tape and pass it along.
The tape's images included (in this order):
- flowing, bloody water rushing into the ocean
- an empty, solitary chair (with reflected shadow)
in the center of a room
- a close-up of comb strokes through hair
- an enigmatic woman (Samara's mother Anna) brushing
her hair, seen within a framed oval-shaped mirror (1st time)
- a view of a 2nd mirror on the wall in the same
room - this time a shadowy view of the undead, decomposed young
girl Samara
- another view of the enigmatic woman looking over
and smiling at the 2nd mirror (off-screen) (2nd time)
- a brief view of a nail, with blood at its tip
- a view looking up at a person (Richard Morgan) standing
behind a closed window (1st time)
- a windy coastal scene (notice
the fly walking in a circle on the image)
- a huge object (bubbles?) coming out of a person's
open mouth as they drown (Samara drowning?)
- a view of thrashing black plastic (the garbage bag
used to suffocate Samara) (1st time)
- the closing of a well cover viewed from inside the
well (1st time)
- a burning Japanese maple tree
(1st time)
- an index finger being pierced by a nail, and detaching
the fingernail
- a sea of squirming maggots
- a sea of
floundering humans
- a glass of water on a bare table in front of an
empty, wooden chair
- a gigantic centipede crawling on the floor, appearing
from under the table
- a lame farm animal (goat or three-legged lamb?)
- a close-up of a horse's large eyeball (in shock?!)
- the closing of a well cover viewed from inside the
well (2nd time)
- a box full of seven amputated or detached twitching
fingers
- a burning tree (2nd time)
- the thrashing black plastic (2nd time)
- the enigmatic woman turning around - her reflection
seen in the framed oval-shaped mirror behind her (3rd time)
- a view looking up at a closed window
(without anyone looking out this time) (2nd time)
- a twirling chair, spinning upside-down and in mid-air
- a ladder (1st time)
- a view of waves washing atop a horse corpse(s) in
the ocean
- a zoomed view of a woman (Anna) falling forward
to her suicidal death off the coast-side cliff
- the ladder, now toppling or falling forward to the
ground (2nd time)
- the closing of a well cover viewed from inside the
well - now sealed (last time)
- more of the ladder toppling down (3rd time)
- a view of the well from distant eye-level
The PG-13 film's greatest and scariest scene was the
pay-off scene at the conclusion:
- there was a disturbing
and shocking scene at the end of the film - Rachel's ex-boyfriend
Noah Clay (Martin Henderson) watched the video on a TV screen (the
TV turned on by itself) in his studio. The tape was of the
undead, decomposed young girl Samara (with long black hair covering
her face) crawling
out of the well in the woods and walking toward the screen.
- then, there was the astounding image of the demonic
girl crawling directly out of the TV screen toward him,
and leaving wet hand and footprints on the floor.
- the first look of her face
was a lethal stare attack.
- Rachel frantically called for Noah
on the phone and then raced in her car to get to him. When she
arrived, she found Noah dead, fulfilling the curse.
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The Death of Noah Clay (Martin Henderson) After Watching
Videotape
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Rosemary's
Baby (1968)
#23
Roman Polanski's devil-worshipper film was his first
American feature film and his second, scary horror film - following
his first disturbing film in English Repulsion (1965, UK) -
see above. Polanski cleverly and deliberately presented
this film with enough ambiguity so that the viewer was never quite
certain whether the female protagonist's experiences were truly supernatural
or just fabricated, imaginative hallucinations.
The creepy, eerie gothic film was about a young newlywed
couple:
- Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow), a pregnant
mother-to-be
- Guy (John Cassavetes), Rosemary's self-centered,
ambitious, yet struggling NYC actor husband
The couple moved into a large, rambling old apartment
building in Central Park West (the Dakota), and began a loving,
post-honeymoon period. They became friendly with the eccentric and
elderly next-door neighbors - both overly-solicitous and intrusive:
- Minnie and Roman Castevet (Ruth Gordon
and Sidney Blackmer)
Soon, the ambitious husband's acting career
turned promising. Many of the Woodhouse's fears
and problems began with bizarre hallucinations and dreams, especially
when
"dizzy," woozy and disoriented Rosemary (after eating some
of Minnie's chocolate mousse, laced with sleeping powder) was put
to bed by Guy.
- in an hallucinatory scene that impersonated a Black
Mass, she imagined being on a mattress drifting on the ocean, and
then as a passenger on a presidential yacht. Guy completely undressed
her until she was shivering and naked, and then abruptly was seen
wearing a bathing suit.
- hallucinatory images included the Birth of Man
paintings on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, a typhoon at sea, and
a naked descent into the hold of the ship, where a fire burned
and Rosemary was laid on a mattress. She was surrounded by many chanting,
naked figures, including Guy, Roman, and Minnie. The latter assured everyone: "As long
as she ate the mousse, she can't see nor hear. She's like dead now." A
bloody-red liquid was painted on Rosemary's bare chest. A person
resembling Mrs. John F. Kennedy (Patricia Ann Conway) who wore a
white diaphanous gown descended a staircase and suggested that her
legs be tied down in case of convulsions. Attendants spread her
legs apart and bound them.
Rosemary: "This is no dream, this is really
happening."
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- Rosemary recalled being raped by Satan in her
dream-like sleep. She remembered that Guy had begun making love
to her, but then his appearance changed into a grotesque Beast-like
figure resembling the Devil, with yellowish eyes and clawed, scaly
hands. He stroked the length of her body with his hairy
claw. While being 'raped' during this horrific copulation scene,
she realized: "This is no dream, this
is really happening!"
- the next morning - Rosemary questioned
mysterious scratches she found on the side of her body; she was
appalled that Guy admitted making love to her while she was passed
out - supposedly from mixing alcohol - "It was kind of fun
in a necrophile sort of way." She remembered something quite
different from Guy's recollection - a demonic, inhuman rape
- the paranoid, haunted, and hysterical woman believed
herself impregnated so that her baby could be used in evil cult rituals.
She suspected that she and her unborn baby were victims of a vile
conspiracy being conducted by modern-day witches. [Later, she realized
that she was correct - Guy had made a deal with the Castevets,
members of the coven, to allow Rosemary to be impregnated by Satan
himself, in exchange for Guy receiving acting jobs.]
- Rosemary discovered that her friendly Dr. Saperstein
(Ralph Bellamy) was actually a Satanist.
- in the final scene of the creepy film, Rosemary
snuck into the Castevet's apartment through a closet
passageway - with a kitchen knife upraised in her hand. There,
she found a coven of witches (including Guy), surrounding a black-draped
baby cradle to pay their respects. She approached the black bassinet expecting
to see her own human child. In a frightened, angry tone, she asked
about her baby cradled there with an inverted cross hanging above
- fully expecting the child to have "Guy's eyes." She slowly
walked over to the cradle, saw her child in the bassinet and her
eyes widened in terror: "What have you done to it? What have you
done to its eyes?" When told by Roman: "He has his father's
eyes," she screamed: "What are you talking about?! Guy's eyes are
normal! What have you done to him? You maniacs!"
- Horrified that she had birthed offspring of Satan,
she spit in Guy's face. Although Rosemary rejected the
devil-worshipping coven of witches, she accepted the reality of
the situation and showed an instinctive mothering role and maternal
instinct toward the baby in the final scene - she gently rocked
the child to sleep.
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Eating the Tainted Chocolate Mousse
The Morning After: Scratches on Rosemary's Back
"What have you done to its eyes?"
"You maniacs!"
Maternal-Nurturing Response to Satanic child
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