There are horror movies we watch just because theyâre gruesome. Films like Hostel, Saw, or even titles like Cannibal Holocaust take us to a dark, dark place if weâre willing. Not every feature has to do that, of course. There are plenty of good, relatively tame features that are considered to be classics within the genre. Halloween and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre both feature very little gore.
There are plenty of solid PG-13 horror films and even PG-rated horror. But even those, every now and then, will feature scenes you donât expect. Sometimes theyâre shocking because theyâre unexpectedly gross or gory, sometimes theyâre just scarier than you were anticipating. These scenes come out of nowhere, but they can be great.
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When a film is relatively tame, itâs often expected to be safe. Sometimes itâs not and that can completely catch the audience off-guard.
Itâs the unexpectedness of these movies, though, that ultimately makes them so memorable. Here are a few of our favorite examples.
âI Saw Her Face,â in The Ring
Up until this point, The Ring is creepy. Weâre still hanging on the suspense of that opening because we donât entirely know what happened. Weâre at the funeral, Naomi Watts is piecing together information, and as sheâs getting the gaps filled in about what occurred, weâre treated to a quick glimpse of the corpse. Itâs horrifying. Itâs so quick that we canât tell what happened, yet the image is practically burned into our minds.
Stripeâs Death in Gremlins
Gremlins has moments of horror, absolutely. But itâs never gory or gross until the end, which spirals into Evil Dead territory as Stripe attacks Billy with a chainsaw before being blasted by sunlight. His death is long and leaves nothing to the imagination. He melts before our eyes, turning from a little monster to a pulpy puddle of puke. His bulging white eyes, crumbling skullâitâs all classic horror stuff.
The Gunshot Boy in The Sixth Sense
Stephen Kingâs general rule of thumb is that when creating horror, you try to scare people by building dread and tension, if that doesnât work, you try to creep them out, and if that doesnât work, you go for the gross-out. M. Night Shyamalanâs The Sixth Sense was labeled as a fairly classy movie, but even it wasnât above the gross-out. In this scene, we can kind of already tell that this kid is a ghost, but arenât totally sure whatâs wrong with him until he says âIâll show you where my dad keeps his gunâ and turns around to reveal that the whole back of his head has been blown off.
The body in the Boat in Jaws
As much as Jaws is a PG movie, it packs the punch of an R-rated horror in several scenes. This sequence in particular feels like it would be right at home in an â80s slasher as Hooper, diving for evidence of the shark, bites off more than he can chewâpun intendedâwhen he comes face to face with a corpseâs head in this gruesome jump scare. Seeing the film in theaters a while back, I can happily confirm that moment still works.
That Funeral Interruption in Drag Me to Hell
Itâs hard to defend Christine when she barges in on the funeral of the woman who cursed her, totally overturns the coffin and knocks the old womanâs corpse over on top of her. Appropriately, the dead body vomits all sorts of gross Sam Raimi goop into her mouth. Itâs such a refreshing scene. This is probably the moment when the audience truly understands that theyâre seeing classic Raimi horror, even if itâs PG-13, as everything about this moment screams of Evil Dead 2.
The Face-Melting Sequence in Poltergeist
There are tons of horrifying scenes in Poltergeist. There are so many that could have made it onto this list. But even with a swimming pool full of corpses, thereâs only one scene thatâs truly gruesome and thatâs the scene in which one of the paranormal investigator pulls off his own face in front of a mirror. Itâs gory and genuinely unsettling, even if it turns out to be nothing more than a nightmarish projection.
See: Also: How The Super Bowl Seemingly Predicted Poltergeist Movie Actressâs Death
The Drowning Scene in Frankenstein
The early Universal monster movies were all very tame. We never saw the Wolf Man tear anyone limb from limb. He just kind of strangled people. Dracula never even got to have fangs, we never saw him bite anyone. And then thereâs Frankenstein. This iconic scene has, in some ways, never truly been equaled. The Monster kills her by accident. He doesnât understand what heâs done. As unnerving as the drowning is, the true horror is watching the girlâs father carry her lifeless body through the town.