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The films that gave us childhood nightmares

Luke Holland


Luke digs back into this childhood at the films he thought were his friends, but instead managed to scare the life out of him...

Published on Mar 8, 2010

On a crisp, clear March morning I strolled down the street, whistling a jaunty tune and doffing my cap to passersby and the jolly neighbourhood bobby, warmly content with the agreeable hand life had dealt me.

A robin, twee and delicate as the twig on which it perched, glowed crimson in the hanging sun, dew flecked the grasstops like millions of flawless diamonds and danced across the tranquil vistas rolling lazily the road. The sky, eternal and ethereal, an azure canvas against which whisps of chalky aeroplane plumes crossed their cotton signatures upon the heavens. It was a good day to be alive. And then, out of nowhere, a slobbering man-sized lemur tackled me to the ground, knawed rabidly at my perineum and then shat fire all over my face and head.

Made up nonsense this may be, but this would be a pretty accurate modern-day equivalent to the casual horror inflicted upon us as children in instances in which films, for no good reason other than their own amusement, decided to ease in their gormless viewer with promises of jocular singsongs, asexual japes and fluffy metaphors all wrapped up in a saccharine false sense of security, before blindsiding our young minds with hitherto unforseen instances of utter terror.

Cue childhood trauma, recurring nightmares, urea-starched bedsheets and the death of a little piece of the wonder and innocence of childhood.

So, join me in taking some of the power back by naming and shaming some of these purveyors of  nightmares as the anti-BFG's they truly are.

Were you ever traumatised by anything in the list below, or do you have other demons you wish to share? If so, fret not, my friend, for you are not alone, and we shall get through this together. By confronting and discussing the rotten seeds of our latent fears we'll finally be rid of them once and for all.

Judge Doom's crazy eyes demise:
Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

Holy Jesus and crap in a bag, this was scary. Having successfully negotiated a plot comprised of the brutal murder of cartoons, Who Framed Roger Rabbit unleashed on us it's piece de resistance: Christopher Lloyd - previously a whimsical, avuncular presence in Back To The Future - seemingly perishes in cries of frenzied agony beneath the pitiless certainty of a steamroller's wheel, only to peel himself sickeningly from the floor and re-inflate his body, at which point his eyes casually fall out, leaving behind a pair of peepers straight from the bowels of Hell. And when it surely can't get any worse, he melts amid yet more howls of harrowing despair. Any successful toilet training undertaken until this point is rendered instantly irrelevant.

Ice road fucker:
The Empire Strikes Back

As the saying goes: a sneaky monster is a scary monster, and this particular monster certainly qualifies as such. Leaping out of nowhere and clubbing Luke upside the head with a fluffy mitt is just plain uncalled for, as is dragging him off to a fully-fitted death lair complete with the discarded carcasses of previous victims, and sticking him to the roof to 'save him until later'. The wampa was the part of Empire Strikes Back at which I'd glance idly around the room at nothing in particular while trying to maintain a facade of normalcy, despite the creeping dread of the impending attack creeping into my belly box. Will he reach the lightsaber in time? The monster's coming! For God's sake, man, hurry it up, you cock! In hindsight, the beast looks about as frightening as a medium sized bag of hair, but that mattered not to an easily fooled young mind who much preferred the non-threatening idiocy of an Ewok.

Vermicious knidded in my pants:
Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory

Deliberately juxtaposed with the carefree wonder of a room where everything is edible and the delicious schadenfreude of seeing a greedy fat 'un getting sucked up through a chocolate tube of shame, Wonka's quaint little boat takes a turn straight into an LSD nightmare with abstract images of millipedes on faces, birds being decapitated, lizards feeding on creepy crawlies and that unsettlingly prim chap in a black hat. As if that wasn't enough, Wonka sings a song so creepy it could curdle milk, eyes darting like rats, until he reaches a frothy crescendo of worrying madness. Never take sweets from eccentric strangers with purple coats was possibly the underlying message here, although what I personally took from it was the knowledge that, in a similar situation, I would create a chocolate river all of my own.

More dead fur than Brian May's plughole:
Watership Down

This film should have been prefixed at all times with a giant warning which flashed on the screen for at least ten minutes at a time to allow the enormity of the nastiness within to sink in: "This is not a nice cartoon about rabbits!' it should say, despite the fact this is clearly something of a lie, 'This is a film where all those fuzzy creatures you like so much get maimed and die! One bunny gets eaten by a bird! One by a dog! Ha! One bunny is shot, another gets mutilated by a snare trap! Mwahahahaa! One cute little bunny, feeling the other bunnies don't adequately appreciate the precious gift of life, concocts a ruthless series of torture devices into which the other little bunnies are bundled so they can all be ripped ear from ear to tail to teach them all a lesson! You like that do you, kids?! You want to watch the bunnies die, do you?!" Alas, this warning never appeared, so we all watched it with blissful naivety. This has gone down in recorded history as the worst mistake made by anyone, ever.

