You gotta devote about 3 minutes of your time to look at this short film. Trust me, it's worth it. Creepy, eerie, and unsettling are three words that come to mind. Exactly what kind of drugs do you need to be on to dream this stuff up? Even so, I love it!
Author: aunt john
Traumafessions :: Reader David B. on Teenagers From Outer Space
I saw this movie in 1965 with my younger brother and sister when I was six years old. The movie starts with two astronomers in an observatory discussing a possible UFO sighting. We then see the flying saucer landing. A cute little dog that saw the saucer land runs up to it and starts barking at it. The top of the flying saucer opens and a helmeted alien with a ray gun pops out and Sparky, the cute little dog, gets zapped into a gruesome little dog skeleton that clatters to the ground. …Instant trauma!
I have never forgotten that moment, none of us kids said a word, all three of us just sat there in shock as the all too human looking alien took off his helmet and more aliens emerged from the saucer to examine poor little Sparky's skeletal remains. Later in the movie, one of the aliens goes into a small town and several people get skeletonized in a gun battle. My sister was five at the time and still remembers little Sparky getting zapped into skeleton bones. That movie is probably why my three-year-old little brother feared skeletons through most of his childhood.
Traumafessions :: Reader Taylor D. on The Twilight Zone (1985) eps. "Monsters!," "Need to Know," & "Gramma"
Some of my biggest T.V.-trauma moments from childhood were brought about by the 1985 version of THE TWILIGHT ZONE. I was seven when it started, old enough to know that I wanted to watch scary things, but too young to really handle more than Disney-fied frights (the SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES movie springs to mind as a safe favorite at that age) without nightmares.
Three stories from the series were particularly traumatic. I remember one scene from the episode called "Monsters!" making me run from the room while watching it with my parents and brother. Most of the episode was kind of sweet, about a kid (POLTERGEIST's OLIVER ROBINS) befriending a lonely old man in his neighborhood. It turns out that the old man is a vampire, and if he lives too long in one area, the humans around him turn into monsters that are out to kill him. The humans' transformations start out very mild with seemingly normal flu-like symptoms, so everyone just thinks there's a bug going around. Then one night the kid and his parents are all sick, coughing and sneezing, resting together in their living room…His dad has a really big sneeze that bloodies his nose and sends him collapsing to the ground where he, and then the mother also, suddenly start groaning and convulsing, finally changing all the way into monsters. That was all I could handle…I sprinted out of the room. The only other time in my life that I did that was a couple of years later when watching the chestburster scene in ALIEN.
Another was "Need to Know"…It's about WILLIAM PETERSEN and FRANCES McDORMAND trying to figure out why people in a small town are suddenly going crazy one by one. We find out that the source of it is one local man's discovery of the ultimate, true meaning of all life, and when you find out what it is, the implications of it instantly make you lose your mind. Of course the meaning of life is never shared with the audience, but several times we see someone who knows the secret whisper it into a sane person's ear for only a few seconds, and then sane person will start laughing or screaming maniacally, having been sent around the bend by the info. That was unforgettable and deeply chilling to me that something that only took a few seconds to say could be so monumentally important to everything that exists in the universe that the human mind couldn't handle knowing it. There were no "run from the room" moments in that one, but it's always stuck with me as psychologically terrifying.
But the biggest ‘80s TWILIGHT ZONE trauma for me was the STEPHEN KING adaptation "Gramma," starring the kid from THE NEVERENDING STORY (a.k.a. BARRETT OLIVER) as a kid named Georgie who is left at home one afternoon to look after his overweight, bedridden grandmother. He's already scared of her because she's old and gross, but gradually we learn that she practices Cthulhu witchcraft, and she's wants to take over Georgie's body since hers is dying. What really got to me was that you never see Gramma (maybe some at the end, I don't remember), you just get a sense of this hulking mass in the bed and you hear her deep, breathy voice calling for Georgie: "Georgie! Tea!" She eventually gets Georgie to come close enough to the bed that she can grab him, and as he's screaming it dissolves to later on. Georgie is sitting at the kitchen table and his mom comes home. He tells her that Gramma died while she was out, and the mom walks over and hugs him. She can't see it, but Georgie looks at the camera and he's got freaky cat eyes! I saw this one with my family while on my first ski trip, and "Georgie! Tea!" and the cat eyes are my two most vivid memories of the whole vacation.
