I don't really get too scared of fictional works as much, but yeah I agree with you. I do get scared of chase scenes in horror games and if I take my headphones off I can play it without being scared, but that also kind of beats the purpose of the experience. I think what's the most chilling experience I have with video games that left me not wanting to play another horror game again is Dark Deception, especially in chapter 2 where I hear the monster breathing down my neck. Talking about it just makes me wanna run to bed and stay cover under the blanket for a while.
Something that inspires dread and turn your own mind against you. Just plopped into a situation where it seems like something is going to happen, and you're waiting for that something to happen even though it never did–the paranoia slowly driving you to insanity. That terrifies me.
And I did watch Hereditary once. It shook me to my core. Never again will I watch that movie.
Wouldn't say it scares me, but body horror disturbs me. But not all body horror, mostly the kind of body horror, where someone's being turned into something else against their own will by any means. Bonus points to being disturbed if the process cannot be reversed.
I can't help but feel sorry for such characters. Especially if the end result is something like in "I have no mouth and I must scream" or "Made in the Abyss". Like even for the villain it's a bit too much of a punishment... xD
Also I guess it's more related to games than movies, but there's this specific type of jumpscare that just keeps on going. 99,99% of time it's just overdone regular jumpscare, where someone thinks loudness=scariness, but I've stumbled upon that 00,01% that actually scared me. Not because it was loud and "omg hyperrealistic blood and guts!!!!!1111", but like... Weird and cryptic. xD
- Creepy ambience
- Extreme body horror
- Dread and paranoia. Scenes where it seems like something bad/terrifying/shocking is going to happen without anything necessarily happening, always keeping you on edge. Like what @wispysing said. They always get my heart racing.
- Claustrophobic environments.
@simonitropunk I love the T1000, Robert Patrick does an amazing job in that movie. I think that touches on a great group of frightening antagonists, too. Terminator, The Thing, the monster from It Follows...
They don't stop, and they cannot be reasoned with. Their thinking process may even be completely alien and incomprehensible... but unlike a simple natural disaster or animal, it's clear that they do have a goal: you. There's something uniquely horrific and personal about that.
"A survivor... unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality." Exactly what you don't want chasing you around in the dark...
I think the best horror is ones that even just slightly bend expectations of reality. Often though, I find the more relatable the horror the better. Akin to @NickRowler paranormal creatures inherently isn't scary for me, though if executed well it can be great. I would possibly say the only exception to that would be the game anatomy maybe because of the unbearable expectation that there has to be some physical entity behind the lingering uneasiness.
That being said, I think the scariest pieces of media I can think of are the movies 'Midsommar' and 'District 9' not necessarily because of themselves but their created hyper-realities. they both arguably are effective and turning the audience into the victim and oppressor respectively.
Mild spoilers:
For Midsommar the scary part is how prevalent the idea was that the movie had a happy ending displaying how easily audiences bought into the cultish behavior that had brainwashed the protagonist clearly displaying the ease in which our minds are influenced.
The horror of District-9 comes often on a second viewing particularly in the popcorn scene of burning the aliens' houses. Most everyone I know (including) myself who have seen the movie finds the scene extremely uncomfortable upon rewatch because of how much they're reminded how easily they took part in the (speciest?) racist trap in the beginning.
Then there is the story the double by Fyodor Dostoevsky. A story I saw too much of myself in I swear it's convinced me that one day I will be replaced by a doppelganger that I see in my waking dreams. (A fear that actually inspired the first short of my series on Tapas)
I know it's not really conventional horror, but I think there is something to this kind of simulacra horror.
I've watched quite a bit of horror movies in college so little really takes me for a spin anymore, but for some reason Tusk really creeps me out more than most infamously "disturbing" movies. I legit got disturbed at the trailer even after watching other comparatively "worse" horror movies- just the body horror, and the horror of him even losing the ability to speak really gets to me.
I usually do prefer paranormal/supernatural stuff though, Tusk is the exception as usually I don't really feel that much fear for non-supernatural threats . . . plus, when it's more realistic sometimes it just makes me very sad LOL.
LAWD that scene in Hreditairy shook me too. Like that despair was palpable and I just felt bad all over. In recent years, that was the scariest movie I had seen. Mainstream horror these days, to me, is to uh clean...er that's not the right word. Smooth....digital? Yeah. The things that scared me the most growing up was honestly just how freaky practical effects and costumes could be with the proper lighting and good acting, So my fav horrors were from the 80s & 90s.
Hmnn, personal scares... Anything that causes a body to look melted but still be alive and it's/they are in agony and you can tell. Freaks me the F* out.
Another thing that gets me is being touched by something you can't see. So like I played Death Stranding a few years back, the amount of heart racing -palpitating-screaming I did had my nerves on edge while playing. At first anyway, but there is only so much fear one person can take and so halfway through the game I just started getting mad at ghost hand feet people grabbing Sam and started slicing all the umbilical cords. like even going out of my way to do it bc I was fed up about my packages getting wrecked :V.
Jumpscares actually give me a feeling of great relief hahaha :')
I really loathe the buildup of tension and anxiety that comes beforehand, knowing something's going to happen but not knowing when. Better that the thing shows itself so the protag can start running or fighting. Action is better than helpless waiting.
Otherwise, I'm the person in my family known for being unfazed by horror, but there are a few things in fiction that scare me.
Chase scenes are my most frequent nightmare. I hate the feeling of restless anxiety, having to be constantly wary, knowing I can't hide because it will always find me. These dreams usually end when I allow myself to be caught or stand and fight, because it's better than the anxiety of trying desperately to escape.. I hate this in video games. ;-;
Abduction scares me in movies because it's a real fear. Used to have tons of recurring nightmares of people grabbing one of my little siblings in a public place and running off. I'm never fast enough to stop it.
Sexual abuse was always really deeply and uniquely disturbing to me. I'm mostly desensitized to it now, but even a slight, subtle implication of it happening in fiction was enough to give me nightmares when I was younger.
More abstractly, the concept of losing your grip on reality and not being able to trust your own senses is also terrifying.
For example.. the protagonist sees people as devils leering at him before his vision clears, showing that they're just normal people, giving him odd or concerned looks. Or, protag sees blood pouring from the faucets and showerhead and smells it on his skin. Hallucinations and insanity scare me because they cast everything into doubt and nothing can be trusted.
Yes! That film had me feeling anxious the whole way through, GOD. It was incredibly good, but not something I'd rewatch anytime soon since it is not easy to watch tbh. You just felt the misery of the characters, it really stuck with me.
And yeah, modern horror doesn't scare me that much. Usually if I find the premise interesting, I will watch it out of curiosity, I'm not usually looking to be scared. I veer much more to psychological horror because I find it so interesting, especially when it reveals a lot about people and our world.
With horror games, I just can't play them because they make me too anxious! I'd rather watch someone else play it and laugh at their reactions (especially fun when working on comic stuff!)