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#the killer nun 1979
saturnidaes · 7 months
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The Killer Nun (1979)
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painiac · 6 months
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memoriastoica · 2 years
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Killer Nun (1979)
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letterboxd-loggd · 2 years
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Killer Nun (Suor Omicidi) (The Killer Nun) (1979) Giulio Berruti
August 7th 2022
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volfoss · 1 year
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it is always so scary to be like omg old horror movie w lgbt themes in the description and then have to wait to see how scary the horrors of that being handled are
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On January 30, 1980 Killer Nun debuted to a limited release in France.
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Killer Nun (1979)
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Stats from Movies 701-800
Top 10 Movies - Highest Number of Votes
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Ringu (1998) had the most votes with 1,327 votes. Chillerama (2011) had the least votes with 360 votes.
The 10 Most Watched Films by Percentage
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Beetlejuice (1988) was the most watched film with 80.9% of voters out of 780 saying they had seen it. Demonic Christmas Tree (2022) had the least "Yes" votes with 0.4% of voters out of 491.
The 10 Least Watched Films by Percentage
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The Nun 2 (2023) was the least watched film with 70.6% of voters out of 633 saying they hadn’t seen it. Demonic Christmas Tree (2022) had the least "No" votes with 9.2% of voters out of 491.
The 10 Most Known Films by Percentage
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Beetlejuice (1988) was the best known film, only 0.4% of voters out of 780 saying they’d never heard of it.
The 10 Least Known Films by Percentage
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Demonic Christmas Tree (2022) was the least known film, 90,4% of voters out of 491 saying they’d never heard of it.
The movies part of the statistic count and their polls below the cut.
The Uninvited (1944) The Crazies (1973) Witchfinder General (1968) The Conspiracy (2012) When a Stranger Calls (1979) The Evictors (1979) The Birds (1963) Ice Spiders (2007) Rubber (2010) Eyes of Laura Mars (1978)
Daughters of Darkness (1971) Akira (1988) The End of Evangelion (1997) The Woman in Black (2012) Milfs vs. Zombies (2015) Knife + Heart (2018) It's a Wonderful Knife (2023) Attachment (2022) Gothic (1986) Jakob's Wife (2021)
Stranger by the Lake (2013) The Fog (2005) The Greasy Strangler (2016) Angel Heart (1987) Tumbbad (2018) The Snow Woman (1968) Sugar Hill (1974) Saloum (2021) WNUF Halloween Special (2013)
Sound of Violence (2021) Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) The Haunting of Molly Hartley (2008) Death Laid an Egg (1968) Baskin (2015) The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh (2012) The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967) The Haunting of Julia (1977) The House That Dripped Blood (1971) Megan Is Missing (2011)
Ringu (1998) Three... Extremes (2004) Trench 11 (2017) Out There Halloween Mega Tape (2022) Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986) The Driller Killer (1979) Berberian Sound Studio (2012) One Cut of the Dead (2017) Demonic Christmas Tree (2022) Butcher, Baker, Nightmare Maker (1981)
Urban Legends: Bloody Mary (2005) Motel Hell (1980) Shallow Ground (2004) Annabelle: Creation (2017) Annabelle Comes Home (2019) The Conjuring 2 (2016) The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021) Morgan (2016) Sputnik (2020) Devil's Pass (2013)
Dracula's Daughter (1936) Dagon (2001) We Are Still Here (2015) We Are What We Are (2013) Somos lo que hay (2010) The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988) Midori (1992) The Believers (1987) Troll 2 (1990) Chillerama (2011)
The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976) The Mortuary Collection (2019) The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (1976) The Pit and the Pendulum (1991) House (1985) Flatliners (1990) The Town That Dreaded Sundown (2014) Crimson Peak (2015) Frailty (2001) Hell Night (1981)
Eyes of Fire (1983) Sister Death (2023) Tonight She Comes (2016) Bad Dreams (1988) Dead Snow (2009) Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead (2014) Veronica (2017) The Nun II (2023) Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001) Maniac (1980)
Man's Best Friend (1993) M.O.M. Mothers of Monsters (2020) The Reptile (1966) She Creature (2001) Beetlejuice (1988) The Incredible Melting Man (1977) Kandisha (2020) So Vam (2021) Bit (2019) Death Proof (2007)
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bitter69uk · 4 months
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Died on this day: voluptuous mid-20th century actress and pin-up Anita Ekberg (29 September 1931 - 11 January 2015). In the fifties, the statuesque Swedish sex goddess reigned alongside peers Mamie Van Doren, Jayne Mansfield and Diana Dors as one of atomic-era Hollywood’s preeminent glamour queens. By the early sixties, Ekberg was triumphing in Europe, splashing in the Trevi fountain alongside Marcello Mastroianni in Federico Fellini’s visionary masterpieces La Dolce Vita (1960) and later Boccaccio ’70 (1962). (Fellini was perhaps the only director who knew how to properly utilize her charms). But as a connoisseur of cinematic perversity, I love Ekberg at her gloriously wooden best in the serial killer shocker Screaming Mimi (1958) and later bargain basement Eurotrash horror movies Fangs of the Living Dead (1969) and Killer Nun (1979). (I still haven’t seen the promising-sounding The French Sex Murders (1972)). Even in these indignities, as author Sam Staggs puts it, Ekberg “can steal any scene just by standing still.” In 1999 the BBC made a documentary about Ekberg, capturing her craggy temperamental monstre sacré later years. She clearly relished trashing her erstwhile rivals. (Asked about Sophia Loren, she replies, “Who is that?” On Brigitte Bardot: “she was pretty. You can’t say beautiful. She was – how you say? – very “Barbie.””). After gossip columnist extraordinaire Michael Musto experienced the brunt of her diva’s wrath in 1999, he rechristened her “Anita Yecch-berg.” Still, you can’t help but love her – Anita Ekberg made the world a more glamorous place.
