John Charet’s Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All Time (2025 Edition)

-Introduction-

Last year around this time of year, I posted a blog entry regarding my Top 10 and 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time (read here and here). As for Halloween 2025, I have posted that big treat again, which comes in the form of my Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time. I have some new entries this time around 🙂 Now all of the films listed are not my only favorite horror films (I have an unlimited number), but this is a perfect start. I have decided to start with number 100 and work my way down to 01.

-The Opening Celebration-

First off, below are a few delightful links to check out 

Click here to watch the complete 1983 music video of late iconic singer Michael Jackson’s (a.k.a. The King of Pop) song Thriller

Click here to listen to a shortened version of the song

Have any of you dear readers out there heard of The Merkins? Check out their youtube channel here. They do horror parodies of songs and one of their running acts is The Slashstreet Boys (a spoof of The Backstreet Boys)  The band consists of LeatherfaceMichael MyersJason VoorheesFreddy Kruegger and Ghostface Below are three of my personal favorite parodies of theirs 

Click here to view their spoof of I Want It That Way entitled I’ll Kill You That Way

Click here to view their spoof of Larger than Life entitled Die By My Knife

Click here to view their spoof of Rock Your Body Right entitled Slashing Bodies

-A Few Words Before Reading-

Please be kind to the film at number 07 on this list because that one means a lot to me. Any comment expressing negativity towards number 07 will be deleted. So once again, please be polite 🙂

Now, without further ado, I present to you all:

-John Charet’t Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time-
(#100-01)

100.) The Spiral Staircase (1946) (Dir: Robert Siodmak)
99.) Blood and Black Lace (1964) (Dir: Mario Bava)
98.) Repulsion (1965) (Dir: Roman Polanski)
97.) The Exorcist (1973) (Dir: William Friedkin)
96.) The Changeling (1980) (Dir: Peter Medak)

95.) Jacob’s Ladder (1990) (Dir: Adrien Lyne)
94.) The Orphanage (2007) (Dir: J.A. Bayona)
93.) Halloween II (2009) (Dir: Rob Zombie)
92.) Under the Shadow (2016) (Dir: Babak Anvari)
91.) The Lighthouse (2019) (Dir: Robert Eggers)
90.) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) (Dir: Rouben Mamoulian)
89.) The Body Snatcher (1945) (Dir: Robert Wise)
88.) Rosemary’s Baby (1968) (Dir: Roman Polanski)
87.) Kwaidan (1964)(Dir: Masaki Kobayashi)
86.) The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) (Dir: Tobe Hooper)
85.) Possession (1981) (Dir: Andrzej Zulawski)
84.) Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986) (Dir: John McNaughton)
83.) Dead Alive (1992) (Dir: Peter Jackson)
82.) The Descent (2005) (Dir: Neil Marshall)
81.) The Lords of Salem (2012) (Dir: Rob Zombie)
80.) Island of Lost Souls (1932) (Dir: Erle C. Kenton)
79.) Bluebeard (1944) (Dir: Edgar G. Ulmer)
78.) Horror of Dracula (1958) (Dir: Terence Fisher)
77.) Night of the Living Dead (1968) (Dir: George A. Romero)
76.) Kuroneko (1968) (Dir: Kaneto Shindo)
75.) God Told Me To (1976) (Dir: Larry Cohen)
74.) The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986) (Dir: Tobe Hooper)
73.) Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992) (Dir: Francis Ford Coppola)
72.) Shaun of the Dead (2004) (Dir: Edgar Wright)
71.) Annihilation (2018) (Dir: Alex Garland)
70.) Nope (2022) (Dir: Jordan Peele)

69.) The Leopard Man (1943) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
68.) Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969) (Dir: Terence Fisher)

67.) Onibaba (1964) (Dir: Kaneto Shindo)
66.) Halloween (1978) (Dir: John Carpenter)
65.) Inferno (1980) (Dir: Dario Argento)
64.) Evil Dead II (1987) (Dir: Sam Raimi)
63.) Cemetery Man (1994) (Dir: Michele Soavi)
62.) Let the Right One In (2008) (Dir: Tomas Alfredson)
61.) Twixt (2011) (Dir: Francis Ford Coppola)
60.) Sinners (2025) (Dir: Ryan Coogler)
59.) Haxan (1922) (Dir: Benjamin Christensen)
58.) The Old Dark House (1932) (Dir: James Whale)
57.) Cat People (1942) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
56.) Psycho (1960) (Dir: Alfred Hitchcock)
55.) Dawn of the Dead (1978) (Dir: George A. Romero)
54.) The Fly (1986) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
53.) Cronos (1992) (Dir: Guillermo del Toro)
52.) Martyrs (2008) (Dir: Pascal Laughier)
51.) The Babadook (2014) (Dir: Jennifer Kent)
50.) Pearl (2022) (Dir: Ti West)
49.) The Phantom Carriage (1921) (Dir: Victor Sjostrom)
48.) I Walked with a Zombie (1943) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
47.) The Birds (1963) (Dir: Alfred Hitchcock)
46.) Kill, Baby… Kill! (1966) (Dir: Mario Bava)
45.) Suspiria (1977) (Dir: Dario Argento)
44.) Dead Ringers (1988) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
43.) Cure (1997) (Dir: Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
42.) Rec (2007) (Dir: Jaume Balaguero and Paco Plaza)
41.) Under the Skin (2013) (Dir: Jonathan Glazer)
40.) Nosferatu (2024) (Dir: Robert Eggers)

