TV Moments That Have Scarred You For Life
#1
Posted Dec 31, 2003 @ 9:20 PM
Probably the thing that scarred me the most as a child, was an old movie I saw on the "3:30 Movie" back in the mid-70's when I was probably about 6 or so. This was pre-cable- they would show old movies, everything from Abbott and Costello films to "Frankenstein", after school each day. This particular story was about this group of archeologists or something that discover a lock box with a man's head in it- and the head's ALIVE. Freaked me out. Eventually they find his body and put the two back together and he turns into a harmless pile of dust. Anyone remember the name of this? It was black and white and probably from the early 60's. I had the serious creeps from this movie for YEARS. Even now, I don't think I could watch it.
#2
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 2:37 AM
But a year or so later I went to a friend's house and they admitted they had this problem too. They bought an old country farmhouse that had two bathrooms right next to each other on the ground floor and there was a harmless watersnake that would pop up in either toilet. Can't convince me a snake in the toilet is harmless.
PS, I never went to the bathroom in their house. Ever.
#3
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 9:10 AM
As for clowns - they are the freakiest thing out. There's an episode of Star Trek Voyager with Tim Curry as a clown (like in IT) who has taken over these people's minds and they are all permanently in this freakshow carnival world and have to have fun all the time. If they don't like it they are put in the chair and it kills them, and they end up dying in real life. I was not happy.
The mention of Ray Bradbury's "I Sing the body electric" earlier - wasn't that the name of a song from the TV series Fame - now that was scary TV!
Edited by vickyc007, Jan 1, 2004 @ 9:12 AM.
#4
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 9:28 AM
Probably the thing that scarred me the most as a child, was an old movie I saw on the "3:30 Movie" back in the mid-70's when I was probably about 6 or so. This was pre-cable- they would show old movies, everything from Abbott and Costello films to "Frankenstein", after school each day. This particular story was about this group of archeologists or something that discover a lock box with a man's head in it- and the head's ALIVE. Freaked me out. Eventually they find his body and put the two back together and he turns into a harmless pile of dust. Anyone remember the name of this? It was black and white and probably from the early 60's. I had the serious creeps from this movie for YEARS. Even now, I don't think I could watch it.
Oh my God! I used to watch those movies all the time too. Had to sneak it, because I was supposed to be asleep, but I loved them. I do remember watching that movie and it freaked me out too. Actually, that was the movie that I got busted on. It freaked me out so much, my folks found out what I was doing and took the TV. I can't remember the title, either, though. Sorry. Can't say that I want to watch it again, anyway.
#5
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 9:52 AM
It's a line from Walt Whitman, but I don't know if it was also used in a song on Fame. I used to love watching that series, though.The mention of Ray Bradbury's "I Sing the body electric" earlier - wasn't that the name of a song from the TV series Fame
#6
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 10:54 AM
The mention of Ray Bradbury's "I Sing the body electric" earlier - wasn't that the name of a song from the TV series Fame
It's a line from Walt Whitman, but I don't know if it was also used in a song on Fame. I used to love watching that series, though.
The film version of Fame, during the climactic senior talent night, features, as its centerpiece, the Walt Whitman poem set to music. It wasn't, to my knowledge, used in the tv series.
#7
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 11:19 AM
The film version of Fame, during the climactic senior talent night, features, as its centerpiece, the Walt Whitman poem set to music. It wasn't, to my knowledge, used in the tv series.
"I Sing the Body Electric" on TV? You might be thinking of the "Fame", the reality show. I remember all 12 singers doing that number on Finale Night, with Harlemm Lee & Shannon Bex taking the leads.
#8
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 12:50 PM
Now I have to live with the intellectual shame that I can recall song lyrics said in a naff 80's film better than the poem they were based upon!
Does being English, and therefore unlikely to have studied Walt Whitman, count as an excuse?
ETA Ok - my shame should really be that I knew it only as a song from Fame and not that it was actually a poem by Walt Whitman!
Edited by vickyc007, Jan 1, 2004 @ 1:07 PM.
#9
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 1:03 PM
#10
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 2:25 PM
#11
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 4:16 PM
And there is no such thing as a "harmless watersnake." Not when it's in the toilet.
#12
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 4:53 PM
The Black Dahlia was mentioned earlier, but I don't think this particular show was mentioned. My partner and I were watching what seemed to be a reputable, non-lurid show about the case. However, that all changed when they got through talking about her life and got up to the point of the murder. At that point, they proceeded to show the pictures of her corpse cut in two pieces over and over and over again through the remainder of the program. We had trouble sleeping that night.
