Speaking strictly for myself, it took me 17 years to conquer "The Exorcist". To me, that is/was/will be the scariest movie of all time. That came out in '73. I was five years old when I saw it for the first time (having begged my parents to let me see it, and I honestly had
no idea what it was about....it just caught my attention. When we arrived at the drive in, the first showing was already part way through, and it was the scene where Regan was on that moving scan machine...that was scary enough. During the next showing, I only saw part of the movie. The first time Regan made her demonic growl... I dove under the dash, covering my ears. Never to return until a little later, when suddenly I saw the cut up/scarfaced Regan hurl all over Father Karras. Then I went back under the dash, and did NOT emerge until the exorcism was over.
For seventeen years after, I could not watch that movie because of Regan's face. Funny thing was though, I could have nightmares with that face in it, and never lose control. I couldn't understand why, but I took it.
I remember we went to the drive-in a few years later to see another movie, and when I peered out the back window to see what was playing on the opposite screen, there was a preview for Exorcist II: The Heretic. That face popped up on the screen, and I screamed...immediately turning my view back toward the screen I should've been watching in the first place. (I think the movie was "Grizzly" that we were watching...and it was far less scary than The Exorcist, or the preview I saw on the back screen.) My mom and dad laughed. My little brother was asleep. (Hell, my little brother slept through Star Wars.)
During that time, even movies like Carrie and Beyond the Door (cheesy rip off of The Exorcist, as I would come to recognize later) would scare the bejeezus out of me. If I had seen Alien without spoilers from my cousin (but I asked for that, so it's not her fault), I probably would've been scared out of my mind with that one too.
When I finally conquered The Exorcist (aka....being able to watch it by myself with no aversions), I found that no other movie could scare me. Not even Carrie, BTD, Alien etc.
And today's so-called horror/terror movies are a joke. They might have decent stories with a couple of intense moments, but nothing has ever affected me the way The Exorcist did.
Slasher movies are a joke....and in truth, I'm pretty desensitized to them. I get queasier watching "House M.D." on Netflix than I do watching the goriest horror flick. (Although I will admit, the unsuited spacewalk suicide attempt in Event Horizon did leave me a little sick to my stomach).
Oh, wow! I remember (vaguely) that segment from Trilogy of Terror too! That was also some scary stuff that I only saw a brief portion of, and I could not go to sleep either. I was but a wee laddie back then, and after The Exorcist, that guaranteed at least another sleepless night or two.
