ONTD

2:17 pm - 01/05/2012

The Reelist: Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror


Don’t Go In The Woods is the new "Slasher Musical" directed by Vincent D’Onofrio. The film follows the members of a sensitive pop/rock band desperate to write some new songs as they head into the woods sans cell phones to have a couple of nights with no distractions. When their girlfriends/groupies show up to party, the evening and subsequent morning take a terrifying turn for the worst. In celebration of Don’t Go In The Woods, we proudly present an expanded Reelist of ten great pop music moments in horror (with an honorable mention, of course).



Honorable Mention: 


Blue Velvet (1986)
Song: In Dreams by Roy Orbison 

David Lynch’s Blue Velvet is not technically a horror movie, but it contains what is arguably the most unsettling lip-syncing sequence in film history. Dennis Hopper plays Frank Booth, a unhinged, sadistic gangster who must possess troubled chanteuse Dorothy Vallens (the alluring Isabella Rossellini). When Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan) attempts to save her, Frank takes them both on the joy ride of their life. After a night of torture, Frank and his associates eventually take the unfortunate pair to the apartment of his colleague Ben (a fabulous Dean Stockwell). Frank, obsessed with Roy Orbison’s “candy colored clown,” compels Ben to lip-synch to In Dreams using a fluorescent light as a microphone.  His face hauntingly illuminated, Stockwell delivers an eerily beautiful take on the Orbison classic that lingers in one’s memory long after the film itself fades away.


Now, onto our picks for ten great pop music moments in horror: 


Death Proof (2007)
Song: Hold Tight by Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich

Quentin Tarantino, known for making long forgotten songs of the past culturally relevant again, can pick a soundtrack. In Death Proof, he chooses to immortalize Hold Tight in the climax of the first half of the film. The scene follows directly after the girls leave the bar from Arlene’s (a pillow-lipped Vanessa Ferlito) party. As the girls settle in for a long car ride to their lake house, they are tipsy and happy, content to dance along to the music. The song itself is a warning as they speed unknowingly towards Stuntman Mike’s 1970 Chevy Nova. The split seconds you are allowed with the girls at they see the crash coming is gut wrenching, especially Arlene’s closed eye acceptance of impending death. After the crash, Tarantino daringly chooses to essentially start his movie over again. While Death Proof is more of a thrill ride than anything, Hold Tight is no doubt a masterful moment in the Tarantino’s film lexicon.  


Phantom of the Paradise (1974)
Song: Life at Last by Ray Kennedy (as performed by Gerrit Graham)

Brian De Palma’s little-seen cult classic Phantom of the Paradise was tragically was ignored in the wake of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. More of a concert film than a musical, Phantom of the Paradise is a rock version of Faust with a little bit of a wacked-out Phantom of the Opera thrown in for good measure. For the pop music moment, Beef (Gerrit Graham, in a fantastic lip-synch performance), the embodiment of evil, owns the stage as he sings, “Do you realize that all of you donated something horrible you hated that’s a part of you? I’m your nightmare coming true!” The audience squirms with anticipation as they watch the Phantom (William Finley) prepare to kill Beef with an electric lighting bolt straight to the heart during his glam-rock musical number. De Palma delivers a dynamic sequence filled with thrills and chills with the song punctuated by the Phantom’s mechanical laugh.


From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)
Song: After Dark by Tito & Tarantula

From Dusk Till Dawn, the first full-length collaboration between Robert Rodriquez and Quentin Tarantino, features two criminals on the run (Tarantino and George Clooney) who kidnap a family (including Harvey Keitel and Juliette Lewis) to help them cross the Mexican border. When the crooks and crew go to meet their contact at the Titty Twister bar, the whole gang settles down for a nightcap. No one is prepared for the appearance of Satanico Pandemonium (Salma Hayek) and the snake that adorns her neck. She seduces the crowd with her feminine wiles, turning Tarantino into her dog and making him worship at her feet (literally!), all to the tune of After Dark, the perfect song to accompany her sensual dance. With glowing red lights, fire pits, and dark, moody lighting, Rodriquez masterfully uses this song to set up the entrance of thirsty vampires and the film’s second act.  


The House of The Devil (2009)
Song: One Thing Leads to Another by The Fixx

God Bless Ti West. This budding auteur successfully created one of the most memorable sequences in modern horror using the long-forgotten Fixx song One Thing Leads to Another. West’s homage to 80s horror, The House of The Devil, follows nice girl Samantha (Jocelin Donahue) who responds to a shady babysitter ad because she is struggling to make the rent on a new apartment. When Samanatha arrives for the babysitting job, her potential employer (Tom Noonan, ladies and gentlemen) informs her that there is no child to watch, just his elderly mother-in-law. Samantha settles in for the night, knowing that something awful is going to happen. A series of tension-filled bumps in the night and creepy happenings culminate in Samantha dancing to One Thing Leads to Another as it blares from her Walkman as she literally tries to dance her fears away. Honestly, should she really be all that surprised when a cult of devil worshipers tries to abduct her? The House of the Devil is an atmospheric return to 80s horror cinema — when the heroine’s hair was feathered, the suspense was real, and the kills were gory.


Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)
Song: No One Lives Forever by Oingo Boingo

Featuring performances from Dennis Hopper, Caroline Williams and the great Bill Moseley, Tobe Hooper’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 is a worthy follow-up to its vaunted predecessor. Though decidedly more campy than the terrifying first installment, TCM 2 also offers insane, frightening sequences and moves like a freight train. Did I mention it’s gruesome too? In one sequence, two joy riding punks on the phone to a radio station have the misfortune of running into Leatherface on top of a moving vehicle. Stretch, a long-legged radio DJ, is forced to listen in terror as her two callers are sliced up by Leatherface as the song No One Lives Forever plays in the background. Later, when told by the police to play the recording, Stretch soon becomes the prey of America’s favorite cannibal family. Tobe Hooper couldn’t have picked a more fitting number.


The Devil's Rejects (2005)
Song: Free Bird by Lynyrd Skynyrd

While Rob Zombie, the former musician, has directed such films as Halloween, Halloween II and House of 1000 Corpses, his most acclaimed film to date is The Devil's Rejects. Like House of 1000 Corpses, this film follows the members of the Firefly family, Captain Spaulding (Sid Haig), Otis (Bill Moseley) and Baby (Sheri Moon Zombie), as they flee the police, brutally killing anyone they encounter. Pursued by an equally bloodthirsty band of sheriffs and bounty hunters led by William Forsythe, the Firefly clan, shot up and bloodied, finally makes a break for it on a seemingly open road with the famous Lynyrd Skynyrd anthem blaring, only to meet up with a roadblock.  The Devil's Rejects ends like a twisted version of Bonnie & Clyde, ensuring its everlasting place in the realm of horror.
 


The Hunger (1983)
Song: Bela Lugosi is Dead by Bauhaus

Tony Scott’s directorial debut, The Hunger, has possibly the coolest opening in cinema. Vampire Miriam (Catherine Deneuve) and her companion, John (David Bowie), are in pursuit of hot-blooded meal. The creepy black and white credits are cut together with the strangely beautiful Bauhaus as he performs in an iron cage, with the flashing club lights behind him. The audience never gets a clear view of Miriam and John, who are obscured by the shadows, as they stalk their prey, another glam-rock couple. The film gets off to an evocative and stylistic start before John begins to age rapidly (oh, the catch of being a vampire’s companion!) and Miriam sets her sights on Susan Sarandon. Since its release, The Hunger has amassed an impressive cult following, thanks to the actors’ performances, the film’s dark, glamorous atmosphere and its haunting soundtrack.


Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Song: Don’t Stop Me Now by Queen

Directed by Edgar Wright, Shaun of the Dead is the beloved horror comedy hybrid that launched the international careers of Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost (all already well-known in the UK). Shaun (Pegg) is a lovable slacker who flees from zombies with his best friend, Ed (Frost). Scrambling to save Shaun’s mom, girlfriend and friends from the living dead, the group seeks shelter in Shaun’s favorite pub, The Winchester, where a zombified local barkeeper attacks them. As the jukebox plays Don’t Stop Me Now, a rhythmic battle ensues between the gang and the zombie, with pool cues and darts serving as weapons. The scene offers a weird moment of levity before the film transitions from comedy into straight horror. 


Near Dark (1987)
Songs: Naughty Naughty by John Parr, Morse Code by Jools Holland, Fever by The Cramps, The Cowboy Rides Away by George Strait

Not one, but four songs are featured in a memorable scene from Near Dark, the first film directed by Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelow. Now a genre classic, Near Dark follows a group of vampires (Lance Henrikson, Bill Paxton, Jenny Wright et al) who want to induct Caleb (Adrian Pasdar) into their clan. The group takes Caleb to a seedy bar in the middle of nowhere, and as they emerge from the mist with mayhem in mind, Naughty Naughty plays in the background. The music switches to Morse Code as the bar patrons begin to sense impending doom, and finally, to Fever when the vampires being to really feast. At the end of this sequence, Mae (Wright) dances when the last man standing (a young James LeGros) to George Strait’s The Cowboy Rides Away to prepare him for Caleb’s initiation. Bigelow’s use of music is integral to the impact of this ten-minute sequence—no surprise that she went have an acclaimed career.