Cheeky happy rollerskating child murderers:
Return To Oz

Parents clearly saw the word 'Oz' in the title and assumed - reasonably, considering the original - that this was a magical tale of whimsy set in a technicolour wonderland populated by affable idiots and harmless cardboard cutout baddies, with the odd frilly musical number thrown in for a bit of that vanilla camp flavour. How wrong they were. The villain wished to decapitate our young protagonist with the express intention of adding her head to an already ample head collection, and to do so, dispatched hordes of  rolling smackhead demons to mercilessly chase her down. This could be construed by some as unsuitable fare for kids but, screw it, they thought, it'll give us a laugh when twenty years down the line parents receive a cataclysmic psychiatrist's bill after years of intensive shock therapy to purge all memory of these terrible events from the drug-woollen minds of their now mature, yet still hopelessly incontinent, children. Utter bastards.

Women's institute now regarded with extreme caution:
The Witches

Hate it, hate it, hate it. Psychologically astute in its grim insinuation to children that beneath their mother's benign veneer lurks a pointy-eared, hook-nosed hell-bitch harbouring a fatal ignominy of youngsters and can smell their distinctive odour ('distinctive' = 'shit of a dog') from fifty paces. Having revealed their hideous visages to us and each other, we see in horror that the witches have a plan, as a feckless lookey-likey of boob-faced uber-gonk Tom Chaplain from preposterously insipid turd makers Keane discovers to his wobbly dismay in another traumatically nasty transformation.  Also, by way of a spot of collateral damage, The Witches also managed to instil a healthy irrational fear of recreational residential Cornish retreats. Though this may, be, in hindsight, just me.

David Bowie's inexplicable crotch arrangement:
Labyrinth

Not only was Jereth's monolithic pant-python terrifying to behold, it delivered its belated one-two sucker punch years later as we chaps realised that Bowie was 'the man' for reasons besides Aladdin Sane. As a child, no freaky, decapitating, fire-dancing hippy goons or hugely sinister hand-face abominations could ever compare to the sheer edifice that was Jereth's completely unneccessary, if anatomically educational, display of junk. Was it stipulated in his contract? Didn't any member of the cast or crew ever stop to say "Hang on, everyone, I've just had a thought. This is a kid's film, isn't it? I don't think it's appropriate for David to wear trousers so tight you can count his pubes..."

Michael Jackson's chrome nose job:
Moonwalker

Fresh off the back of the zombie/werewolf/PVC suit deathfest of Thriller in 1983, M. Jizzle was no stranger to scaring the bejesus out of the kiddies (now, now...). In his bizarre cinematic outing of the late eighties, he spends roughly half of the running time taking a mighty kicking at the fists and feet of Joe Pesci's despicable hoodlums, before spending the other half of the film in a really rather time consuming robotic transformation. Again, it's the eyes that initially unsettled, then his face splits asunder like Terry's Chocolate Orange and the metallic screams begin to finish the job of turning young Michael Jackson fans into snotty, blubbering wrecks strewn haphazardly across the shoulders of parents rapidly departing the cinema. Special mention also goes to Joe Pesci's hair, which only became frightening when I was old enough to know what the word 'phallic' meant.

Scary castles never house pleasant people:
Beauty And The Beast

Walt Disney's assault on youngsters everywhere continues unabated, countless (okay, 43) years after his death. Disney's frozen head, entombed in suspended animation,  feeds despotic mirth and malevolent dread into a series of cutting edge supercomputers which, in turn, through a complex network of electrodes, trigger twitch reflexes in the arms of an army of restrained animators who have no conscious choice but continue to assent to the whim of the Almighty Disney and create these foul tales of trauma and terror.

Throughout the decades - from Bambi's mum, Dumbo's acid trip, Snow White's hag, Sheer Khan's Baloo battering, Something Wicked This Way Comes, Mufasa's demise, Pinnocchio's donkeys and countless others - Walt Disney's head has fed greedily on the misery it has inflicted on the immature populace. Loads of examples to choose from but, risking ridicule, the scene in Beauty And The Beast where the father stumbles into the castle of the titular hound and finds himself on the receiving end of a nasty dose of imprisonment hit all the right werewolfy buttons back in the day, and shit me up something chronic.