39.) The Fall of the House of Usher (1928) (Dir: Jean Epstein)
38.) Freaks (1932) (Dir: Tod Browning)
37.) Dead of Night (1945) (Dir: Alberto Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden and Robert Hamer)
(Anthology Film)
36.) Night of the Demon (1957) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
35.) The Innocents (1961) (Dir: Jack Clayton)
34.) The Tenant (1976) (Dir: Roman Polanski)
33.) Ringu (1998) (Dir: Hideo Nakata)
32.) Inside (2007) (Dir: Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo)
31.) The Haunting of Hill House (2018) (Dir: Mike Flanagan)
(Miniseries)
(Streaming)
30.) The Shrouds (2024) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
29.) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) (Dir: Robert Wiene)
28.) Bride of Frankenstein (1935) (Dir: James Whale)
27.) The Uninvited (1944) (Dir: Lewis Allen)
26.) The Haunting (1963) (Dir: Robert Wise)
25.) Eraserhead (1977) (Dir: David Lynch)
24.) The Thing (1982) (Dir: John Carpenter)
23.) Audition (1999) (Dir: Takashi Miike)
22.) Pulse (2001) (Dir: Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
21.) Mother! (2017) (Dir: Darren Aronofsky)
20.) Angst (1983) (Dir: Gerald Kargl)
19.) Un Chien Andalou (1929) (Dir: Luis Bunuel)
(Short Cinema)
18.) The Black Cat (1934) (Dir: Edgar G. Ulmer)
17.) Isle of the Dead (1945) (Dir: Mark Robson)
16.) Peeping Tom (1960) (Dir: Michael Powell)
15.) Carrie (1976) (Dir: Brian De Palma)
14.) Videodrome (1983) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
13.) The Kingdom Trilogy (1994/1997/2022) (Dir: Lars Von Trier) 
(Danish Television)

12.) The Host (2006) (Dir: Bong Joon Ho)
11.) Climax (2018) (Dir: Gaspar Noe)
10.) Vampyr (1932) (Dir: Carl Theodor Dreyer)
09.) The Shining (1980) (Dir: Stanley Kubrick)
08.) Nosferatu (1922) (Dir: F.W. Murnau)
07.) Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992) (Dir: David Lynch)
06.) The Devil’s Backbone (2001) (Dir: Guillermo del Toro)
05.) Midsommar (2019) (Dir: Ari Aster)
04.) The Seventh Victim (1943) (Dir: Mark Robson)
03.) Diabolique (1955) (Dir: Henri-Georges Clouzot)
02.) Eyes Without a Face (1960) (Dir: Georges Franju)
01.) Don’t Look Now (1973) (Dir: Nicolas Roeg)

Honorable Mentions: Frankenstein (1931), The Invisible Man (1933), What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), Hour of the Wolf (1968), Let’s Scare Jessica to Death (1971), The Wicker Man (1973) and The Entity (1982)

Click here to see my exact same ranking on Letterboxd

P.S. I just added two links from this year’s blog entry regarding my Top 10 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time – a Kim Newman commentary link on number 3 and a documentary link on number 4. Click here 

Anyway, I hope all of you enjoyed reading my Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time list and last, but not least 🙂

Have a Happy Halloween
. .
U

John Charet’s 10 Films to Watch for St. Patrick’s Day (In Chronological Order)

-A Few Words Before Reading-

Please be kind to the film at number 9. Any comment expressing negativity towards number 9 will be deleted. So once again, please be polite 🙂

-Introduction-

First off, before I continue, I would like to wish all of my dear readers a very Happy St. Patrick’s Day 🙂 Anyway, all of the films listed here are great films that I love to watch near or on St. Patrick’s Day. Most of these do not hail from Ireland, but they do have a hint of Irish flavor to them.

Click here to listen to The Irish Rovers Goodbye Mrs. Durkin

Click here to listen to The Irish Rovers Black Velvet Band

Click here to listen to their entire album

Click here to listen to The Dubliners Molly Malone

Click here to listen to their entire album

Now without further ado, I present to all of my dear readers:

-John Charet’s 8 Films Recommended for St. Patrick’s Day Viewing-
(In Chronological Order)

1.) Odd Man Out (1947)
Dir: Carol Reed
Country: United Kingdom
Color: Black and White

While The Third Man will always remain director Carol Reed’s crowning achievement (or at least for me), Odd Man Out has to at least rank as second best for most people like myself. Set over the course of one night, Odd Man Out is a tightly constructed British film noir rich in suspense. Robert Krasker’s expressionistic cinematography is as much a creative dress rehearsal for his work on The Third Man as it is masterful in it’s own right. Odd Man Out is also a reported favorite of directors Roman Polanski and Sam Peckinpah (read here and here).