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saturnidaes · 7 months
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Paola Morra as Sister Mathieu (1979)
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ronnymerchant · 11 months
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Anita Ekberg
Among her genre films-
. ABBOTT AND COSTELLO GO TO MARS (1953)
. LA DOLCE VITA (1960)
. the MONGOLS (1961)
. BOCCACCIO '70 (1962)
. the ALPHABET MURDERS (1965)
. FANGS OF THE LIVING DEAD (1969)
. the KILLER NUN (1979)
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Duck's Halloween Movie Picks!
I love Halloween and spooky season in general. So here's my list of many, many (but not all) horror movies to watch this October!
🧠 Zombies 🧠
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Sometimes dead is better.
Night of the Living Dead (1968) & (1990)
Return of the Living Dead (1985)
Diary of the Dead (2007)
Dawn of the Dead (2004)
Overlord (2018)
Pet Semetary (1989)
Dead Snow (2009)
Dead Alive (1992)
#alive (2020)
Train to Busan (2016)
Little Monsters (2019)
Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse (2015)
Zombie (1979)
Wonderfully Witchy
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It isn't Halloween without a witch.
The Witch (2015)
The Craft (1996)
Practical Magic (not a horror movie but I don't care, I love it) (1998)
Hocus Pocus (a true classic) (1993)
The Blair Witch Project (1999)
Don't Knock Twice (2016)
Drag Me To Hell (2009)
Ghastly Ghouls
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Ghosts, Demons, and Poltergeists oh my!
Includes but is not limited to: haunted houses and/or people, demons, cursed objects, beings from other dimensions, etc.
The Exorcist (1973)
Insidious (2010)
The Conjuring (2013)
The Nun (2018)
Poltergeist (1982)
Verónica (2017)
Hellraiser (1987) & (2022)
Candyman (1992) & (2021)
Thir13en Ghosts (2001)
The Shining (1980)
Evil Dead (1981)
The Fog (1980)
Paranormal Activity (2007)
House on Haunted Hill (1959) & (1999)
The Frighteners (1996)
House (1985)
Hell House LLC (2015)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Gonjian: Haunted Asylum (2018)
Possession (1981)
Carnival of Souls (1962)
Ringu (1998)
The Entity (1982)
Vicious Vampires
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Because they're bloody sexy.
Nosferatu (1922)
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1999) plus all the other million dracula movies
Interview with a Vampire (1994)
30 Days of Night (2007)
Boys From County Hell (2020)
Underworld (2003)
Bloodsucking Bastards (2015)
Near Dark (1988)
Salems Lot (1979)
From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)
Fright Night (1985) & (2011)
Stakeland (2010)
The Black Water Vampire (2014)
Werewolves
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Fluffy and vicious, the perfect combo.
Dog Soldiers (2002)
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Night of the Wolf: Late Phases (2014)
Ginger Snaps (2001)
The Wolf Man (1941) & (2010)
The Company of Wolves (1984)
Cursed (2005)
The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020)
Howl (2015)
The Howling (1981)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Wer (2014)
Bad Moon (1996)
The Beast Must Die (1974)
Miscellaneous Monsters
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All monsters need love, not just the classics.
The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
The Mummy (1999)
Frankenstein
Wishmaster (1997)
Eight Legged Freaks (2002)
Feast (2007)
IT (1990) & (2017)
The Descent (2005)
Jaws (1975)
Jeepers Creepers 1 + 2 (2001) & (2003)
Horror Express (1972)
Cold Ground (2017)
Devil's Pass (2013)
The Ruins (2008)
Cabin in the Woods (2011)
The Monster Squad (1987)
Under Wraps (1997)
The Babadook (2014)
Slashers
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Because people are scary too.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
Friday the 13th (1980)
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Halloween (1978)
The Collector (2009)
House of Wax (2005)
The Strangers (2008)
The Crazies (1973) & (2010)
SAW (2004)
Scream (1996)
The Hills Have Eyes (1977) & (2006)
The Burning (1981)
The People Under The Stairs (1991)
Sleepaway Camp (1983)
Slumber Party Massacre (1982)
Terror Train (1980)
Stage Fright (2014)
You Might Be The Killer (2018)
The Toolbox Murders (1978)
Hell Fest (2018)
Revenge (2018)
The Invitation (2016)
Audition (1999)
It Came From Space!
