Author Topic: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~  (Read 1659 times)

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~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« on: January 21, 2015, 08:32:52 PM »
Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time



Described as a story which emphasizes the psychology of its characters and their unstable emotional states, the following films are benchmarks for what a successful psychological thriller should aspire to be. Instead of displaying legions of gore and violence, their main objective is to play with your mind. To leave it up to you to construct the tension of what you have just witnessed.

As the great perplexer David Lynch once said: “when you are spoon-fed a film, more people instantly know what it is. I love things that leave room to dream and are open to various interpretations. It’s a beautiful thing.” So read on and enjoy the ride.




Das Experiment



Das Experiment is a 2001 German thriller from director Oliver Hirschbiegel, starring Moritz Bleibtreu as Tarek Fahd, or later only to be known as Prisoner 77.

Tarek reads a newspaper advert regarding a social experiment in a simulated prison. With a financial reward given, provided participants complete the full 14 day stay, it’s an offer this reader can’t refuse. The 20 curious volunteers are first divided up into Prisoner and Guards and are then asked to remain in their role throughout. Monitored and observed by scientists, the trial takes a plummet into the dark depths of human behaviour. With the prisoners becoming more than disenchanted with the guard’s superiority, the guards take matters into their own hands, becoming merciless, brutal enforcers of their dungeon.

A gruelling yet compelling watch, what makes Das Experiment even more powerful, is the fact that it is based on actual events. Known as the Stanford Prison Experiment, this was concocted as a study of the psychological ramifications of becoming a prisoner or guard.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #1 on: January 21, 2015, 08:37:20 PM »
Kill List



In Kill List, we are presented with a film that has obviously been heavily influenced by some of the horror heavy-weights. Take The Wicker Man(1973), add a dash of Race With the Devil and a pinch of Rosemary’s Baby and presto! Kill List doesn’t fail to deliver!

Two ex-army pals, Jay (Neil Maskell) and Gal (Michael Smiley), are now plying their trade as hit men (the latter rather reluctantly). After agreeing to another ‘hit’, the two comrades are in the middle of the assignment when they comprehend that they are involved in something much more sinister than anticipated.

From English director, Ben Wheatley, in just his second feature film, Kill List is a formidable beast that contains graphic scenes and is not for the faint-hearted.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #2 on: January 21, 2015, 08:39:37 PM »
Angel Heart



Angel Heart is an American psychological thriller directed by Alan Parker and stars Mickey Rourke and Robert DeNiro. Released in 1987, but set in the 50’s, it was well ahead of its time and has now reached cult status.

Mickey Rourke stars as Harry Angel, a rugged private investigator that has been hired by a man named Louis Cyphere (DeNiro), to uncover the whereabouts of a disappeared singer, Johnny Favourite. Along the way, Angel meets several characters that all share information on the story of Favourite. However, with these characters being killed shortly after meeting with Angel, he finds himself a lot more involved than he could ever care to have wished for.

With Rourke in top form, giving possibly his best performance and the genius casting of DeNiro in his role, Angel Heart is an atmospheric, intelligent, bloody horror, with much duplicated but never surpassed twists. An unforgettable classic.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2015, 08:41:43 PM »
Tell No One



This French thriller stars Francois Cluzet as Alex Beck, a man continuously struggling with grief after losing his wife 8 years ago. When Alex receives material hinting that his wife is alive and well, a complex chain of events results in a chaotic manhunt for him.

With an excellent supporting cast of Marie-Josee Croze, Andre Dussollier and Kristin Scott Thomas, this suspenseful tale is comparable to the work of Alfred Hitchcock. Full of twist and turns, with such a well-executed plot, Tell No One is a frantic, edge of your seat chef-oeuvre.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #4 on: January 21, 2015, 08:43:05 PM »
Timecrimes



Released in 2007, Timecrimes is a Spanish sci-fi thriller based on time travel. Directed by Nacho Vigalondo and starring Karra Elejalde, the film was shot on an extremely low budget, without any CGI or flashy special effects. Easily one of the more intelligent and complex time loop movies, it is frantically paced and superbly executed.

Timecrimes introduces Hector (Elejalde), who is currently renovating his house, along with his wife in the countryside. Whilst surveying the nearby woods through his binoculars, he spots a young woman undressing. Curiously he enters the woods to investigate, when suddenly he is attacked and chased by a man covered in bloody bandages, wielding a pair of scissors. Can Hector escape from this madman? And exactly why was he assaulted in the first place?

Certainly a prime example of cinema where the less known is for the better, Timecrimes will continuously keep you on your toes and have you doubting your own thoughts, much like our Hector.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #5 on: January 21, 2015, 08:44:20 PM »
A Tale of Two Sisters



Asia is well known for being the cutting edge of horror movies, with emphasis given to the build-up of tension and creepy atmosphere, the premeditated pacing and menacing images, A Tale of Two Sisters, is no different. The highest grossing Korean horror, this masterpiece is a brilliant, visceral horror, brimming with bewildering twists.

