Burgomeister's thread on big or small monsters got me thinking-what monster is the scariest to you?
Mine would be the vampire-not a lumbering brute or a slobbering man-beast or a drooling ghoul....vampires are SMART. There like serial killers. They think things out. They plan. The Wolfman doesn't think things out. Zombies dont have a game plan.
"The spider spinning his web for the unwary fly."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sqej6t29ygc
Of course you all knew I would pick vampires. :lookingup:
But whats YOUR favorite? and why?
When I was a kid around 6 or 8 years old, Frankenstein's monster was by far my favorite monster. I think it was because he was created in a laboratory and most Frankenstein movies had scenes with a lot of gadgetry and electricity and I thought that was cool. In the 1970s and 80s I went through a phase where I loved zombie movies. Now, I'm not sure which monster is my favorite.
Godzilla's my fave. Big, green and mean! :buggedout:
But, for a more traditional monster, I'd have to say Frankenstein. The idea of life being 'created' and the ramifications of creating a creature that had feelings and emotions at that. It was a very neat and compelling story. He looked pretty neat too! :smile:
That's why I like Toho's Frankenstein Conquers The World so much..they took the basic idea and created The Monster from the atom, so he was a living being to begin with. Of all the variations of The Monster that have come and gone, this one was pretty neat.
Quote from: Umaril The Unfeathered on March 05, 2011, 11:02:36 AM
Godzilla's my fave. Big, green and mean! :buggedout:
But, for a more traditional monster, I'd have to say Frankenstein. The idea of life being 'created' and the ramifications of creating a creature that had feelings and emotions at that. It was a very neat and compelling story. He looked pretty neat too! :smile:
That's why I like Toho's Frankenstein Conquers The World so much..they took the basic idea and created The Monster from the atom, so he was a living being to begin with. Of all the variations of The Monster that have come and gone, this one was pretty neat.
I agree-FRANKENSTIEN CONQUERS THE WORLD was unique-WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS was meant to be a sequel! The Gargantuas were the by-product of the Frankenstein Monster-but most of that plot went out the window with the American cut.
(http://i93.photobucket.com/albums/l79/RCMerchant/WOTG_MaserCannon400.jpg)
My favorite Hero- Godzilla
My favorite Villain- Megalon! :twirl:
I love Frankenstein's Monster, Dracula, Godzilla, and all the classic monsters but the fellow closest to my heart is the good ol' Gill Man from THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON series.
For the record - I had this model long before I saw any of his movies:
(http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q14/Brent_Gair/Models/KBcblfr.jpg)
My favorite is MechaGodzilla vers. 1974 and 1975.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlWFjJhlRSc&feature=related
I like all the old Universal Monsters as well!
My favourite is definitely Godzilla. I've spent many a lonely teenage and childhood evening away in his company and he always perked me up. I actually think I prefer the heroic Big G who takes down the baddies which is not the version most seem taken with. I also have a strong liking for Mothra, Mechagodzilla, Gamera and King Kong.
The monster I personally find most frightening is the Wendigo, the ghostly spirit of lonely places. Big and monsterous, it hides in shadows and lurks and waits for you feeding on your growing fear before it later decides to feed on you... :buggedout:
My favourite Universal monster is the Wolf Man. Tragic and he doesn't want to be bad, he just cannot help it. It's his nature, the fear deep inside that the monster is really deep down in the darkest recesses of oneself. Speaking of vampires though, I've mentioned before how they were the first monsters to really terrify me as a child, so much so I'd wrap my sheet tight around my neck at night..hoping to prevent potential bites... :bouncegiggle:
I also really love the aliens and robots of 1950s film and TV -- Gort, Robby the Robot, The Thing, The Flying Saucers from Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, the "Lost in Space" Robot, the spooky otherworldly "bears" from the classic "Outer Limits" TV series.
Brundlefly (The Fly- 1986)
He used to be you or I.
(http://www.deviantart.com/download/112773574/The_Fly_BrundleFly_by_Jakemasiti.jpg)
He just looks wrong. Almost pathetic.
I've always found him to be very sympathetic looking and still grotesque.
Mine is Frankenstein's monster.
Whilst originally seen in the films as a monster, a beast without reason, he was in fact a very human, almost child like character.
Of all the 30's horror films, he had the resounding effect.
I've always been partial to werewolves and giant-anything.
Werewolves have the whole"evil lurking within" thing going on. It's kind of like Jekyll and Hyde but werewolves are more visually exciting. And some of the movie put an interesting spin on lycanthropy.