Val Kilmer pigs out:
Willow

Lovable dwarves! Cheeky quipping heroes! Funny little borrower things! Swordfights! Sorcery! What's not to like?! Quite a lot, as it happens. The demon dogs at the beginning weren't really scary (they were clearly just black labs in fancy headgear, overdressed showoffs, all woof and no wow), so, unless stricken with a cynophobic malaise, many a child would happily make it through to the castle siege, whereby the weirdly-hot-because-she's-older-and-powerful-a-bit-like-Helen-Mirren-in-her-more-recent-years Queen Bavmorda bellows down a gruesome spell from atop her castle to the crowd assembled below who, in what must be one of the most poorly received Royal speeches in history, promptly turn into snuffling swine. But it's the way they turn: clutching the stomachs in shock and pain, dropping to the ground screaming as their teeth expand and their limbs swell into clammy clubs, transforming our heroes into hideous The Hills Have Eyes pig-man hybrids, their wails becoming the high pitched screeches of a herd of snorting poo-dwellers. Harrowing.

Did anything left out of the list give you the heebie jeebies? Do any of these films still scare you today? Then please share your own childhood nightmares in the comments section below, for the world needs to know what we endured and why, even now, we still check in the wardrobe and under the bed before we go to sleep.

See also:
The Top 10 Kids' Films That Traumatise Small Children

Click here for a list of ALL the lists at Den Of Geek...

 

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Users Comments

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By viridis 1 March 8, 2010 09:48:43 AM

This list is perfect. It's like you know me. I've been traumatized by Witches when I was young and now I don't ever want to see it again. I've seen Hellraiser, but I am terrified of Witches, because of that scene (even whilst Rowan Atkinson stars in it!)Val Kilmer pigs out is just terrifying, and so is the terrible Michael Jackson robot scene. Ever since Nightmare on Elm Street 1 I'm afraid of my own bed swallowing me whole, and funnily enough I still get Ernest Scared Stupid flashbacks now and again when I lie in bed and think of the troll under the bed. Also the wolves in Beauty and the Beast, the forest, the castle *shivers*. And Pinnochio with kids turning into freaking donkeys. It's like they intended on scaring the shit out of little kids. What the fuck was wrong with Disney when they made Pinnochio? That shit is terrifying!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By DamonD 1 March 8, 2010 10:41:48 AM

I agree, great choices here and many I'd have nominated myself. Watership Down is one of the all-time kid traumatizers, especially given its inexplicable popularity among teachers with nothing else to occupt their class...

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Modestgaz 1 March 8, 2010 12:01:42 PM

The movie 'It', right at the start when pennywise appears down a drain with balloons. A never went near drains in the rain for years. A have never forgave my parents for letting me watch that with them

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By spago 1 March 8, 2010 12:21:46 PM

my personal childhoiod frightener would have to be Ghostbusters II. the painting of Viggo is bad enough (the bit at the end when he came out of it used to terrify me), but then the creepy museum curator Janosz, first his eyes lit up like torches in the dark hallway, and then he comes back as some sort of crazy posessed nanny! i used to shit a brick with that film!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By clementine 1 March 8, 2010 12:37:26 PM

Absolutely brilliant!! i just spat my dinner all over my desk reading about Labrynth i thought i was the only one transfixed and a little afraid as a child, you did however miss out dark crystal with the skexies (bad spelling but cant be arsed to google)they still shit me up now.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By docemmetttbrown 1 March 8, 2010 02:40:52 PM

"boob-faced uber-gonk" - best desciption of Tom Chaplain ever! I always got scared at the part in Superman 3 where the woman gets turned into the robot by the giant computer.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By clementine 1 March 8, 2010 02:59:45 PM

And the rats from Nimh what the hell was that about it was terrifying the owl was evi oh and lets not forget the bbc adaptation of the chronicles of Narnia some crazed evil woman knifing a lion on a stone table who comes up with these things and decides there ok

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By micah.byrd 1 March 8, 2010 03:19:02 PM

How could you leave off The Dark Crystal? That movie was one of my favorites of all time when I think back to it but for God's sake it was creepy as hell!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Scott 1 March 8, 2010 04:45:15 PM

the thing that scared me the most as a child, was the bigfoot from the six million dollar man, still creeps me out a bit.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Kapp 1 March 8, 2010 04:55:24 PM

my mom actually let us watch adult horror films as kids in the early 80's...I am now a parent myself and am unsure why my mom did this, but...let it be said, two scary films stick out in my mind as being the scariest... 1. Phantasm- that flying ball scared the crap out of me for years 2. the dog suit from the Shining (I now know even more so why this scene was terrifying, but back then as a kid, I didnt know what was going on, I just saw a scared lady running down the stairs and a freaky dog suit person looks up....couldnt go to sleep for weeks after that. I think the things in movies that scare us the most are the things that make no sense and have no explanation, like something from a nightmare

