Personal Lists featuring...

The Beyond 1981

1

not to popular Horror and thriller i need to watch

281

This list has been compiled by aggregating the movies in three different lists: The Deuce Top 20 (2007-08), The Deuce Top 20 (2008-09) and Quentin Tarantino's Top 20 Grindhouse Classics. The movies in this list all belong to classic international exploitatation/cult cinema movies.

Sources:
http://www.grindhousedatabase.com/index.php/The_Deuce_Top_20_(2007-08)
http://www.grindhousedatabase.com/index.php/The_Deuce_Top_20_(2008-09)
http://www.grindhousedatabase.com/index.php/Quentin_Tarantino%27s_Top_20_Grindhouse_Classics

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The decade to rule them all.

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Source: https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2018/10/the-50-best-ghost-movies-of-all-time.html

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Source: https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2018/10/the-50-best-ghost-movies-of-all-time.html

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For about as long as there have been movies, there have been special effects. That’s no exaggeration: The medium was only a few years old when people began finding ways to toy with the reality of what the motion-picture camera was capturing, creating tricks from quirks in photographic science. A century later, the technology has drastically evolved, but the function remains the same: to make the audience believe the unbelievable. Not that it’s all about fooling us. Yes, some of the best effects blur the line between reality and fantasy. Others simply show us something so cool—so wild or imaginative or beautiful—that we accept the new reality they create, even when we know it’s all make believe. So what makes a special effect special? Maybe it comes down to the effect.

Summer, of course, is the unofficial special effects season, and to commemorate the winding down of Hollywood’s annual parade of CGI-heavy blockbusters, The A.V. Club has picked the highlights from a whole history of cinematic illusion, from the Méliès “trick films” of the early 20th century to the superhero phenomena of today. Note that this is not a list of the most advanced effects work, because as anyone who’s sat through an X-Men movie can attest, even the most state-of-the-art spectacles can look shockingly lousy. Furthermore, not all once-remarkable effects achievements have retained their luster, which is why some of the biggest box office hits of all time are absent from our rundown. (Sorry Titanic stans.) Consider this, instead, a chronological cataloguing of the movies that still dazzle and amaze and disgust us; whether achieved through purely physical/organic means, through the digital magic available at a mouse click, or through something as simple as a cut, the effects within them hold a monopoly on our imaginations.

https://film.avclub.com/the-50-greatest-special-effects-movies-of-all-time-1827830379

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100 horror movies that are "Shock Waves approved", meaning they're liked by all hosts of Blumhouse's Shock Waves podcast. It's a good round-up of notable horror films put together by some hardcore horror fans.

Original podcast episode: http://podcast.blumhouse.com/episode-100

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This is a complete list of all 117 movies banned in Germany for "dissemination or depictions of violence".

Not on Trakt:
- Submissive Geishas (bondage VHS tape published in NL in the late 90s)

Last Update: 04/2024

Not confiscated anymore:
- 03/2004: Cobra (1977) *
- 01/2024: Halloween II (1981)
- 12/2023: Demon Wind (1990) *
- 08/2023: Demons (1985) *
- 03/2023: Bloody Moon (1981)
- 02/2023: Beyond the Darkness (1979) *
- 02/2023: A Bay of Blood (1971) *
- 01/2023: Night of the Zombies (1980) *
- 01/2023: Zombie Flesh Eaters (1979) *
- 01/2023: Eaten Alive! (1980) *
- 09/2022: Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky (1991) *
- 07/2022: Zombi Holocaust (1980)
- 06/2022: Tenebre (1982) *
- 04/2022: Cut-Throats Nine (1972) *
- 03/2022: I Spit on Your Grave (2010)
- 02/2022: Antropophagus (1980)
- 12/2021: Hostel: Part II (2007)
- 11/2021: Drive-in Massacre (1976) *
- 11/2021: Nightmare City (1980) *
- 09/2021: A Cat in the Bain (1990) *
- 07/2021: The Last House on the Beach (1978) *
- 07/2021: Day of the Woman (1978) *
- 03/2021: Mother's Day (1981) *
- 10/2020: Slaughterhouse (1987)
- 05/2020: Dead Next Door (1989)
- 02/2020: Night of the Living Dead (1991)
- 02/2020: Maniac (2012)
- 08/2019: Maniac (1980)
- 01/2019: Dawn of The Dead (1978)
- 02/2018: Contraband (1980)
- 10/2017: The Last House on the Left (1972)
- 06/2017: Phantasm (1979)
- 01/2017: Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984)
- 08/2016: The Evil Dead (1981)
- 07/2016: Mark of the Devil (1970)
- 06/2016: Friday the 13th Part III (1982) *
- 05/2016: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)
- 01/2014: The Horde (2009)
- 10/2013: Battle Royale (2000)
- 01/2013: Saw 3D: The Final Chapter (2010)
- 09/2011: The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)