An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Song: Blue Moon by Sam Cooke

Beware the Moon! John Landis’s masterwork, An American Werewolf in London, tells the tale of two American tourists, David and Jack (David Naughton, Griffin Dunne), who are attacked by a werewolf.  Jack is killed and David lives, at first unaware of the fearsome creature he is about to become. An American Werewolf in London is noted for its soundtrack featuring only songs about the moon. Van Morrison’s Moondance and Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Bad Moon Rising play at different times during the film, but it is the three different versions of Blue Moon that stand out. Sam Cooke performs the song as a slow ballad, and his smooth and lilting voice is heard during the film’s most gruesome scene and Rick Baker's crowning achievement in makeup—David’s first transformation into a werewolf—which is made even more unnerving by the beautiful pop standard that contrasts with the horror on the screen.  


SOURCE: Tribeca Film
violue 5th-Jan-2012 07:16 pm (UTC)
What a random concept for a list.
brucelynn 5th-Jan-2012 07:17 pm (UTC)
Queen of The Damned was a bad movie but that song that played when Akasha walked into the club was perfection.
natvach 5th-Jan-2012 07:39 pm (UTC)
"System"? That song is AWESOME.
iluvkidnappers 5th-Jan-2012 09:22 pm (UTC)
IA TBH
brenden 5th-Jan-2012 07:18 pm (UTC)
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror
Ten Great Pop Music Moments in Horror


irl lol these lists
isntdaveone 5th-Jan-2012 07:20 pm (UTC)
pixiesilver 5th-Jan-2012 07:22 pm (UTC)
Dont go in the woods


that guy needs to be killed for his bad singing ,and ugly face
phillymademe 5th-Jan-2012 07:23 pm (UTC)
lol this list.

i don't think i've ever paid attention to what song was playing during a particular horror scene.

Edited at 2012-01-05 07:25 pm (UTC)
elementalranger 5th-Jan-2012 07:25 pm (UTC)
the second half of death proof is so great, I'm just mad that you have to go through the super boring first half to get to it

also, what a weird concept for a list
scriptedending 5th-Jan-2012 07:26 pm (UTC)
OMG, loooove that song/scene in Death Proof.
kstew 5th-Jan-2012 07:26 pm (UTC)
wat
xtear_drop 5th-Jan-2012 07:29 pm (UTC)
I remember a few years ago when I was a junior in high school and I watched Phantom of the Paradise on TV at my friend's house at like 1 in the morning. IT FREAKED ME OUT.

Edited at 2012-01-05 07:30 pm (UTC)
dedebee 5th-Jan-2012 07:29 pm (UTC)
Don't forget this brilliant song from "A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master."


Clip from the movie (won't embed):
http://youtu.be/hqTS1JDUjDo
ukesenshi 5th-Jan-2012 07:47 pm (UTC)
The Nightmare series has a lot of good examples for this list, actually.

Both of the Dokken songs in III.

Anything, Anything in IV.

I'm sure there are others ... like I think there is some catchy song playing when roach girl gets it in IV but I can't remember right now.
dedebee 5th-Jan-2012 07:53 pm (UTC)
I think this is the song you're talking about.


Part 4 has the perfect use of music throughout the whole film tbh.
ukesenshi 5th-Jan-2012 07:59 pm (UTC)
Haha yes, that's it!

III and IV have a special place in my heart. Growing up IV was the only one my Dad had recorded on VHS and I wore that shit out, so it's the most familiar to me. And my uncle had III plus it was tied in to the great NES game, and I loved the songs in that too / the powers in the dreams etc.

I'd say III into IV, since they flow so well together (though I wish Patricia came back for IV) are probably my favorite two films in the series.

But yeah, IV had the best music. I still get so pumped up when Anything, Anything plays (both when Alice's brother is doing his karate, and when it plays again during her powers montage).

Urgh such a good movie, and so 80's. /fanboy
dedebee 5th-Jan-2012 08:15 pm (UTC)
I had 3 & 4 on VHS too! They were tape to tape bootlegs also, so the quality was super-shitty but I didn't even care, I still watched the heck out of them.

I wish that they got Patricia back for 4 also, but I'm kind of glad they didn't because I think I would have even been more devastated when Kristen died.