Click here to watch the entire film

I can’t find a link to the film’s original theatrical trailer

2.) The Quiet Man (1952)
Dir: John Ford
Country: United States
Color: Color

While I am unsure whether The Quiet Man would rank somewhere within my top 10 favorite John Ford films (I love every single one), it is undeniably one of his most personal films, made evident by the director’s Irish heritage (read here). Along with Wake of the Red Witch, The Quiet Man was one of the very few big-budget projects ever financed by Republic Pictures, a studio that regularly specialized in B-films. What we get is a highly entertaining period piece doubling as a romanticized depiction of Ireland in all it’s Technicolor glory. Last, but not least, The Quiet Man is justifiably celebrated for a long climactic fight sequence that is every bit as humorous as it is exciting.

Click here to watch a 1992 making of hosted by Leonard Maltin

Click here to watch a 1991 documentary on The Quiet Man from Irish television (or at least I believe)

Click here to watch a documentary entitled Memories Of The Quiet Man. Though I am not sure when it came out

Click here to watch part 1 of 2 of a tour of The Quiet Man locations

Click here to watch part 2 of 2 of a tour of The Quiet Man locations

Click here to watch Irish actor Gabriel Byrne talking about The Quiet Man from 2011

Click here to view a trailer for the 2010 documentary entitled Dreaming The Quiet Man

Click here to view the film’s original theatrical trailer

3.) Duck, You Sucker! (1971)
(a.k.a. A Fistful of Dynamite)
Dir: Sergio Leone
Country: Italy/United States
Color: Color

Often overlooked in favor of his more popular Once Upon a Time in the West or The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Duck, You Sucker! proves to be every bit as masterful as director Sergio Leone’s other spaghetti westerns, which include those first two aforementioned titles. In fact, Duck, You Sucker! is actually my personal favorite of Leone’s westerns. Part of it lies in it’s historical backdrop of the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) and as a self-proclaimed cinephile, it’s presence has always fascinated me. The other half is rooted in the theme of friendship and along with Once Upon a Time in America, Duck, You Sucker! may be Leone’s most insightful take on it. Leone’s flair for exhilarating set pieces and celebrated composer Ennio Morricone’s distinctive music score serve as the icing on the cake.

Click here to watch the film’s original theatrical trailer

Click here to watch the entire film

Click here to listen to Ennio Morricone’s complete music score for the film

4.) Barry Lyndon (1975)
Dir: Stanley Kubrick
Country: United Kingdom/United States
Color: Color

2001: A Space Odyssey is often considered legendary director Stanley Kubrick’s magnum opus, but some cinephiles usually opt for a different title. Whenever somebody asks me what my personal favorite Kubrick film is, my answer is Barry Lyndon. Indifferently received by both critics and audiences during it’s initial theatrical release in 1975, Barry Lyndon (like most of Kubrick’s films) has since been reassessed as a cinematic masterpiece. Based (loosely or otherwise) on William Makepeace Thackeray’s picaresque novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon (first published as a serial in Fraser’s Magazine in 1844), Barry Lyndon is the closest Kubrick ever came to creating a period piece akin to his unrealized ambitious Napoleon Bonaparte biopic. Set during the 18th century, Barry Lyndon chronicles the misadventures, eventual rise and inevitable fall of an Irish rogue. Not unlike 2001, Barry Lyndon remains a technically groundbreaking film. To achieve authenticity for it’s respective period setting, Kubrick relied (for the most part) on natural lighting for the exterior and interior shots (candlelight for the latter) courtesy of cinematographer John Alcott. Humorous, tragic and characteristically thought-provoking, Barry Lyndon may just be the most mature film in Kubrick’s oeuvre.

Click here to watch an analysis of the film from youtube user Empire of the Mind (click here to view his channel)

Click here to view the film’s original theatrical trailer

Click here to view a 2016 BFI trailer for it

Click here to watch a video about Kubrick’s unrealized Napoleon Bonaparte epic uploaded by youtuber Frame Voyager (click here to check out his channel)

Click here to watch other video about it

Click here to read this Amazon link to a 2011 massive book that fully details Kubrick’s vision and given the size of it, no wonder the price tag is heavy 🙂

5.) The Dead (1987)
Dir: John Huston
Country: United Kingdom/United States/West Germany
Color: Color

If anything else, The Dead not only resembles the work of a seasoned veteran, but also that of a born-again director. For his intended or unintended swan song, Huston adapts James Joyce’s title story that first appeared in the aforementioned celebrated author’s 1914 book of shorts entitled Dubliners. Huston’s refined touch fits perfectly with the elegantly written drama, which is penned by his son Tony. The result is every bit as intimate as it is profound.