The other was a science-fiction show, the new Twilight Zone or something like that. These people crash (?) on a planet with horrible giant spiders. The spiders first inject you with venom that causes you to become paralyzed and hallucinate, and then of course they wrap you up for later eating. To raise the stakes, it was imperative that our crash surviors got off the planet because they were carrying vaccine (?) or something to deal with a plague on their home planet.
After various members of the party die in accidents or are incapacitated by the spider venom, one man finally manages to purge the ship of spiders, fix the ship, get all the injured/incapacitated people safely buckled in for the trip, and blast off into space. He's free of the planet's atmosphere, looks out at the sky full of stars and giddy with relief announces, "I saved them! I saved them!"
And then, the last shot is of the ship's bridge. Everyone, including the man who we thought saved everyone is wrapped in cocoons and either babbling or comatose. The man is wrapped in his web cocoon, eyes glazed, drooling, and mumbling "I saved them, I saved them." *shudder*
Last but not least is a moment from some of my father's science fiction show watching from my childhood. Some plague or something is making people "evaporate" in their sleep, and leaving nothing but little piles of sand behind. For years, I was afraid to go to sleep because there might be nothing left of me but a pile of sand.
I just thought of a few other moments courtesy of my father's taste for science fiction.
The jelly pancake things going after Spock. They were little and flappy and evil. I realize that is one of the cheesiest episodes ever of the TOS, but it scared me at the time.
The noise of the monitors in the Star Trek sick bay. It took me years to hear that noise without wanting to duck.
Edited by Trilobyte, Jan 2, 2004 @ 12:34 AM.
#13
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 5:57 PM
As for clowns - they are the freakiest thing out. There's an episode of Star Trek Voyager with Tim Curry as a clown (like in IT) who has taken over these people's minds and they are all permanently in this freakshow carnival world and have to have fun all the time. If they don't like it they are put in the chair and it kills them, and they end up dying in real life. I was not happy.
Oh God, I remember that! These alien people were trapped in a carnival world, and one by one the clown was excecuting them by cutting off their heads (causing their real bodies, outside the carnival, to die of fear). Then Harry and B'Elanna went into the carnival to rescue the survivors, and Harry was trapped there too... y'know, Voyager didn't often freak me out, but that one episode just made me shake. Evil carnivals are nothing to sniff at.
#14
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 7:00 PM
Heh, that sounds exactly like the fate of the entire United Nations staff in the cheesy Batman movie based on the even cheesier 60's series. The Penguin, Joker, Catwoman, and the Riddler are all in cahoots to get rid of the UN for some reason, so they turn them into little vials of dust, if I'm not mistaken, lol.Some plague or something is making people "evaporate" in their sleep, and leaving nothing but little piles of sand behind. For years, I was afraid to go to sleep because there might be nothing left of me but a pile of sand.
#15
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 11:02 PM
#16
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 11:50 PM
The other was a science-fiction show, the new Twilight Zone or something like that. These people crash (?) on a planet with horrible giant spiders. The spiders first inject you with venom that causes you to become paralyzed and hallucinate, and then of course they wrap you up for later eating.
That was actually the new Outer Limits. The actor who played the main character of the episode went on to play Will on Will and Grace.
#17
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 11:59 PM
And mine.
#18
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 11:57 AM
Then i spent a long time thinking of all the things the guy could have done instead e.g
a. why didn't he just request to leave the airforce and not do the mission, but then i re-read the part about it being a futuristic society and I doubted whether they would let him.
b. Now that he knows its a simulator why didn't he just start breaking things inside it - these things always cost money and they'd rather jepoardise him than the equipment
c. etc
Then i remembered this was only a show, (which i'd never even seen!) and i needed to get out more. I'm going to lie down now.
#19
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 12:25 PM
Also I love Twilight Zone, but it's because of that show that I get freakout about mannequins and dummies. You can't tell me their not alive when people aren't around. Related to mannequins, I also get freaked out on elevators sometimes because in the mannequin episode she ended up on a floor that no one knew about but the mannequins.
#20
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 12:49 PM
Scientific experiment plotlines freak me out in general.
I saw a t.v. movie years ago about another type of experiment. A bunch of people were placed in an ultra-advanced air-raid shelter and told they were going to have to live there for 30 days to test its habitability. In the meantime, a real nuclear war broke out and they had to stay in the shelter and watch on t.v. as the entire world blew up all around them and all these terrified victims were banging on the doors to the shelter trying to get in (they had a big argument as to whether or not they should let them in). Eventually one distraught participant killed herself, and then everybody found out there was no nuclear war -- it was all part of a big experiment to see how people would react in wartime conditions.
And then there was the classic one about the people who were told they were participating in a study that measured human reaction to electrical shock. They were instructed to press a button that delivered a mild electrical charge to another test subject, only the charges got gradually stronger and stronger. And the other subject was screaming in pain but the head scientist kept telling the participants to continue, and most of them did. It turned out it was all fake -- the scientists were testing how blindly people were willing to obey authority. The scary part is, pretty much everybody did what the head scientist said. I also think it was based on a true story.
