COLUMN: Top 3 Horror Movies

Image: https://unsplash.com/photos/pCgxm-HDMNs

Image: https://unsplash.com/photos/pCgxm-HDMNs

Top 3 Horror Movies

Some things make you stop breathing. It can happen because you're anticipating the results of playing online casino slots or watching an engaging horror movie. Want to feel such emotions? Then one of these films will definitely satisfy you. 

Don't Breathe, 2016

On a budget of less than ten million dollars, Don't Breathe grossed nearly $160 million. Besides, it earned a dozen Best Horror Film nominations and won several awards in that category. This success is largely due to the unusual plot, which is uncharacteristic of this kind of film.

Three petty criminals are out to steal houses to resell the loot. They target houses where there is an alarm system of the company where the father of one of the criminals works. One day, the robbers get a tip: a war veteran lives in the Detroit suburbs. His house has something to live for: after the death of his daughter, he was paid a huge monetary compensation.

But the main thing is that the owner of the house is blind. It means that it will not be difficult to rob him, the criminals are sure. But the old veteran is less like a defenseless invalid. As soon as the burglars enter his house, the victim becomes a hunter. An ordinary robbery turns into a fight for the trio, in which they already have to fight for their lives.

Hush, 2016

If the character of Don't Breathe is blind, the main character of Hush is deaf. Mike Flanagan wrote the screenplay with his wife Kate Siegel, who played the title role. Before shooting, they rehearsed the entire film in their home, which later caused extra problems - the creators of the picture had difficulty finding a similar dwelling.

Maddie, a young and successful writer, lives alone in a cabin in the woods after a fight with her boyfriend. Having lost her hearing and voice in her youth, she has adapted to life and found herself writing novels. She is working on her second book, inspired by the success of her first, and her neighbor Sarah stops by to talk about it. Everything seems routine and ordinary. 

And a few minutes later, Sarah, fleeing from a stranger, knocks on the window asking to be let in right away. Except, of course, Maddie doesn't hear it. The murderer notes for himself that the lady of the house is deaf, and finds various elaborate ways to frighten her, intending to eventually kill her. 

When Flanagan announced that he was going to make a film without dialogue, no one believed him. Not completely without talking at all, but still: the dialogues take less than fifteen minutes, and over seventy of the action takes place without a single word.

Panic Room, 2002

David Koepp got the idea for Panic Room when he read an article in the newspaper. She told him that more and more people in the homes were asking for special "safe rooms. Koepp wrote the script in just six days and received a record four million dollars for it.

After her divorce, Meg and her daughter Sarah move to a new house in an upscale neighborhood. From the former millionaire landlord, they get a luxurious property with a "panic room" hidden even in the blueprints. The room is equipped with everything to protect the owners in case of intruders.

It doesn't take long to test the room. On the first night, the new tenants are broken into by three criminals who have come for the money hidden in the safe.