Click here to watch the film’s original theatrical trailer

6.) Miller’s Crossing (1990)
Dir: Joel Coen
Country: United States
Color: Color

If it weren’t for A Serious Man, Miller’s Crossing would be my number one favorite Coen Brothers film of all time. On the surface, Joel and co-writer Ethan borrow elements from hard-boiled crime novels and similar films to blend them together within it’s atmosphere. The former consists of works written by Dashiell Hammett (Red Harvest and The Glass Key), while films like The Third Man, Le Doulos, The Conformist and The Godfather make up the latter (read here). While the result most certainly works as a highly effective pastiche, Miller’s Crossing is so much more than that. In the center, Miller’s Crossing emerges as a bona fide gangster classic in it’s own right. As with all of their work, when it comes to characters, dialogue and direction, The Coen Brothers trademark quirkiness is evident in every single frame of Miller’s Crossing. Carter Burwell’s Irish influenced music score fits perfectly with the film’s late 1920’s period setting.

Click here to watch cinematographer turned director Barry Sonnenfeld discussing his experiences as director of photography on the film

Click here to watch an interview with actor Gabriel Byrne conducted by the late Bobbie Wygant

Click here to watch an interview with actor John Turturro conducted by Wygant

Click here to watch an interview with actress Marcia Gay Harden conducted by Wygant

Click here to watch an interview with actor Jon Polito conducted by Wygant

Click here to view the film’s original theatrical trailer

Click here to listen to Carter Burwell’s music for the film

Click here to listen to the song Danny Boy sung by Frank Patterson. This song appears when Albert Finney’s character is defending himself with a Tommy Gun and bumps off two rival gangsters with it (click here to watch the scene)

7.) The Fugitive (1993)
Dir: Andrew Davis
Country: United States
Color: Color

As an Illinoisan, I have a habit of making sure I watch The Fugitive at least once a year during the month of March. This is not only rooted in the fact that it was shot on location in the city of Chicago (at least for the most part) or that it’s director (Andrew Davis) and lead star (Harrison Ford) proudly hail from there, but also serving as the only film (or at least based on my knowledge) to feature the aforementioned city’s tradition of dyeing the Chicago River green for St. Patrick’s Day (read here). Based (loosely or otherwise) on Roy Huggins 1960’s television series of the same name, which ran from 1963-67, The Fugitive is an expertly crafted chase thriller highlighted by it’s atmospheric Chicago locations. Ford is truly effective as the wrongfully accused Dr. Richard Kimble, but the standout is Tommy Lee Jones as Samuel Gerard, the Deputy US Marshall on his trail.

Click here to watch an interview director Andrew Davis did late last year promoting his debut novel (co-written with Jeff Biggers) entitled Disturbing the Bones, which is a great read. Legendary director Michael Mann (also born and raised in Chicago) gave it a positive blurb (read here)

Click here to watch a 1993 interview with him conducted by the late Bobbie Wygant

Click here to watch a 2013 documentary on it entitled The Fugitive: Thrill of the Chase

Click here to watch a 2001 short documentary entitled On the Run with The Fugitive

Click here to watch another 2001 short documentary entitled Derailed: Anatomy of a Trainwreck

Click here and here to watch two respective trailers for the film

Since I have endless links on Davis, just click here to watch them all 🙂

8.) The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006)
Dir: Ken Loach
Country: Ireland/United KIngdom/Italy/Germany/France/Spain/Switzerland
Color: Color

In The Wind That Shakes the Barley, British director Ken Loach takes his knack for social realism and applies it to both the Irish War of Independence (1919-21) and the Irish Civil War (1921-23). Limited to 21st century cinema alone, the result still stands out as the best drama centering on the two subjects as of 2025. Cinematographer Barry Ackroyd’s gritty cinematography goes hand in hand with Loach’s firm socialist sensibilities. In fact, the scene featuring Damien O’Donovan (Cillian Murphy) telling his brother Teddy (Padraic Delaney) that he will never sell out debatably parallels that of Loach’s own uncompromising political philosophies. Ever the dissenting Brit, Loach (along with screenwriter Paul Laverty) pulls no punches in depicting the traditionally heroic British Army as a pack of sadists. Unsurprisingly, this aspect was part of the film’s controversy (read here). Would you all like to hear another interesting piece of trivia? At the 2006 Cannes Film Festival, The Wind That Shakes The Barley won Loach the coveted Palme d’Or prize.