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As if space isn't scary enough on it's own.
Includes: anything sci-fi related, not just space stuff.
The Thing (1982)
Alien (1979)
Predator (1987)
AVP: Alien vs. Predator (2004)
Event Horizon (1997)
DOOM (2005)
Monsters (2010)
Re-Animator (1985)
Bride of Re-Animator (1990)
Pandorum (2009)
Chopping Mall (1986)
The McPherson Tape (1989)
Extraterrestrial (2014)
Always Anthology
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The more the scarier!
Creepshow (1982)
Creepshow 2 (1987)
Tales from the Hood (1995)
V/H/S (2012)
V/H/S: 2 (2013)
V/H/S: 94 (2021)
V/H/S: 99 (2022)
Body Bags (1993)
Asylum (1972)
Trick 'r Treat (2015)
All Hallows' Eve (2019)
Holiday Specials
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We can't leave out these holidays during spooky season!
My Bloody Valentine (1981) & (2009)
Prom Night (1980)
April Fool's Day (1986)
Black Christmas (1974)
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fettesans · 6 months
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Top, screen capture from Killer Nun (Suor Omicidi), directed by Giulio Berruti, 1979. Bottom, Xandra Ibarra, Free To Those Who Deserve It (series), 2020, silicone, jewelry, syringe needles, clarinet ligature, tent stake, vise, pigment, dimensions variable. Via.
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There was a time when irony was supposed to have died—when Americans, frightened and weary, worried that the world had robbed them of their constitutional right to laughter. They needn’t have fretted: Irony—satire—political discourse that operates through the productive hedge of the joke—have not only evaded death in past decades; they have, instead, been enjoying a renaissance. Jokes have informed many prominent, though certainly not all, political protests; they have also, more broadly, come to shape the way people understand the world around them. Many Americans get their news filtered through late-night comedy and their outrages filtered through Saturday Night Live. They—we—turn to memes to express both indignation and joy. Jokes, in other words, with their charms and their appealing self-effacement and their plausible deniability (just kidding!), are helping people to do the messy work of democracy: to engage, to argue, and, every once in a while, to launch a successful bid for the presidency of the United States.
Scrolling through Instagram to see the pictures from the March for Science, I marveled at the protest’s display of teasing American wit. (“Remember polio? No? Thanks, science!”) And then I thought of Neil Postman, the professor and the critic and the man who, via his 1985 book Amusing Ourselves to Death, argued preemptively against all this change-via-chuckle. Postman wasn’t, as his book’s title might suggest, a humorless scold in the classic way—Amusing Ourselves to Death is, as polemics go, darkly funny—but he was deeply suspicious of jokes themselves, especially when they come with an agenda. (...)
Postman today is best remembered as a critic of television: That’s the medium he directly blamed, in Amusing Ourselves to Death, for what he termed Americans’ “vast descent into triviality,” and the technology he saw as both the cause and the outcome of a culture that privileged entertainment above all else. But Postman was a critic of more than TV alone. He mistrusted entertainment, not as a situation but as a political tool; he worried that Americans’ great capacity for distraction had compromised their ability to think, and to want, for themselves. He resented the tyranny of the lol. His great observation, and his great warning, was a newly relevant kind of bummer: There are dangers that can come with having too much fun. (...)
Postman was a postmodernist who was uniquely suspicious of postmodern thought, and he worried, as Daniel Boorstin had before him, that our images had come unmoored from our fuller realities—and that people, being tied to them, were similarly adrift. He saw a world in which Americans were made pliant and complacent because of their cravings for distraction. He knew that despots often used amusement to soften and systematize their seizings of power. He worried that television—an environment where facts and fictions swirl in the same space, cheerfully disconnected from the world’s real and hard truths—would beget a world in which truth itself was destabilized. “In a print culture,” he argued, “writers make mistakes when they lie, contradict themselves, fail to support their generalizations, try to enforce illogical connections. In a print culture, readers make mistakes when they don’t notice, or even worse, don’t care.”
Megan Garber, from Are We Having Too Much Fun?, for The Atlantic, April 27, 2017.
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schlock-luster-video · 11 months
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On May 31, 1982, Killer Nun debuted in West Germany.
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avnj0gia · 1 year
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Paola Morra in Killer Nun (1979)  
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