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Post by onethreetwo on Sept 6, 2021 18:23:46 GMT
That includes dark humor or black comedy. What are some? I'll start.
The Dark and the Wicked (2020)
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Post by jamesbamesy on Sept 6, 2021 18:26:38 GMT
Many horror movies have their light moments so this is pretty tough to choose. I guess I'll go with Hereditary, the definition of dread.
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Sept 6, 2021 18:34:56 GMT
I don’t remember many laughs in the Evil Dead remake.
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Post by janntosh on Sept 6, 2021 18:38:38 GMT
The original Candyman
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Post by Catman 猫的主人 on Sept 6, 2021 19:13:50 GMT
Dark Water (2002)
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Post by kolchak92 on Sept 6, 2021 23:05:08 GMT
An American Werewolf in London
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Post by Catman 猫的主人 on Sept 6, 2021 23:06:38 GMT
The Wailing (2016)
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Post by jamesbamesy on Sept 6, 2021 23:12:08 GMT
An American Werewolf in London There were many moments of dark comedy, particularly whenever David hallucinated the deceased characters.
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Post by Catman 猫的主人 on Sept 6, 2021 23:15:10 GMT
Train to Busan (2016)
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Post by Nicko's Nose on Sept 6, 2021 23:17:40 GMT
Martyrs (2008) of course.
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Post by Lux on Sept 6, 2021 23:42:09 GMT
...All of them.
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Post by kolchak92 on Sept 6, 2021 23:43:30 GMT
An American Werewolf in London There were many moments of dark comedy, particularly whenever David hallucinated the deceased characters. I was kidding.
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Post by mgmarshall on Sept 7, 2021 0:15:20 GMT
Night of the Living Dead is pretty grim from start to finish.
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Post by jamesbamesy on Sept 7, 2021 0:49:11 GMT
There were many moments of dark comedy, particularly whenever David hallucinated the deceased characters. I was kidding. Ah.
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Post by kolchak92 on Sept 7, 2021 1:04:09 GMT
I could be wrong, but did Rosemary's Baby have any comic relief in it? It's been a while since I've watched it but I remember the whole movie being pretty serious all the way through.
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Post by Salzmank on Sept 7, 2021 1:29:01 GMT
I could be wrong, but did Rosemary's Baby have any comic relief in it? It's been a while since I've watched it but I remember the whole movie being pretty serious all the way through. Ruth Gordon’s Minnie Castevet? And the ending, with all the fussing about the baby, is supposed to be blackly comic, I’m pretty sure.
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Post by Dramatic Look Gopher on Sept 7, 2021 1:41:02 GMT
Many horror movies have their light moments so this is pretty tough to choose. I guess I'll go with Hereditary, the definition of dread. The one horror movie I automatically think of as having no humor at all is The Incubus (1982). That one was grim all the way through.
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Post by kolchak92 on Sept 7, 2021 1:51:37 GMT
This is a pretty tough thread topic I think, simply because humor is a very subjective thing. I never found Ruth Gordon in Rosemary's Baby or the ending to be particularly funny in any way, but Salzmank does, therefore what I think is a legitimate answer all of the sudden becomes very arguable.
Anyway, one of the best answers I can come up with is Don't Look Now (1973), although I'm sure someone on here will disagree.
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Post by jamesbamesy on Sept 7, 2021 2:01:05 GMT
Many horror movies have their light moments so this is pretty tough to choose. I guess I'll go with Hereditary, the definition of dread. The one horror movie I automatically think of as having no humor at all is The Incubus (1982). That one was grim all the way through. Not seen that one. Worth checking out?
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Post by Dramatic Look Gopher on Sept 7, 2021 2:04:02 GMT
The one horror movie I automatically think of as having no humor at all is The Incubus (1982). That one was grim all the way through. Not seen that one. Worth checking out? It has its flaws, but still worth seeing.
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