Click here to watch the film’s original theatrical trailer

9.) The Irishman (2019)
Dir: Martin Scorsese
Country: United States
Color: Color

As much as I love Goodfellas, for me, it is The Irishman that stands out as esteemed filmmaker Martin Scorsese’s crowning achievement. Helmed when Scorsese was at the age of 74 going on 75, The Irishman represents a culmination of his trademark themes that originated in his electrifying 1973 breakthrough Mean Streets. On the surface, when it comes to form and content, The Irishman is as fast-paced as Goodfellas. Simultaneously, in the center, The Irishman moves so gracefully that it makes that 1990 classic look like the work of a 27-28 year-old director as opposed to that of a then 46 year-old by comparison. In contrast to the black comedy of that earlier masterwork, The Irishman relies on subtlety for it’s humor. Taking into account the film’s overall somber tone, a very credible argument can be made that The Irishman comes off as Scorsese’s way of reflecting on his past crime films. Thematically speaking, If Goodfellas centered on loyalty and Casino centers on greed, than The Irishman is about mortality and regret. The film’s use of The Five Satins In the Still of the Night serves as further confirmation of this. The result is unquestionably the most mature of Scorsese’s crime dramas. If anything else, The Irishman serves as the perfect epitaph for the subgenre. In closing, The Irishman ranks as my second favorite gangster film of all time after Howard Hawks Scarface.

Click here to watch an insightful analysis on The Irishman by youtuber Why It’s Great (Click here to view his channel)

Click here to watch another insightful analysis on The Irishman by youtuber Renegade Films (Click here to view his channel)

Click here to watch the film’s Official teaser trailer

Click here to watch the film’s Original theatrical trailer

Click here to watch the film’s final trailer

10.) The Banshees of Inisherin (2022)
Dir: Martin McDonagh
Country: United Kingdom/United States
Color: Color

British-Irish playwright and film director Martin McDonagh’s The Banshees of Inisherin serves as only one of many perfect examples of how to define a tragicomedy. Delightfully misanthropic, the key to understanding The Banshees of Inisherin’s hilarity is rooted in the more absurd aspects of the human condition. For example, the film’s central plot centers on aspiring music composer Colm Doherty (Brendan Gleeson) needlessly ending his friendship with drinking buddy Padraic Suilleabhain (Colin Farrell). When every single one of his efforts at repairing the relationship is declined by Colm, Padraic starts a feud that leads to horrifying results for the both of them. Similar to the American cult sitcom It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Banshees of Inisherin relies on irony to execute it’s humor. In the case of The Banshees of Inisherin, the beautiful Irish scenry stands in contrast to the film’s overall irreverent tone. Thematically speaking, The Banshees of Inisherin may just be McDonagh’s richest film to date.

Click here to watch the film’s original theatrical trailer

Let me conclude this blog entry with two questions for my dear readers below:

What are some of your favorite films to watch during St. Patrick’s Day?

What links or videos were your favorites?

R.I.P. David Lynch (1946-2025)

A polite reminder before reading this blog entry of mine 🙂 I will not tolerate any insults or negativity towards David Lynch or any of his films I mention in this post. Any negative comments will be deleted. As a matter of fact, I will not tolerate any negativity of anybody mentioned in this blog entry. So once again, I am politely asking you all to please be kind 🙂

David Lynch (1946-2025)

Earlier today, the world lost one of our greatest visionary filmmakers. He was 78-years old and the cause of death was emphysema. That director was David Lynch. My introduction to Lynch was in early 2002, when I watched the then entire series of the cult television series Twin Peaks, which lasted from 1990 to 1991. Co-created with Mark Frost, Lynch also directed episodes of the show. When Lynch and Frost brought the series back in 2017 for Showtime, Lynch would direct every episode of the third season. By 2005, I had seen and loved almost every single Lynch film. Dune was good, but after watching it, I can totally understand why Lynch refused to talk about it during his life. Not since the death of British filmmaker Terence Davies back in 2023 has the death of a well-respected director hit me so hard. When I first heard the news, I just could not believe it. Ever since then, I have been in a very sad mood 😦 Lynch’s family made the following statement on his Facebook page – There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us, But, as he would say, ‘Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole.’ … It’s a beautiful day with golden sunshine and blue skies all the way. Read here and here for more information. I know the news is probably not as shocking once one takes into account that Lynch was battling lung disease for a long time (read here), but it is still heartbreaking either way.

Click here to visit the David Lynch Foundation website

Click here to visit a youtube video channel entitled DAVID LYNCH THEATER

Click here to watch a youtube video link to a wonderful remembrance of David Lynch courtesy of Chicago-based cinephile Kursten Ranquist (Click here to see his youtube channel)

Limited to this website only, I would love to remember Lynch through quite a few posts of mine. One of his films is on the first link, three on the second, one on the third and two on the fourth.

Click here to read a 2022 blog entry regarding my Top 10 Favorite Films of All Time

Click here to read a 2023 blog entry regarding my 100 Favorite Films of All Time

Click here to read a 2024 blog entry regarding my Top 10 Favorite Horror Films of All Time

Click here to read a 2024 blog entry regarding my Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All Time

Click here to read a 2024 blog entry I did where I mention Twin Peaks during my visit to the Music Box Theatre that year

Click here to read a 2024 blog entry wishing actress Sheryl Lee (Laura Palmer in Twin Peaks) a very Happy 57th Birthday

Since I do not have time to do a ranking of every single one of Lynch’s films, I want to let all of my dear readers know that with the exception of Dune (the 1984 version), I love every single film that David Lynch has directed and If you need me to direct you all to every single thing he ever directed, just click here.