Name That Trauma :: Reader Sophia D. on the Attack of Tiny Robots
This really scared me when I was little and I've never known what it was. It was the end, I think, of a movie I was watching on T.V.
There was a man and a woman, I think, trapped in this huge room with hundreds of tiny machines/robots who were crawling all over them and trying to kill them.
That's really all I can remember but I don't know if that's enough information.
There was a big metal structure in it too…can somebody help me?
UPDATE: NAME THAT TRAUMA SOLVED! Special thanks to Professor Von Whiskersen for nailing it with RUNAWAY!
Traumafessions :: Reader Balanisbuff1 on Curtains
Am I the only person in existence who was traumatized as a child by the mere COMMERCIALS for the '80s horror film CURTAINS?
I love a good horror movie, but even I couldn't watch this film until last year (now that I'm in my 30's). And it still scared me!
I could never get the image of the masked killer skating across the frozen lake in broad daylight out of my mind. It absolutely terrified me!!
::shudder::
Name That Trauma :: Reader Grokenstein on the Consequences of Playing Ball With Frankenstein's Monster
Hi!
Here's another Name That Trauma for the gang; Frankenstein fanatics shouldn't have much trouble with it.
I remember catching part of a Frankenstein movie on T.V. as a child (many, many moons ago) in which the Monster and one of Frankenstein's friends/assistants were bouncing a ball back and forth between them. The Monster becomes overwhelmed with joy, and hugs his new friend–unfortunately crushing him to death. It takes the Monster a few minutes, but he eventually realizes he has done A Bad Thing, and he decides to cover up his grave error by opening up a furnace and pushing the body inside.
It was a scary and depressing reminder that the "innocence of childhood"–and the Monster is very childlike and innocent at first–masks a cold-blooded instinct for self-preservation that does not mourn friends.
Hope someone can help me relive that moment!
Thanks in advance,
Grokenstein
Traumafessions :: Reader Turnidoff on Star Trek ep. "Operation: Annihilate!"
My Dad was a big STAR TREK fan so we always had it on in the house when I was a wee lad. The one episode that was forever burned into my mind was "Operation: Annihilate!" The crew set down on a planet that was inhabited by these flying pancake like parasites that would attach to your spine. They would stick to the walls and for some reason be immune to phazers.
As a kid who already was freaked out by leeches, this was a terrifying thought. Even if poorly executed, just the thought of one of those floating by and clinging to your back was traumatic.
Apparently, as we learn from Dr. McCoy, they would inject tissue into your back and some how "meld" with you so that if it was torn off, you'd be killed along with it.
Fortunately this paved the way for my first viewing of ALIEN to be almost something that was passé! Well, not really.
Traumafessions :: Reader Errico on Space 1999 ep. "Force of Life"
Another trauma of mine, although a minor one, was an episode of SPACE 1999. One might wonder what could be scary in a dated-looking 70's style family sci-fi series? Well, the episode "Force of Life" has an alien entity that feeds on "energy" taking the body of one of the characters. The man now "possessed" starts absorbing energy from lights and small plants just by touching them but soon grows greedier and the first human victims are found frozen, all the heat absorbed from their bodies.
Near the end the need for more energy forces the villain into the nuclear reactor in which he will literally burn becoming a slow moving black crispy monster with glowing creepy eyes. Well that was a pretty scary show for the audience (kids mostly), and for that time.
I can't call this a major trauma, it didn't leave permanent damages but it's something that stuck in my mind. As a matter of fact when I was a kid I dreamt of this black-burnt man with glowing eyes chasing me around like a zombie.
UNK SEZ: Thanks Errico, you can find more SPACE 1999 trauma HERE!