Part 4 might not be the best of the series, but it's my favorite for all the reasons you listed. I think it had the best characters of all of them and it's such a great 80s movie. I'm so glad someone else can appreciate it as well!
ukesenshi 5th-Jan-2012 08:17 pm (UTC)
♥ It's always fun running into people online and finding out your favorite films from childhood got love elsewhere too.
squirrels_oh_no 5th-Jan-2012 07:32 pm (UTC)
I can't watch Near Dark anymore because I always expect an alien to show up and for them to all whip out guns and go on a bug hunt and for Newt to show up.
lucky_latkes 5th-Jan-2012 07:35 pm (UTC)
I fucking HATE free bird
sandvich 5th-Jan-2012 07:36 pm (UTC)
I knew Tarantino's foot fetish wasn't a secret, but, uh. Wow.
suspiriorum 5th-Jan-2012 07:41 pm (UTC)
I find it oddly fascinating. He utilizes bare feet much like other directors utilize nudity.
expromqueen 5th-Jan-2012 07:37 pm (UTC)
reservoir dogs is not a horror movie, but the scene of michael madsen torturing the cop goes to show how a good song choice can make a horribly awesome scene even more awesome
insane_sweetie 5th-Jan-2012 07:38 pm (UTC)
Hip to Be Square in American Psycho.
stuckmodebabe 5th-Jan-2012 08:04 pm (UTC)
I showed that clip for my final presentation in my cinema class and the majority of people were horrified.
suspiriorum 5th-Jan-2012 07:38 pm (UTC)
I love the bar scene in Near Dark so much and Ben's lip-synching to In Dreams in Blue Velvet is perfection.
champagnexdream 5th-Jan-2012 07:42 pm (UTC)
I love Tarantino, but I still don't know how I feel about Death Proof.
quizblorg 5th-Jan-2012 07:49 pm (UTC)
I think it's a masterpiece, if only for the completely original structure.
champagnexdream 5th-Jan-2012 07:51 pm (UTC)
I can appreciate that. :o) I keep forgetting that the two parts are the same movie.
champagnexdream 5th-Jan-2012 08:44 pm (UTC)
Lol no. It's from a Fuel song. I've had it since 2002, CUT ME SOME SLACK OK.
champagnexdream 5th-Jan-2012 08:56 pm (UTC)
Bahahaha.
quizblorg 5th-Jan-2012 07:48 pm (UTC)
"Phantom of the Paradise" is one of my favourite films of all time.

klmnumbers 5th-Jan-2012 08:12 pm (UTC)
Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Song: Don’t Stop Me Now by Queen

YES FOREVER. One of the funniest moments in that film.
friedgold_x 5th-Jan-2012 08:16 pm (UTC)
Yes Shaun Of The Dead! One of my favourite songs and favourite films. Cannot think of anything but hitting zombies with pool cues whenever I hear Don't Stop Me Now.
greenfairy_87 5th-Jan-2012 08:26 pm (UTC)
Not really pop, but I loved the scene in Trick R Treat when Marilyn Manson's cover of "Sweet Dreams" is played over the werewolf orgy.
clairelittleton 5th-Jan-2012 11:42 pm (UTC)
yess love that too.
platinum_demise 5th-Jan-2012 08:28 pm (UTC)
This list... I guesssss. Near Dark and The Hunger are two of my favorite films though!
spydergamez 5th-Jan-2012 08:37 pm (UTC)
Muse "Newborn" during the car chase in High Tension p.s.
bresson 5th-Jan-2012 08:41 pm (UTC)
yes!!!!!!! and the scene when they sing to Sara Perche Ti Amo while driving down the highway tbh
bresson 5th-Jan-2012 08:40 pm (UTC)
okay though really In Dreams is some of the best use of music in a movie ever
stickykeys633 Love this movie despite it's terribleness5th-Jan-2012 08:44 pm (UTC)
Flagpole Sitta - Harvey Danger, classic.





Edited at 2012-01-05 08:45 pm (UTC)
clairelittleton Re: Love this movie despite it's terribleness5th-Jan-2012 11:45 pm (UTC)
lol i didn't think it was terrible :( i loved this movie idec.
mis__shape 5th-Jan-2012 09:12 pm (UTC)
The Hunger's opening sequence is seriously one of the sexiest things I've ever seen. And then the rest of the movie happened.
reach_the_end 5th-Jan-2012 09:47 pm (UTC)
I liked "How We Operate" by Gomez in The Hitcher. And I liked their use of "Closer" in The Hitcher as well.

The Devil's Rejects sucked ass because no one in it can act.
blackwidow 5th-Jan-2012 10:02 pm (UTC)
I agree so hard with Free Bird on The Devil's Rejects. That part is so great, I get chills every time I watch it.

Don't Stop Me Now in Shaun of the Dead I agree with as well. I die of laughter every single time I watch it.
cincopasos we need more of5th-Jan-2012 10:59 pm (UTC)
krisgonn 6th-Jan-2012 01:21 am (UTC)
LOL at the first preview,

"we said no phones" so they smash them with an axe! I would kill that bitch myself if he did that to my phone.
prophecypro 6th-Jan-2012 06:41 am (UTC)
American Werewofl in London is kind of hilarious
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