Also, below are a few examples of me indulging (but in a healthy way) in Lynch fandom 🙂


Two More Things

For David Lynch’s Family

I want to express my condolences to David Lynch’s entire family with this beautiful Catholic (my religious affiliation) prayer for the departed below:

Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

For Californians

As all of you are probably aware right now, the recent California Wildfires has affected many Californians through loss of property and loved ones. Once again, I want to offer this beautiful Catholic prayer for the departed below:

Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

John Charet’s Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time

-Introduction-

Last year around this time of year, I posted a blog entry regarding my Top 10 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time. As all of my dear readers are probably aware, I posted this year’s entry one week before Halloween (click here). As for Halloween 2024, I have posted a big treat, which comes in the form of my Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time. Now all of the films listed are not my only favorite horror films (I have an unlimited number), but this is a perfect start. I have decided to start with number 100 and work my way down to 01.

-The Opening Celebration-

First off, below are a few delightful links to check out 🙂

Click here to watch the complete 1983 music video of late iconic singer Michael Jackson’s (a.k.a. The King of Pop) song Thriller

Click here to listen to a shortened version of the song

Have any of you dear readers out there heard of The Merkins? Check out their youtube channel here. They do horror parodies of songs and one of their running acts is The Slashstreet Boys (a spoof of The Backstreet Boys) 🙂 The band consists of Leatherface, Michael Myers, Jason Voorhees, Freddy Kruegger and Ghostface 🙂 Below are three of my personal favorite parodies of theirs 🙂

Click here to view their spoof of I Want It That Way entitled I’ll Kill You That Way

Click here to view their spoof of Larger than Life entitled Die By My Knife

Click here to view their spoof of Rock Your Body Right entitled Slashing Bodies

-A Few Words Before Reading-

Please be kind to the film at number 07 on this list because that one means a lot to me. Any comment expressing negativity towards number 07 will be deleted. So once again, please be polite 🙂

Now, without further ado, I present to you all:

-John Charet’t Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time-
(#100-01)

100.) The Lighthouse (2019) (Dir: Robert Eggers)
99.) Frankenstein (1931) (Dir: James Whale)
98.) The Spiral Staircase (1946) (Dir: Robert Siodmak)
97.) What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) (Dir: Robert Aldrich)
96.) Kwaidan (1964) (Dir: Masaki Kobayashi)

95.) The Exorcist (1973) (Dir: William Friedkin)
94.) The Changeling (1980) (Dir: Peter Medak)
93.) Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992) (Dir: Francis Ford Coppola)
92.) The Orphanage (2007) (Dir: J.A. Bayona)
91.) Under the Shadow (2016) (Dir: Babak Anvari)
90.) The Invisible Man (1933) (Dir: James Whale)
89.) The Body Snatcher (1945) (Dir: Robert Wise)
88.) Kuroneko (1968) (Dir: Kaneto Shindo)
87.) Rosemary’s Baby (1968) (Dir: Roman Polanski)
86.) The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) (Dir: Tobe Hooper)
85.) God Told Me To (1976) (Dir: Larry Cohen)
84.) The Entity (1982) (Dir: Sidney J. Furie)
83.) Jacob’s Ladder (1990) (Dir: Adrian Lyne)
82.) Halloween II (2009) (Dir: Rob Zombie)
81.) Annihilation (2018) (Dir: Alex Garland)
80.) The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986) (Dir: Tobe Hooper)
79.) Twixt (2011) (Dir: Francis Ford Coppola)
78.) Bluebeard (1944) (Dir: Edgar G. Ulmer)
77.) Horror of Dracula (1958) (Dir: Terence Fisher)
76.) Island of Lost Souls (1932) (Dir: Erle C. Kenton)
75.) Onibaba (1964) (Dir: Kaneto Shindo)
74.) Night of the Living Dead (1968) (Dir: George A. Romero)
73.) Halloween (1978) (Dir: John Carpenter)
72.) Dead Alive (1992) (Dir: Peter Jackson)
71.) The Descent (2005) (Dir: Neil Marshall)
70.) The Lords of Salem (2012) (Dir: Rob Zombie)

69.) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) (Dir: Rouben Mamoulian)
68.) The Leopard Man (1943) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)