The story embarks with a teenage girl named Soo-Mi (Su-Jeong Lim) being cared for in a mental hospital, why she is there, we are not told. In the next scene, Soo-Mi is shown travelling and arriving with her father and younger sister Soo-Yeon (Geun-Young Moon), to their lakeside estate. They are welcomed on arrival by the daughter’s stepmother, Eun-Joo (Jung-ah Yum), much to the disgust of the daughters. From this moment on we witness the bitter divide between stepmother and stepdaughter, with the uneasy tension flourishing within the household. With the mysterious presence of an intrusive ghost only heightening the already strained atmosphere, the feeling of impending doom leads to a heartbreakingly shocking finale.

A gut-wrenching, modern day horror, this 2003 gem is a tour de force of Korean cinema, by director Kim Jee-Woon.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #6 on: January 21, 2015, 08:45:40 PM »
The Secret in Their Eyes



‘El Secreto de sas ojos’ is an Argentine crime drama from 2009. Directed by Juan Jose Campanella, the film stars Ricardo Darin and Soledad Villamil. With outstanding storytelling and immaculate acting, this movie will have you hooked from start to finish.

In 1974, Federal Justice Agent, Benjamin Esposito (Darin), is delegated to the crime of a brutal rape and murder of a young woman. Upon promising the husband that the killer will be caught and will serve life in jail, two innocent men are accused and held, by a competing co-worker, in order to get a quick conclusion. Expertly told the story continuously flickers back and forth to 1999 where the case is still unresolved and still troubling Esposito. With the co-operation of an alcohol dependant assistant and a love-that-never-was ex-boss Irene (Villamil), the case is reopened.

Revealing incredible, gut-wrenching outcomes and a thrilling finale, this is a truly touching, emotional masterpiece of world cinema.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #7 on: January 21, 2015, 08:52:53 PM »
Repulsion



Directed by Roman Polanski, this is the first film in what was to become known as ‘The Apartment Trilogy’ along with Rosemary’s Baby and The Tenant.

Filmed in London, it tells the story of Carol, played by Catherine Deneuve, who has moved in with her older sister Helen. In a truly unforgettable performance we watch Carol’s paranoia spiral out of control after her sister leaves the apartment for a few days.

It leaves the viewer not knowing exactly what is real and what is purely imaginative in the claustrophobic, sexually repressed mind of Carol.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #8 on: January 21, 2015, 08:54:25 PM »
Manhunter



Manhunter is the pioneer of all films Hannibal Lecktor. Directed in 1986 by Michael Mann it stars William Peterson and Brian Cox. Telling the story of the hunt for a serial killer known as ‘The Tooth Fairy’, Manhunter spawned another 4 films and a television series, featuring the infamous Dr Lecktor.

Will Graham (Peterson) has been persuaded to end his retirement from the FBI and reunite in order to catch a serial killer on the loose. However, in order to progress, Will must pay a visit to Lecktor (Cox), an imprisoned cannibalistic serial killer, who incidentally is the cause of Will’s retirement, after attacking him. Despite Lecktor agreeing to help capture the killer, Will now has to deal with Hannibals’s mind games as well as the psychological trauma of his past events. With time running out, a desperate pursuit leads to a thrilling final confrontation with ‘The Tooth Fairy’ (Tom Noonan). But between another victim and his own family, will it all be in vain?

Based on the novel Red Dragon, Manhunter contains some great performances, most notably Brian Cox and Tom Noonan. If you are a fan of the Hannibal Lecktor series and are yet to see this, you are in for a suspenseful, atmospheric treat.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #9 on: January 21, 2015, 08:56:13 PM »
Videodrome



Homicide, Sleaze, torture, S&M, nihilism – Videodrome.

Welcome to the world of cult Canadian director David Cronenberg. James Woods stars as Max Renn, the president of a TV channel, searching for that quantum leap to the most in demand of broadcasting.

The breakthough arrives when Renn discovers Videodrome, an Asian television show airing brutal torture and snuff TV. With his girlfriend Nicki (Blondie’s Deborah Harry), immediately aroused and obsessed with the show, they delve further and find that the show is in fact broadcast out of Pittsburgh, USA. Eager to audition for the show, Nicki sets off to Pittsburgh, however when she fails to return, Max starts to become apprehensive. The more Max explores, the more he submerges into a world of mind regulation, sex, violence and disturbing hallucinations.

So sit back, relax and enjoy the visceral experience of Cronenberg’s 1983 mind-trip masterpiece, Videodrome.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #10 on: January 21, 2015, 08:58:59 PM »
Whatever Happened to Baby Jane



Whatever happened to Baby Jane is a 1962 American psychological horror. Directed by Robert Aldrich, the film infamously stars two screen icons together in Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. The film is extremely intense and dark yet slightly comical.

