Lot of people complaining that their favorite horror film did not appear in the video. Well it is just impossible. There have been so many horror classics that even a 4 hour documentary wouldn'be enough. Not to mention a 13 minute summary. And what the creator of this video has done is nothing less than remarkable. It traces a general line of development of the genre in broad terms, it is not a discussion of milestones in horror. Excellent job, fantastic.
To all those in the comments who said you forgot this movie, or should have mentioned that movie, he told you up front that this was an extremely condensed version of horror cinema. It was only meant to show the highlights.
i feel like most of those type of comments are looking for "validation for their knowledge", anyway, instead of truly caring for the mentions. because it would be just unreasonable to expect every single film getting mentioned.
What a well made video Horror is arguably the most genre of film. So many fantastic directors got their start with horror classics and so many stars have been in horror movies before they were really known. It's a genre thats so easily influenced with trends of film and changes so fast but no horror film really ever gets forgotten. Some horror fans are practically historians when it comes to long-running characters like Dracula, Frankenstein, Invisible Man, Michael Myers, ect. but the horror films even before those are so old that they're pretty much ancient cinema and are archived from the most diehard of cinephiles.
Bob Clark's black Christmas gets overlooked in every horror documentary it was the first holiday themed slasher and it introduced the very first phone call killer
I get that this is mostly western-centric but damn.. early 00's Japan horror deserved a mentioned for introducing cyberhorror (Ju-On, Kairo, Suicide Club etc..) to the world
This was really helpful, I'm working on a research paper for my history class and this was a perfect video to take notes from (I'll obviously cite it). It'd be great if you could make another short history video about the horror genre from 2010-present, but I understand it must be a very research-heavy and time-intensive project. It would also be cool to get a short history of different subgenres of horror, I know you made a video about zombies in cinema, but there are a lot of other genres you could cover. Just a suggestion, keep making content dude!
Left out: The Exorcist had massive influence on Satanist horror. Amityville and the rise of haunted house films. The Shining's massive influence on the respectable horror film along with Silence of the Lambs. Also left out Blair Witch being the first in viral marketing / internet horror. And Cannibal Holocaust was actually first found footage horror
There was 2 films that you may have overlooked. 1 Godzilla (1954) The reason I say godzilla is because it was capatlising on the "Nuclear fear" Of the 50s. 2 The Blob (1958) It was on of the first coulor horror films and had some amazing Special effects.
I'm completely surprised that there was no mention of The Exorcist. I think the vast majority of horror fans would agree that The Exorcist is the most frightening film of all time. It had an emotional effect on people that no horror film before or since has had. Many people were seeing psychiatrists and going back to church after seeing it. Omitting The Exorcist from this video is like showing a video on heavyweight boxers and omitting Muhammad Ali.
Correction: There was a very brief mention of The Exorcist. My mistake, but it only lasted about 3 seconds. That's why I missed it the first time. I would have given The Exorcist a much more extensive review.
Well done but I would also mention the rise of Asian horror films in 1998-2004 [The Ring, Ju-On, The Eye, Shutter] and James Wan - the most influential horror director of 2010s.
Fantastic overview and so well put together! Definitely gives people a lot of room for greater explanation if anything jumps out of them. I'd only recommend that people also consider checking out Spanish/Mexican/Latin American horror as well. For obvious reasons there wasn't much time to cover that here, but it might be something that could interest people. Nonetheless, there is already much to examine here!
Your channel is a labor of love. It is a sad reflection on our degraded tastes as an audience that this channel isn't more popular. But what you do is splendid. Bravo.
Great video, but if I could pick you up on one *tiny* detail, at 6:20, it's the Quatermass Experiment, not Quartermass. But otherwise, good analysis of the socio-cultural influences on the horror film and developing trends.
hello 😁I'm doing my architectural thesis on horror cinéma, I would be so happy if you could send me your thesis so that I could see it as an example ( sorry my English, is not my first language)
I noticed this decade is itching for a renaissance. Recently watched "malignant" which had a 80s evil dead-ish pov chase and was obviously camp. Also watched "we need to do something" which is based off a book! Not a cheap remake of a ongoing franchise like film makers been doing.
You did a fantastic job, and mentioned many gems, but I think leaving out an explicit mention of The Exorcist left a little to be desired as it was an immensely important and impactful film.