67.) Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969) (Dir: Terence Fisher)
66.) Blood and Black Lace (1964) (Dir: Mario Bava)
65.) The Tenant (1976) (Dir: Roman Polanski)
64.) Inferno (1980) (Dir: Dario Argento)
63.) Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986) (Dir: John McNaughton)
62.) Cemetery Man (1994) (Dir: Michele Soavi)
61.) Shaun of the Dead (2004) (Dir: Edgar Wright)
60.) The Phantom Carriage (1921) (Dir: Victor Sjostrom)
59.) Cat People (1942) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
58.) Psycho (1960) (Dir: Alfred Hitchcock)
57.) Kill, Baby… Kill! (1966) (Dir: Mario Bava)
56.) Suspiria (1977) (Dir: Dario Argento)
55.) Possession (1981) (Dir: Andrzej Zuwalski)
54.) The Fly (1986) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
53.) Cronos (1992) (Dir: Guillermo del Toro)
52.) Let the Right One In (2008) (Dir: Tomas Alfredson)
51.) The Babadook (2014) (Dir: Jennifer Kent)
50.) Nope (2022) (Dir: Jordan Peele)
49.) Haxan (1922) (Dir: Benjamin Christensen)
48.) The Old Dark House (1932) (Dir: James Whale)
47.) I Walked with a Zombie (1943) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
46.) The Birds (1963) (Dir: Alfred Hitchcock)
45.) Dawn of the Dead (1978) (Dir: George A. Romero)
44.) Evil Dead II (1987) (Dir: Sam Raimi)
43.) Cure (1997) (Dir: Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
42.) Martyrs (2008) (Dir: Pascal Laughier)
41.) The Haunting of Hill House (2018) (Dir: Mike Flanagan)
(Miniseries)
(Streaming/Television)
40.) Pearl (2022) (Dir: Ti West)

39.) The Fall of the House of Usher (1928) (Dir: Jean Epstein)
38.) Freaks (1932) (Dir: Tod Browning)
37.) Dead of Night (1945) (Dir: Alberto Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden and Robert Hamer)
(Anthology Film)
36.) The Innocents (1961) (Dir: Jack Clayton)
35.) The Wicker Man (1973) (Dir: Robin Hardy)
34.) Dead Ringers (1988) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
33.) Ringu (1998) (Dir: Hideo Nakata)
32.) Rec (2007) (Dir: Jaume Balaguero and Paco Plaza)
31.) Under the Skin (2013) (Dir: Jonathan Glazer)
30.) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) (Dir: Robert Wiene)
29.) Bride of Frankenstein (1935) (Dir: James Whale)
28.) The Uninvited (1944) (Dir: Lewis Allen)
27.) Night of the Demon (1957) (Dir: Jacques Tourneur)
26.) The Haunting (1963) (Dir: Robert Wise)
25.) Eraserhead (1977) (Dir: David Lynch)
24.) The Thing (1982) (Dir: John Carpenter)
23.) Audition (1999) (Dir: Takashi Miike)
22.) Inside (2007) (Dir: Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo)
21.) Mother! (2017) (Dir: Darren Aronofsky)
20.) Un Chien Andalou (1929) (Dir: Luis Bunuel)
(Short Cinema)
19.) The Black Cat (1934) (Dir: Edgar G. Ulmer)
18.) Isle of the Dead (1945) (Dir: Mark Robson)
17.) Peeping Tom (1960) (Dir: Michael Powell)
16.) Hour of the Wolf (1968) (Dir: Ingmar Bergman)
15.) Let’s Scare Jessica to Death (1971) (Dir: John Hancock)
14.) Videodrome (1983) (Dir: David Cronenberg)
13.) The Kingdom Trilogy (1994/1997/2022) (Dir: Lars Von Trier)
(Danish Television)

12.) Pulse (2001) (Dir: Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
11.) Climax (2018) (Dir: Gaspar Noe)
10.) Vampyr (1932) (Dir: Carl Theodor Dreyer)
09.) The Shining (1980) (Dir: Stanley Kubrick)
08.) Nosferatu (1922) (Dir: F.W. Murnau)
07.) Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992) (Dir: David Lynch)
06.) The Devil’s Backbone (2001) (Dir: Guillermo del Toro)
05.) Midsommar (2019) (Dir: Ari Aster)
04.) The Seventh Victim (1943) (Dir: Mark Robson)
03.) Diabolique (1955) (Dir: Henri-Georges Clouzot)
02.) Eyes Without a Face (1960) (Dir: Georges Franju)
01.) Don’t Look Now (1973) (Dir: Nicolas Roeg)

P.S. I just added two links from this year’s blog entry regarding my Top 10 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time – a Kim Newman commentary link on number 3 and a documentary link on number 4. Click here 🙂

Anyway, I hope all of you enjoyed reading my Top 100 Favorite Horror Films of All-Time list and last, but not least:

Have a Happy Halloween
. .
U

My Favorite Noah Baumbach (2024 Edition)

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Marriage Story (2019)
  2. Margot at the Wedding (2007)
  3. White Noise (2022)
  4. The Meyerowitz Stories (2017)
  5. Frances Ha (2012)
  6. The Squid and the Whale (2005)
  7. MIstress America (2015)
  8. While We’re Young (2014)
  9. Greenberg (2010)
  10. De Palma (2015)
    (co-directed with Jake Paltrow)
    (Documentary)
  11. Mr. Jealousy (1997)
  12. Kicking and Screaming (1995)
    (no relation to the 2005 comedy)
  13. Conrad & Butler Take a Vacation (2000)
    (Short)

My Favorite Sean Baker Films (2024 Edition)

Some of these films I saw on either old DVD’s or online.