* removed from index. Therefore re-releases are possible but previous releases remain confiscated because of legal technicalities.

Source: http://www.schnittberichte.com/svds.php?Page=Beschlagnahmen&Kat=Filme

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"To assist local authorities in identifying obscene films, the Director of Public Prosecutions released a list of 72 films the office believed to violate the Obscene Publications Act 1959."

Source:
http://bloody-disgusting.com/editorials/3476400/breaking-72-video-nasties/

More info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_nasty

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Library for Kodi import

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Prior to the establishment of UK state censorship implemented in the Video Recordings Act of 1984, censorship was in the realms of the courts and the Obscene Publications Act. This required the courts to apply the test of whether videos were likely to "deprave and corrupt" the viewer. The Director Of Public Prosecutions (DPP) maintained a list of those videos that were felt likely to be found obscene by the courts and hence worthwhile prosecuting.
Of course, the real drivers behind the moral panic were the UK press led by the ever obnoxious Daily Mail. Not to mention a few politicians who felt they could make a name for themselves.

Several versions of the video nasty list were published with videos added and removed over the period 1983-1985. 72 videos were listed at least for a while. Another couple of films can stake a claim via a shared name with listed films. 39 made it through to the end, and these became known as the DPP39s. These 39 titles became the most sought after collectibles.

12

The 100 Scariest Movie Moments is an American television documentary miniseries that aired in late October 2004 on Bravo. Aired in five 60-minute segments, the miniseries counts down what producer Anthony Timpone, writer Patrick Moses, and director Kevin Kaufman have determined as the 100 most frightening and disturbing moments in the history of movies.

23

Lucio Fulci was an Italian film director, screenwriter, producer and actor. Although he worked in a wide array of genres through a career spanning nearly five decades, including comedy, Spaghetti Western, adventure, science fiction and erotica, he garnered an international cult following for his giallo and horror films. His most notable films include the "Gates of Hell" trilogy − City of the Living Dead (1980), The Beyond (1981) and The House by the Cemetery (1981) − as well as Massacre Time (1966), One on Top of the Other (1969), A Lizard in a Woman's Skin (1971), Don't Torture a Duckling (1972), White Fang (1973), Four of the Apocalypse (1975), Sette note in nero (1977), Zombi 2 (1979), Contraband (1980), The Black Cat (1981), The New York Ripper (1982), Murder Rock (1984) and A Cat in the Brain (1990). Because of the high level of visceral graphic violence present in many of his films, especially Zombi 2 and The Beyond, Fulci is frequently referred to as "The Godfather of Gore", a title also given to Herschell Gordon Lewis.

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Italian cinema has proved very popular with international audiences, and yet a surprising unfamiliarity remains regarding the rich traditions from which its most fascinating moments arose. Directory of World Cinema: Italy aims to offer a wide film and cultural study in which to situate some of Italian cinema’s key aspects, from political radicalism to opera, and from the arthouse to popular genres. Essays by leading academics about prominent genres, directors and themes provide insight into the cinema of Italy and are bolstered by reviews of significant titles. From silent spectacle to the giallo, the spaghetti western to the neorealist masterworks of Rossellini, this book offers a comprehensive historical sweep of Italian cinema that will appeal to film scholars and cinephiles alike

List import based on the book. Thematic chapters:

  • Silent Cinema
  • Neorealism
  • Melodrama
  • Comedy
  • Giallo
  • Gothic Horror
  • Peplum
  • Spaghetti Western
  • Political Cinema
  • Contemporary Cinema

More information on this is also aviable on http://worldcinemadirectory.co.uk/!

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Collection of arrow video titles

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