I loved this video except for the part I hate in every history of horror lesson - the part where the speaker decides the horror genre went to shit lol. I accept it in all its forms, I don't think it ever went to shit.But anyway I subscribed. :)
Really great content. I think it's important to state that Cannibal Holocaust was the first Found Footage film with Blair Witch Project copying the format. So many great clips though - thank!
Like the review. I love that you have the music from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari playing. Just one thing, his name is pronounced as Conrad VITE not what you said. (Technically it's FITE in German) But I do love this video
I'm all for this, but I do think you missed out The Innocents from 1961, which is the greatest horror film of all time. Keep up the good work though, I'm enjoying the channel!
I was really skeptical about how comprehensive it could be in 13 minutes, but it was excellent overall. But The Innocents definitely needs to be included.
I would say 28 Days Later should have been mentioned. Though its contribution bringing movies from film to digital is not exclusive to horror, it still should be concidered as a landmark in the genre.
excellent video. If I may I have only one issue overall with the video itself. The background audio you use is at time a bit to loud and overwhelming it is sometimes hard to hear what you're saying.
So basically horror movies are based of real life experiences. Im actually shock. People would say it just a movie its not real. But the movie are actually telling a story of what really happen . I love getting knowledge
Great job and thank you so much for your effort however, I was expecting that you mention two great horror films; The Freaks and Eyes with out face! (Actually i came here in order to make a research about the " Freaks ")
Bummed you didn't mention AIP/Roger Corman and how drive-ins created an audience for cheap 50s-60s horror. Also, you mentioned the Cold War, but not Godzilla, et al, from Japan. But overall, I'm totally diggin your series. Thank you!
I’ve been watching endless cinema analysis vids on youtube all year and only today did this channel pop up (Citizen Kane ep). Wow, youtube does a pretty good job of burying the more erudite stuff. Glad I found it, now working my way through from the beginning. Right before Carrie, De Palma made Phantom of the Paradise, and I gotta say I’m getting some distinctly Swan vibes from Charlie.
Good work. The brief clips should also give the name of the movie which would be more informative. Hope the creator found the financial support he was looking for, which he asks for in the end.
I currently have a Blue Snowball, which has been a great mic for a few years, but I have traveled quite with it quite a bit and its not in the best shape. I am looking at getting something like a Audio-Technica AT2035 along with a mixer. If you have any suggestions that would be really helpful. Thanks!
Sorry this was from a time before I started putting the names of the films in the lower part of the screen. The film is Mystics in Bali (1981), which is as insane as it is incredible.
+Choreocrat Asian horror is such a big (and strange) topic. I thought it was probably worthy of its own video some time in the future, so i only made passing reference to it here. Thanks!
I suspected as much. One of the horror movies that played most with my brain was Japanese version of Ring, so I was thinking about all of the US remakes of Japanese and Korean horror. You're right, though, they are huge areas.
With W. D. Griffith's, "The Sealed Room(1909)", why wasn't something so interesting, redone at least a half dozen times, already?? You iterated "The Blair Witch Project", came out in 1989. No, it came out in 1999.
I am very confused when it comes to horrors. I love the taste of fear, I like being scared, unsettled and disgusted by what I see so I watch horrors most of time. I have seen around 400 horror films in my 21 years long life but only a handful of them got me really unsettled...I watch them not because I get scared by every other horror film but because I believe this one could be the next rare one that left me disgusted as Carpenter's The Thing did for example. In recent years the only truly scary horror I have seen was Hereditary. It is masterpiece that comes out once in a decade. All those remakes and sequels are shitty and they are only about jumpscares. So my relationship with horrors is...I love horrors but 95% of them can't get me pee my pants...so I just watch thrillers and crime films instead recently :D
Lot of people complaining that their favorite horror film did not appear in the video. Well it is just impossible. There have been so many horror classics that even a 4 hour documentary wouldn'be enough. Not to mention a 13 minute summary. And what the creator of this video has done is nothing less than remarkable. It traces a general line of development of the genre in broad terms, it is not a discussion of milestones in horror. Excellent job, fantastic.
Yahhh…. It would be cool to see a 4 hour video about this kinda stuff tho. It’s really interesting
Ok
@@macysondheimdon't die as a disbeliever
@@sonicriders.7don't die as a disbeliever
@@macysondheimdon't die as a disbeliever
To all those in the comments who said you forgot this movie, or should have mentioned that movie, he told you up front that this was an extremely condensed version of horror cinema. It was only meant to show the highlights.
So do you think that Alien series or exorcist are not the highlights?