#21
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 1:02 PM
That reminds me of a classic "Twilight Zone", in which a local doctor and model citizen is having a birthday party which much of the town attends. They lionize him but also tease him about the bomb shelter he built below his house, which is just big enough, and has just enough supplies, to get him and his family comfortably through a nuclear attack that none of the others think will happen. [The scientific impossibility of living through the aftermath of such an attack had not yet been established for the general public]. Then the unthinkable happens - the air raid sirens go off. The doctor brings his family down to the shelter. The other townspeople, none of whom have shelters, demand that he let them in. He says he can't. A riot ensues and the shelter - and much of the doctor's house - is trashed. Then they hear that it was all a false alarm. Abashed, the townspeople promise to 'repair the damage' - but they all know that some damage cannot be repaired.I saw a t.v. movie years ago about another type of experiment. A bunch of people were placed in an ultra-advanced air-raid shelter and told they were going to have to live there for 30 days to test its habitability. In the meantime, a real nuclear war broke out and they had to stay in the shelter and watch on t.v. as the entire world blew up all around them and all these terrified victims were banging on the doors to the shelter trying to get in (they had a big argument as to whether or not they should let them in). Eventually one distraught participant killed herself, and then everybody found out there was no nuclear war -- it was all part of a big experiment to see how people would react in wartime conditions.
And then there was the classic one about the people who were told they were participating in a study that measured human reaction to electrical shock. They were instructed to press a button that delivered a mild electrical charge to another test subject, only the charges got gradually stronger and stronger. And the other subject was screaming in pain but the head scientist kept telling the participants to continue, and most of them did. It turned out it was all fake -- the scientists were testing how blindly people were willing to obey authority. The scary part is, pretty much everybody did what the head scientist said. I also think it was based on a true story.
It is indeed a true story. I believe the scientist who ran the study was named Stanley Milgrim or Milligan. It gives one pause, thinking about it. I mean, we ask how the Nazis rose to power and got some people to do such terrible things. I think this experiment gives one part of a possible answer. Truly chilling.
#22
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 1:19 PM
Pants NinjaAs for clowns - they are the freakiest thing out. There's an episode of Star Trek Voyager with Tim Curry as a clown (like in IT) who has taken over these people's minds and they are all permanently in this freakshow carnival world...
Are y'all talking about that episode 'The Thaw'? The Clown was played by Michael McKean- who is everybody from Lenny Koznoski to David St Hubbins.Oh God, I remember that! These alien people were trapped in a carnival world, and one by one the clown was excecuting them by cutting off their heads... and Harry was trapped there too...
http://pic9.picturet...51/41684081.jpg
My most scarring TV moment involving Tim Curry would have to be this
#23
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:01 PM
And then there was the classic one about the people who were told they were participating in a study that measured human reaction to electrical shock. They were instructed to press a button that delivered a mild electrical charge to another test subject, only the charges got gradually stronger and stronger. And the other subject was screaming in pain but the head scientist kept telling the participants to continue, and most of them did. It turned out it was all fake -- the scientists were testing how blindly people were willing to obey authority. The scary part is, pretty much everybody did what the head scientist said. I also think it was based on a true story.
It is indeed a true story. I believe the scientist who ran the study was named Stanley Milgrim or Milligan. It gives one pause, thinking about it. I mean, we ask how the Nazis rose to power and got some people to do such terrible things. I think this experiment gives one part of a possible answer. Truly chilling.
Yup, Stanley Milgram. Sigh. We can't do experiments like that anymore.
#24
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:22 PM
Thanks JedimasterElvis I knew it was somebody famous but couldn't remember who. I actually have all of Voyager on video so should have known that!Are y'all talking about that episode 'The Thaw'? The Clown was played by Michael McKean- who is everybody from Lenny Koznoski to David St Hubbins.
I never saw the show with Tim Curry and Gary Cole as they never showed it in the UK although everyone on the boards has said it was pants. Shame, as I really like both Gary Cole and Tim Curry - they're both very easy on the eye. Mind you, the plot synopsis sounds very much like "The Nanny".
ETA Oops my bad - additional comment deleted as it was about a film not a TV
programme.
2ND ETA
What does "pants" mean? Is it dirty? I hope it's dirty.
Nope, sorry no dirt here. It's a UK expression which means rubbish/useless/naff. Pants are underwear in the UK and not trousers as they are in the US.
Hence, our major amusement whenever we hear all of those American cops to tell people to "drop their pants". Hee hee. We all have the mentality of six year olds.
