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cliche
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by
Paul
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Jul 12, 2009 12:52PM

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Or answering the door, when they know it's nothing good. who answers the door to a stranger in the middle of the night? Not I.


I must admit, I use that one in my writing. Several victims have backed into something worse. I should stop that. I'd hate to be cliche.
i love Scary Movie, all of them, and they are full of cliche's. I love how they make fun of them. I should watch them again, we'd have a lot more for the list.


Apparently he couldn't find an address, and needed to call the person to make sure he had it right.
He was probably telling the truth, but I wasn't letting him in to use my phone.


Lesson learned, next time it may have been an axe murderer. Always lock your door.




Last time religious nuts came to my door, I cussed them out like a crazy lady. Of course, I was working nights then, and they showed up sat 10amish, ringing the doorbell! They probably thought I was possessed when I opened the door and started yelling at them.

The ambush in the dark, nearly abandoned for the day garage.
As for the opening the door in the middle of the night, I'll do that. Granted I've got a .50 cal desert eagle in my hand, but hey, I'm not afraid to answer my door. It's probably a buddy looking for help since I've got no LAN line and only mobile phone that gets turned off at night.
Oh the endless scream of some dumb broad and even dumber killer who can't shut her up fast enough.


This happened in one of the Resident Evil movies, and in a book I recently read called City of the Dead. I mean, you've been chased all day by brain-eating zombies, you know you're gonna have to kill your acquaintance there!
I hate the backing up thing, too. And the "good guy" who's helping out but leads you straight to the head vampire, monster, whatever. For example, that smarmy SOB in Aliens; the doctor in Rosemary's Baby; the Ralph Fienne's friend (Danny Huston) in The Constant Gardener. Granted, these people might really not know what's going on, but I hate when a bogus level of trust is shown that we can see through a mile away.


Sort of like a group of stars in a horror movie will be padded with extras that will be bumped off to give the audience some of the violence they're hungering for, but sparing the stars they don't want to see killed. I think the Star Trek-like comedy with Tim the Toolman and Sigourney Weaveer had a faceless character that kept bemoaning the fact that he would soon get whacked because he's just an extra.

Don't forget the macho jock with a high level of douchebagness who makes the audience want to shout, 'he's hiding in the attic' or 'under the bed!' to who ever or whatever stalking him.

And did anyone mention a scared character hiding and striking with a weapon the first movement they see, but it turns out it was their own mother or lover, and the injured person looks at them all pitiful and drops to the knees, pauses, and then falls flat on his/her face? LOL. Classic!








How about when the victim is in a room turned in such a way the door to the hall is clear, and then a body walks by the door with that weird jangly piano music playing. Sometimes the victim turns in time to see nothing.
I detest the cheap scare. You know there will be one, two is pushing it, before the kill.


Perfect example is Karen Black in Trilogy of Terror. (Hope I didn't spoil this made-for-TV '70s movie that no one will ever see again.


I, too, always wish the hero would die within the first 5 minutes.

I, too, always wish the hero would die within the first 5 minutes."
******SPOILERS********
You might light Necroscope then.

You might light Necroscope then."
I like anything that begins with 'necro'