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Tangerine (2015)
  2. Take Out (2004)
    (co-directed with Shih-Ching Tsou)
  3. The Florida Project (2017)
  4. Starlet (2012)
  5. Red Rocket (2021)
  6. Prince of Broadway (2008)
  7. Warren the Ape – Season 1 (2010)
    Episode: It Girl
    Episode: Crash Course
    Episode: Bad Po-Fo
    Episode: Anger Management
    (Cable/Television)
  8. Fur on the Asphalt: The Greg the Bunny Reunion Show (2010)
    (Short)
  9. Greg the Bunny – Season 1 (2005)
    Episode: Martian Serum 7 from Mars
    (Cable/Television)
  10. Snowbird (2016)
    (Short)
  11. Khaite FW21 (2021)
    (Short)
  12. Taco Bell: Fry Again (2022)
    (Commercial)
    (Short)
  13. Four Letter Words (2000)

My Favorite Ari Aster Films (2024 Edition)

I watched all of his short films online.

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Beau Is Afraid (2023)
  2. Midsommar (2019)
  3. Hereditary (2018)
  4. The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011)
    (Short)
  5. Munchausen (2013)
    (Short)
  6. C’est La Vie (2016)
    (Short)
  7. Basically (2014)
    (Short)
  8. The Turtle’s Head (2014)
    (Short)
  9. Beau (2011)
    (Short)
  10. Herman’s Cure-All Tonic (2008)
    (Short)
  11. TDF Really Works (2011)
    (Short)

My Favorite Olivier Assayas Films (2024 Edition)

Some of these titles I watched online. For the record, there may be a title or two missing because I have not seen it yet. I also can’t find them online.

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Irma Vep (2022)
    (Miniseries)
    (Cable/Television)
  2. Irma Vep (1996)
  3. Carlos (2010)
    (Miniseries)
    (French/German Television)
  4. Summer Hours (2008)
  5. Clouds of Sils Maria (2014)
  6. Personal Shopper (2016)
  7. Clean (2004)
  8. Demonlover (2002)
  9. Sentimental Destinies (2000)
  10. Late August, Early September (1998)
  11. Non-Fiction (2018)
  12. Something in the Air (2012)
  13. Cold Water (1994)
  14. Boarding Gate (2007)
  15. Cinema, de notre temps (1996)
    Episode: HHH, portrait de Hou Hsiao-hsien

    (Documentary)
    (French Television)
  16. Paris, I Love You (2006)
    Segment: Quartier des Enfants Rouges
  17. Paris Awakens (1991)
  18. Disorder (1986)
  19. Winter’s Child (1989)
  20. Wasp Network (2019)
  21. Noise (2006)
    (Documentary)
  22. Winston tong en studio (1984)
    (Documentary)
    (Short)
  23. Rectangle – Deux chansons de Janco (1980)
    (Short)
  24. To Each His Own Cinema (2007)
    Segment: Recrudescence

My Favorite Darren Aronofsky Films (2024 Edition)

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Mother! (2017)
  2. Black Swan (2010)
  3. The Fountain (2006)
  4. The Wrestler (2008)
  5. Noah (2014)
  6. Requiem for a Dream (2000)
  7. Pi (1998)
  8. The Whale (2022)

My Favorite Andrea Arnold Films (2024 Edition)

* * * * (Out of * * * *)

  1. Fish Tank (2009)
  2. American Honey (2016)
  3. Cow (2021)
    (Documentary)
  4. Wuthering Heights (2011)
  5. Red Road (2006)
  6. Wasp (2003)
    (Short)
  7. Dog (2001)
    (Short)
  8. Milk (1998)
    (Short)
  9. Big Little Lies – Season 2 (2019)
    Episode: What Have They Done?
    Episode: Tell-Tale Hearts
    Episode: The End of the World
    Episode: She Knows
    Episode: Kill Me
    Episode: The Bad Mother
    Episode: I Want to Know
    (Cable/Television)
  10. Transparent – Season 3 (2016)
    Episode: If I Were a Bell
    (Streaming/Television)
  11. Transparent – Season 2 (2015)
    Episode: Oscillate
    Episode: Grey Green Brown & Copper
    (Streaming/Television)
  12. Transparent – Season 4 (2017)
    Episode: Desert Eagle
    (Streaming/Television)
  13. I Love Dick – Season 1 (2017)
    Episode: Scenes from a Marriage
    Episode: Ilinx
    Episode: The Barter Economy
    Episode: Cowboys and Nomads
    (Streaming/Television)