Edited by vickyc007, Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:48 PM.
#25
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:38 PM
What does "pants" mean? Is it dirty? I hope it's dirty.in the UK although everyone on the boards has said it was pants
Heh. Actually, the Curry/Cole Family Affair is a remake of the 1966 TV show of the same name (starring Brian Keith as Uncle Bill & Sebastian Cabot as Mr French). I watched it in syndication as a kid in the 70s. Love the opening theme. And older sister Cissy was kinda hot (keeping in mind I was 6 or 7 at the time).Mind you, the plot synopsis sounds very much like "The Nanny"
TOPIC: There was a PSA about AIDS wherein we are treated to desolate streets filled with sad, hungry, grimy, crying children- left behind to fend for themselves because all the adults are dead from AIDS! AAAHHHHH! It's like that ep of Old Skool Star Trek 'Miri' ("Bonk, bonk on the head") and, like, 28 Days w/o the cannibalism. Sad & scary.
Edited by JedimasterElvis, Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:39 PM.
#26
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 8:51 PM
The Sopranos. Ralphie. Janice. In Bed. It was horrible. I tried to cover my eyes, but I could still hear it. "Who's Mama's Hoor?". Then I tried to cover my ears, and close my eyes and sing. Then I had to bleach my eyes. It was so much worse than Ralphie's head when he dies.
And yes, just to agree. Litle House on the Prairie. The mime. The morphine vomit. The episode when Carrie was in the whole thing as herself and her imaginary friend.
Any ep of SevHev I've seen.
And the SNL commercial spoof with the clear gravy. It makes me want to vomit. Does anyone remember this? It was a spoof on the crystal Pepsi ads, and it featured clear gravy being poured on meat. Yuck. Just yuck. It's way squickier than it sounds.
#27
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 9:01 PM
It had Kim Darby and that's not even the scariest part. She kept seeing these little creatures around her house, but only she could see them. They'd pop up all over the place and pull horrible evil pranks. Everyone thought she was crazy, of course. The worst part was at the very end where they'd killed her and she'd become one of them.
#28
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 9:59 PM
#29
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 11:59 PM
Watching my poor, sweet, favorite fictional human ever (with the exception of Giles) Xander suffer the one injury that freaks me out the most, bar none. Oh, my God, I was screaming and crying and then completely immobilized for a good five minutes.
I don't normally watch Animal Planet (I used to, but it's like they've gradually phased out all the wild animal stuff to focus on pets, which isn't half as interesting, and also I have problems with them running a spay/neuter commercial campaign while glorifying how great it is to have your pets give birth in the million daily episoded of "That's My Baby." *inhales*) so I've missed out on some of the more lovely moments of animal cruelty, but there is one that's stuck with me: A man comes home to see that his neighbor has left the gate to his backyard open, and his female Rottweiler is in the yard, whining and digging frantically. The man recognizes that the dog is completely freaked out about something, so he gets down on his knees and starts helping her dig. A few minutes later he finds somewhere between three and five Rottie puppies that the neighbor has buried alive. Thankfully, the guy and some friends got them to the vet and were able to save most of them.
I loved "Unsolved Mysteries" to death as a child, but the theme song scared the crap out of me. I always had to turn it on after the credits ended. I've never had the "ohmigod, I just know that guy is hiding in my neighborhood" fear, though, especially in the last few years. I've noticed that every time somebody gets found in my state on that show, he's been masquerading as either student or faculty at my alma mater's rival university several cities over. Amuses me to no end. :P
I am apparently the only X-Files addict in the world who wasn't skeeved out of my brain by "Home."
Aww, you guys were creeped out by "The Electric Gandmother"? It's one of my old favorites. Ihave it on tape somewhere, and I can actually pick out that little song she sings (melody only, no chords) on the piano. But I'll admit, I was freaked by the part where they first get to the warehouse, before they even start designing the grandmother. There's a closeup of the dad's gloved hand holding a handkerchief and wiping the snow off a wall so they can check the address, but for some reason it never focused properly in my head when I was a kid and it looked like some sort of giant worm puppet sneaking towards them. I never understood that and had to content myself with being mightily creeped. And it just got worse from there when the father reads the sign on the door that says the company's name and "specializes in the creation of lifelike androids, playmates, companions, and especially--" The door swings open on its own and creepy, distorted voices finish, "grrrrandmutherrs!" Augh! Scary!
#30
Posted Jan 3, 2004 @ 12:54 AM
A woman moves into a house and notices a stain on the wall. She tries and tries to clean off the stain with everything she has, but it keeps getting larger and larger. By the end of the show, the stain has become some kind of picture.
I saw this as a small child and can't remember much beyond that, but do remember it scared the hell out of me.