The story opens in 1917, characterizing Baby Jane Hudson (Davis), the very spoilt, child vaudeville star and her rather neglected younger sister Blanche (Crawford). However, in teenage years, roles reverse and Blanche went on to achieve stardom, with Jane becoming no more than just a has-been. Years later, both women are now confined to a shared mansion, with Blanche now crippled and in a wheelchair, after a tragic car accident involving what was widely thought to have been Jane, at the wheel. Now Jane ‘cares’ for her sister, handing out brutal beatings and mentally torturing her, whilst still living in a world of distorted dreams and high hopes. With the insane and hysterical former child star becoming more violent, can the imprisoned Blanche escape Baby Jane’s stronghold?

Both Davis and Crawford play the feuding sisters impeccably as they argue back and forth. (Mainly due to the well-documented tale that they actually loathed each other)An important and distinguished piece of Hollywood history, Whatever happened to Baby Jane is a riveting drama that is an absolute must see for all film fans.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #11 on: January 21, 2015, 09:00:36 PM »
Eyes Wide Shut



From the brilliant mind of director Stanley Kubrick, we have his 1999 showpiece ,Eyes Wide Shut, starring Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. Kubrick once again leads us down a path trying to differentiate between real world and the subconscious.

Dr. Bill Harford (Cruise) and wife Alice (Kidman) are a young married couple living in New York with their young daughter, Attending a Christmas party thrown by a rich patient, (during which they are both involved in separate sexual temptations) Bill is reintroduced to an old school friend Nick, who has been hired to play piano there. Upon his wife’s admission of a recent sexual fantasy involving a naval officer, Bill’s emotions are turned upside down. After meeting up with Nick again, finishing his set at the jazz club, Bill learns of an engagement Nick must attend to for his next set. However, to gain entrance to the party, one requires a mask, costume and finally a password. With the appeal of the party too difficult to turn down, Bill’s night unravels into an erotic, violent, unsettling sexual odyssey.

Sadly, Eyes Wide Shut was to be Stanley Kubrick’s final film, being released just several months following his death.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #12 on: January 21, 2015, 09:04:03 PM »
The Tenant



The last film in Polanski’s ‘Apartment trilogy’. Another brilliant psychological horror that this time has Polanski himself starring. Again, claustrophobic, disturbing and intense, the film shows how Trelkovsky (Polanski) moves into an apartment in which the previous tenant had thrown herself out of her window.

Evidently, insanity and obsession gradually tiptoe in, resulting in a slightly comical yet tragic climax.

The Tenant will leave you with more questions that it does answers but nevertheless, another Polanski masterpiece in my opinion.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #13 on: January 21, 2015, 09:05:41 PM »
The Conversation



Most directors struggle to achieve that once-in-a-lifetime piece de resistance, yet in 1974, one man delivered two. Please step forward Mr Francis Ford Coppola. Despite missing out to Oscar winner The Godfather 2, The Conversation is still well and truly classified as one of the definitive films from the 70’s, The fantastic Gene Hackman ingeniously plays the paranoid, neurotic, freelance surveillance expert, Harry Caul.

Running his own surveillance business in San Francisco, Harry is a loner, who rarely lets anyone into his apartment, let alone his life. After being given a job to tap into the conversation of a young couple talking in Union Square, the more Caul filters the recordings, the more unsettled he gets. Averting the opportunity to hand in the tape to his employer, due to what might happen to the young couple, he finds himself on the wrong end of the bugging. As his mental state collapse, can Harry find the solution before he self-destructs?

Containing superb performances by none other than John Cazale, Harrison Ford and an electrifying cameo from Robert Duvall, The Conversation is a haunting thriller that lingers long in the mind.

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Re: ~ Great Psychological Thrillers That Are Worth Your Time ~
« Reply #14 on: January 21, 2015, 09:08:55 PM »
Hour of the Wolf



Regarded by many as one of the most important and influential directors of all time, Ingmar Bergman made many great films, a lot of which handled death, disease and the downfall of the human mind. Hour of the Wolf is no different.

The film is set on a modest, harsh looking island, where Johan, played by Max Von Sydow, has sought refuge, along with his wife Alma (Liv Ullman). Johan is a painter who is battling insomnia and is haunted by the demons of his past. Despite coming across as being very cold and a bit of a bully, his loving wife is loyal and helps him through his obvious psychological illness. Things however take a turn for the worst, as Alma discovers Johan’s secret diary, followed by an eerie invitation for dinner with fellow islanders, who live in a nearby castle. As ‘the hour of the wolf’ approaches, the truth is unravelled and the shocking past that has been torturing Johan is frighteningly revealed.

This gothic horror is a chilling, claustrophobic journey, which displays the psychological torment one man suffers. A gritty, surreal work of art from a genius director, Hour of the Wolf is a beautiful but bleak movie that easily stands the test of time.