@@SIASOUKHTEH Aliens more like sci fi to be honest
@@SIASOUKHTEH 0:04 & 8:29
i feel like most of those type of comments are looking for "validation for their knowledge", anyway, instead of truly caring for the mentions.
because it would be just unreasonable to expect every single film getting mentioned.
The Shining was definitely a highlight, why did he only show it in the beginning?
Great overview! A perfect video for new fans of horror.
What a well made video
Horror is arguably the most genre of film. So many fantastic directors got their start with horror classics and so many stars have been in horror movies before they were really known. It's a genre thats so easily influenced with trends of film and changes so fast but no horror film really ever gets forgotten.
Some horror fans are practically historians when it comes to long-running characters like Dracula, Frankenstein, Invisible Man, Michael Myers, ect. but the horror films even before those are so old that they're pretty much ancient cinema and are archived from the most diehard of cinephiles.
Suicide not allowed
Bob Clark's black Christmas gets overlooked in every horror documentary it was the first holiday themed slasher and it introduced the very first phone call killer
Suicide not allowed
I’ve noticed that too
Thanks, this was a great starting point for further investigation into the history of the genre!
I get that this is mostly western-centric but damn.. early 00's Japan horror deserved a mentioned for introducing cyberhorror (Ju-On, Kairo, Suicide Club etc..) to the world
Totally agree.
@@huiwenz754 no this video will be 3-4 hour long if you mention that
Great retrospective ! Thank you !
This was really helpful, I'm working on a research paper for my history class and this was a perfect video to take notes from (I'll obviously cite it).
It'd be great if you could make another short history video about the horror genre from 2010-present, but I understand it must be a very research-heavy and time-intensive project. It would also be cool to get a short history of different subgenres of horror, I know you made a video about zombies in cinema, but there are a lot of other genres you could cover. Just a suggestion, keep making content dude!
A very well knowledge put together in such a short time. Well done dude.
Amazing work. You’re channel is wonderful
Left out: The Exorcist had massive influence on Satanist horror. Amityville and the rise of haunted house films. The Shining's massive influence on the respectable horror film along with Silence of the Lambs. Also left out Blair Witch being the first in viral marketing / internet horror. And Cannibal Holocaust was actually first found footage horror
There was 2 films that you may have overlooked. 1 Godzilla (1954) The reason I say godzilla is because it was capatlising on the "Nuclear fear" Of the 50s. 2 The Blob (1958) It was on of the first coulor horror films and had some amazing Special effects.
I'm completely surprised that there was no mention of The Exorcist. I think the vast majority of horror fans would agree that The Exorcist is the most frightening film of all time. It had an emotional effect on people that no horror film before or since has had. Many people were seeing psychiatrists and going back to church after seeing it. Omitting The Exorcist from this video is like showing a video on heavyweight boxers and omitting Muhammad Ali.
Correction: There was a very brief mention of The Exorcist. My mistake, but it only lasted about 3 seconds. That's why I missed it the first time. I would have given The Exorcist a much more extensive review.
Well done but I would also mention the rise of Asian horror films in 1998-2004 [The Ring, Ju-On, The Eye, Shutter] and James Wan - the most influential horror director of 2010s.
great overview, you got my sub
Dog not allowed ect
Excellent! Thank you! Perfect for spooky season
Yo! Charlie!! you're cool! keep up the impeccable work man
A certain Hershel Gordon Lewis would dispute the statement made at 7:55.
Fantastic overview and so well put together! Definitely gives people a lot of room for greater explanation if anything jumps out of them. I'd only recommend that people also consider checking out Spanish/Mexican/Latin American horror as well. For obvious reasons there wasn't much time to cover that here, but it might be something that could interest people. Nonetheless, there is already much to examine here!
Your channel is a labor of love. It is a sad reflection on our degraded tastes as an audience that this channel isn't more popular. But what you do is splendid. Bravo.
Great video. Thank you.
Suicide not allowed
Wow. You had me at the clip of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) but, what a video!
BTW this was an amazingly put together video thank you for this!
Really brilliant selection and analysis. Well structured and thoroughly engaging. Thank you :)))
Thanks for your comment about your audio equipment. I thought my speakers were crapping out. Great vid!
Suicide not allowed
Literally just discovered this channel today! Awesome content
Awesome! I enjoyed this a lot.
The Birds should have included because that was a great horror film also
Great video man, thanks for the info
great video, this channel is awesome, keep it coming I Will watch every single one of your videos, greetings from Portugal
Thank you for the video!!!