As for giant monsters, whether you're talking Godzilla, Gamera, The Deadly Mantis or Food of the Gods, giant monster movies are just plain simple fun.
Ghidora... He's just cool..
Quote from: Umaril The Unfeathered on March 05, 2011, 11:02:36 AM
Godzilla's my fave. Big, green and mean! :buggedout:
But, for a more traditional monster, I'd have to say Frankenstein. The idea of life being 'created' and the ramifications of creating a creature that had feelings and emotions at that. It was a very neat and compelling story. He looked pretty neat too! :smile:
That's why I like Toho's Frankenstein Conquers The World so much..they took the basic idea and created The Monster from the atom, so he was a living being to begin with. Of all the variations of The Monster that have come and gone, this one was pretty neat.
Quote from: RCMerchant on March 05, 2011, 11:15:23 AMI agree-FRANKENSTIEN CONQUERS THE WORLD was unique-WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS was meant to be a sequel! The Gargantuas were the by-product of the Frankenstein Monster-but most of that plot went out the window with the American cut.
(http://i93.photobucket.com/albums/l79/RCMerchant/WOTG_MaserCannon400.jpg)
I have the Japanese cut and it clearly explains the Frankenstein-Gargantua relationship. You need look no further than the facial features of Frankenstein Sanda (the good natured brown one) to see the relationship to Frankenstein.
There's a few theories of how Frankenstein is actually one of the Gargantuas.
One is that, after Frankenstein is dragged to the ocean bottom by Oodaku, his uneaten remains somehow regenerate (the power of the Monster's heart) and a deformed aquatic version named Gaira is born. His violent temperment stems from the damage to the brain as a result of lack of oxygen, which could not be repaired before the bidy slowly converted to a water breather.
Two, that the landlside either kills Frankenstein, or causes him to go dormant from his wounds recieved in the landslide. The heart regenerates Frankenstein into his next mutation, which is the benevolent brown creature Sanda, with part of his memory and the memory of the female doctor and the kindness she showed him.
Some good ideas, there.
Quote from: A Man Called Ed on March 07, 2011, 05:26:28 PM
Ghidora... He's just cool..
The thing with King Ghidorah is that he has to have some sort of unknown mastery of gravity, because he has the most aerodynamically unsustainable body known to monsterdom.
It wouldn't have hurt the guys at Toho to put a pair of arms on him, and make him bi\quadruped, either. Be that as it is, he looks pretty cool when he's suspended in mid-air, kicking his legs with all three heads swaying to and fro!
Quote from: Venomx on March 05, 2011, 01:46:41 PM
My favorite is MechaGodzilla vers. 1974 and 1975.
I have to agree with you.
Godzilla vs MechaGodzilla (1974) was the first "Monster Movie" I ever saw. I still have my old VHS tape of it, sitting on my shelf. The characters and plot was pretty forgettable, but MechaGodzilla was effin awesome! I mean, hell, he has laser cannons in his eyes! His freaking eyes!
Anyways, my runner up would probably have to be either Mothra or Megalon. Probably Mothra; he's bada$$!
[/late-night-nostalgic-rambling]
Hm, my favorite is probably Godzilla in his various (Japanese-made) incarnations. The one that scared me as a child was the Blob. Oh, I also liked/was afraid of the thing in the crate from Creepshow.
Bruce, the shark from Jaws, King Kong (1933) and the ants from Them! Those were my favorite monsters when I was a child.
In terms of coolest monster, I'm a big fan of Gigan. He combines the best of kaiju and giant mecha. A giant cyborg monster from space with built-in buzzsaws, hooks and blades, and one big, glowing red eye. I've always been curious what sort of creature Gigan was before aliens made him over.
For scariest, I would have a hard time choosing. As a kid, mutants tended to scare me. They started out as ordinary people or animals, and now they're grotesque and ferocious. Prophecy, for example. Notwithstanding the sleeping bag scene, that movie scared me when it came out.
These days, the scariest monsters are the human ones. Human psychos scare me because they're based on real people who commit real acts of brutality, and they seem perfectly normal, maybe even charismatic. It could be argued that a lot of fictional monsters are also based on real human brutality.
In that way, I kind of like the traditional portrayal of Frankenstein's monster. The Karloff monster wasn't evil. He just had no moral compass, no understanding of consequences or of his own strength. He functioned on animal instinct and minimal intelligence. The monster playing with the little girl was chilling because he meant no harm, but ended up killing her because he had a powerful body controlled by an impaired and twisted sense of reason. Throwing pretty things in the river is fun. No more flowers. Throw pretty girl in the river.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9t6NHlPJHA