Great video, but if I could pick you up on one *tiny* detail, at 6:20, it's the Quatermass Experiment, not Quartermass. But otherwise, good analysis of the socio-cultural influences on the horror film and developing trends.
10:21 what is the name of the music on this video? I love it, does anyone know?
Great video!
Amazing work! I'm doing my thesis on horror cinema and this is a very useful starting point. Thanks so much!
hello 😁I'm doing my architectural thesis on horror cinéma, I would be so happy if you could send me your thesis so that I could see it as an example ( sorry my English, is not my first language)
Thank you! Great video.
Fear Allah
0:03 what music is at the beginning of the video?
Excellent this is great research for out podcast.
❤ What is the name of the background music at the beginning of the video?😮
Great trip through the Horror history of film
80's were what raised me in the 2000s - 2010s
You should've added transformation movies such as The Wolfman or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Great video btw
Thank you for the video......I've learned a lot of things today about the Horror genre.......👌
Dog not allowed ect
Movie at 6:08
The hunchback of Notre dame 1923 is a romance,not a horror film,but it did start the universal monster trend.
Ehhh still a horror movie, or at least a thriller.
no the thing and the shining? Also I would give more attention to The exorcist.
Great great video! really loved it!
Great videos. Curious have you already picked all your films for your 100 years series?
I have a pretty long list along with some other longer "history of..." video ideas like this one, but it is constantly changing!
I look forward to it!
Well Done!!! Thank You!! Why did you stop making videos?! All the Best from 🇧🇷! ✌️🖖
This should be updated in a few years when we’re further into the 2020s.
I noticed this decade is itching for a renaissance. Recently watched "malignant" which had a 80s evil dead-ish pov chase and was obviously camp. Also watched "we need to do something" which is based off a book! Not a cheap remake of a ongoing franchise like film makers been doing.
Good video. Keep it up.
You did a fantastic job, and mentioned many gems, but I think leaving out an explicit mention of The Exorcist left a little to be desired as it was an immensely important and impactful film.
I think the shining should have been included but it was a great video! Much love 👍🏼
I loved this video except for the part I hate in every history of horror lesson - the part where the speaker decides the horror genre went to shit lol. I accept it in all its forms, I don't think it ever went to shit.But anyway I subscribed. :)
But it went to shit in the 2010s and 2020s
Really great content. I think it's important to state that Cannibal Holocaust was the first Found Footage film with Blair Witch Project copying the format. So many great clips though - thank!
I think you missed Alien and The Thing, but this was a great video.
You should've mentioned The Day of The Triffids (1962), that's a British classic
9:29 what is the name of the movie?
Nice review! Love it!
No shining or silence of the lambs?
4:16 a trope of horror history
what is the movie at 0:06
Alien
@@coochiefart6669don't die as a disbeliever
Dog not allowed ect
What’s the music played at the beginning of the video?
Спасибо за топ! Благодаря этому видео, посмотрел хорошие фильмы!.
Impressive, especially considering at least 3,900 horror films have been released over 125 years. I counted.
The “cat scare” is called a Luwten Bus. Based off the scene you showed
666 Likes, the deed is done
Whom dar'st thou summon?
Like the review. I love that you have the music from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari playing. Just one thing, his name is pronounced as Conrad VITE not what you said. (Technically it's FITE in German) But I do love this video
I'm all for this, but I do think you missed out The Innocents from 1961, which is the greatest horror film of all time. Keep up the good work though, I'm enjoying the channel!
I have never seen the trailer, but I just watched the trailer and its going straight to the top of my must watch list. Thanks.
I was really skeptical about how comprehensive it could be in 13 minutes, but it was excellent overall. But The Innocents definitely needs to be included.
He missed Alien...
I think Cabinet of Dr Caligari is better
This video was very educational and informative but I think you should have mentioned “ The Shining” and “ The Silence of the Lambs”
This video flew by. I wish it were a long, more in-depth look at horror cinema .... maybe two hours in length.
Really nicely done.
I would say 28 Days Later should have been mentioned. Though its contribution bringing movies from film to digital is not exclusive to horror, it still should be concidered as a landmark in the genre.
28 days later should absolutely have been mentioned. good call.
Guess we have to wait ~70 more videos before we hear you talk about it ;D
One Hundred Years of Cinema it should have been because 28 Days Later helped revitalize the zombie horror subgenre of the 2000s.
What movie is that at 11:34 ???
The Babadook, its great!
@@onehundredyearsofcinema Thanks
@@luero2008don't die as a disbeliever
@@onehundredyearsofcinemadon't die as a disbeliever
Dog not allowed ect
I didnt freak out to this but i need something challenging to watch even that i'm a kid
excellent video. If I may I have only one issue overall with the video itself. The background audio you use is at time a bit to loud and overwhelming it is sometimes hard to hear what you're saying.
Dog not allowed ect
Can u please do one on science-fiction. One of my favorite genres
So basically horror movies are based of real life experiences. Im actually shock. People would say it just a movie its not real. But the movie are actually telling a story of what really happen . I love getting knowledge
Great job and thank you so much for your effort however, I was expecting that you mention two great horror films; The Freaks and Eyes with out face! (Actually i came here in order to make a research about the " Freaks ")
Where's the music from?
what's the music from the start I know it by I can't put my finger on it
Movie at 4:22?
Dog not allowed ect
Favorite gothic horror?I haven’t seen all gothic horrors but,from what I’ve seen,I have to go for the obvious choice of Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
Bummed you didn't mention AIP/Roger Corman and how drive-ins created an audience for cheap 50s-60s horror. Also, you mentioned the Cold War, but not Godzilla, et al, from Japan. But overall, I'm totally diggin your series. Thank you!
I’ve been watching endless cinema analysis vids on youtube all year and only today did this channel pop up (Citizen Kane ep). Wow, youtube does a pretty good job of burying the more erudite stuff. Glad I found it, now working my way through from the beginning.
Right before Carrie, De Palma made Phantom of the Paradise, and I gotta say I’m getting some distinctly Swan vibes from Charlie.
Good work. The brief clips should also give the name of the movie which would be more informative. Hope the creator found the financial support he was looking for, which he asks for in the end.
Old film is about the best thing ever 🍕
awesome video. what microphone do you currently use?
I currently have a Blue Snowball, which has been a great mic for a few years, but I have traveled quite with it quite a bit and its not in the best shape. I am looking at getting something like a Audio-Technica AT2035 along with a mixer. If you have any suggestions that would be really helpful.
Thanks!
Cool overview! Interested in what led you to leave out cinema from Japan and China nearly entirely.
Dog not allowed ect
What is the film at 0:08?
Sorry this was from a time before I started putting the names of the films in the lower part of the screen.
The film is Mystics in Bali (1981), which is as insane as it is incredible.
@@onehundredyearsofcinema Thanks! Definitely going to check it out!
@@eanmeentz596don't die as a disbeliever
@@onehundredyearsofcinemasuicide not allowed
Dog not allowed ect
Gore and violence is a major reason why I and many others enjoy horror films.
“Short”….
This was a great video. I can't find a good reason why this should've been included but i would've liked to see IT somewhere in there
Interesting stuff! What do you think of the influence of the HK, Japanese and Korean horror genres?
+Choreocrat Asian horror is such a big (and strange) topic. I thought it was probably worthy of its own video some time in the future, so i only made passing reference to it here. Thanks!
I suspected as much. One of the horror movies that played most with my brain was Japanese version of Ring, so I was thinking about all of the US remakes of Japanese and Korean horror. You're right, though, they are huge areas.
Great to read, as I was wondering the same when seeing this.
@@HannekeDebiesuicide not allowed
@@mowelinsuicide not allowed
With W. D. Griffith's, "The Sealed Room(1909)", why wasn't something so interesting, redone at least a half dozen times, already?? You iterated "The Blair Witch Project", came out in 1989. No, it came out in 1999.
I am very confused when it comes to horrors. I love the taste of fear, I like being scared, unsettled and disgusted by what I see so I watch horrors most of time. I have seen around 400 horror films in my 21 years long life but only a handful of them got me really unsettled...I watch them not because I get scared by every other horror film but because I believe this one could be the next rare one that left me disgusted as Carpenter's The Thing did for example.
In recent years the only truly scary horror I have seen was Hereditary. It is masterpiece that comes out once in a decade.
All those remakes and sequels are shitty and they are only about jumpscares.
So my relationship with horrors is...I love horrors but 95% of them can't get me pee my pants...so I just watch thrillers and crime films instead recently :D
I thought Alien and thr birth of sci fo horror or the Thing and John Carpenters takes on Cosmic Horror with the growing influence of Lovecraft
You Forgot the Gem : The Sixth Sense. The twisted End horror
5:26 that’s Oklahoma’s atomic Annie at fort sill that’s our girl
Yo my English teacher actually assigned something interesting.