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Kapp 1 March 8, 2010 05:04:04 PM

can't forget the clown doll from Poltergeist, or the Talking Tina doll from the Twilight Zone...just living dolls in general were fricking scary...granted by the time Chuck first came out I was already in high school so I had already gotten over that fear..........I think

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By geekmom 1 March 8, 2010 05:11:44 PM

Great choices, here. I would add "The Last Unicorn," for many reasons, mostly the Red Bull, but anything in the witch's carnival certainly qualifies. And I have now traumatized my own children with "Spirited Away," speaking of pig transformations.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By shelsfc 1 March 8, 2010 06:30:53 PM

Yup, yup, yup, yup, yup. Spot on with all of them. Though I still love most of those films, The Witches traumatised me for life. Seriously, I still can't watch it, I had nightmares for weeks afterwards. *shivers*

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By jonroknrol 1 March 8, 2010 07:12:10 PM

Time Bandits scared the hell out of me, as a child. Especially the ending with the parents blowing up.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By redninja 1 March 8, 2010 07:58:29 PM

The Nazi face-melting at the end of Raiders always had me hiding my face after nearly two hours of jovial, chummy Indiana Jones fun; and the section of Twilight Zone: The Movie by Joe Dante, with the freaky kid that made a frigging horrifying rubbery demon appear from his parents TV shat me up proper

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By redninja 1 March 8, 2010 07:59:43 PM

Oh and The Thing remake as well, will probably not let my kid watch that at eight years old though...

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By viridis 1 March 8, 2010 10:12:26 PM

@Modestgaz: OMG Pennywise down the drain. That shot was freaking terrifying. I saw that movie as an experienced horror watcher and Pennywise beckoning the child closer to the drain scared the shit out of me.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Hazgibbon 1 March 9, 2010 12:12:07 AM

@Kapp "the dog suit from the Shining", that thing is still the most scary part of that film, ist like some bizarre furry thing has been interupted, *Shudder* Watership Down, I hated that thing, seriously kids should never have been allowed to see that. I still remember my horror at watching that. The kid getting pulled under the bed in an ep of Dungeons and Dragons was pretty scary. Hated the bit in Never Ending Story where the unicorn drowns in quicksand too.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By Hazgibbon 1 March 9, 2010 12:14:22 AM

Also, I couldn't watch Optimus Prime's death scene in Transformers the Movie until I was about 12. :D

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By elvisvanhelsing 1 March 9, 2010 12:21:23 AM

I was always terrified as a kid by the weird cyber-woman-thing near the end of Superman III.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By elvisvanhelsing 1 March 9, 2010 12:24:06 AM

Also, and this is literally true and not hyperbole at all, I would actually hide behind the sofa as soon as I saw Bill Bixby's eyes turn white on The Incredible Hulk.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By LittleTime 1 March 9, 2010 01:03:25 AM

Uhm, Wizard of Oz and creepy flying winged monkies. Flying monkies!!!!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By LittleTime 1 March 9, 2010 01:08:58 AM

Ahem - monkeys. (The Monkies were scary in a whole different way)

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By rowdyone 1 March 9, 2010 03:55:54 AM

Watership Down definitely is the one that gave me nightmares for years. I had to block it out for so long....that I eventually forgot the name of the movie. I bought it about a year ago, just to see if it was as haunting as it was years ago...and it is. Scary, creepy, although well-done movie.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By cheechwiz 1 March 9, 2010 12:35:06 PM

"Frankenstein: the True Story". The disembodied arm and hand. Hell! Anything from the BBC2 horror-fests on summer Saturday nights back in the 70s. The giant ants of "Them" spring to mind.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By clementine 1 March 9, 2010 12:58:39 PM

Is legend a kids film because Tim Curry frightened me to death ?

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By MediaOKra 1 March 9, 2010 01:09:35 PM

I remember the show You Can't Do That On Television was very disturbing to me at an early age. Getting slimed for saying the wrong thing, kids purposefully eating rotten food at a local hang. There is a strange mean spiritedness to that show that made me feel queasy. I don't remember the punchlines anymore so it's hard to say what I feel about that show now.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By oatzy 1 March 9, 2010 01:23:05 PM

Surely the child catcher from Chitty Bang Bang should be on here?

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By elleisfor 1 March 10, 2010 02:54:35 AM

Does nobody other than me remember 'Watcher in the woods'? Disney's horror for kids, really creepy, dealing with children disappearing during church rituals and creepy old women attacking young girls. Sca-ry.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By geekygirlUK 1 March 10, 2010 01:21:40 PM

Great list, you've got pretty much all the stuff that used to scare the crap out of me when I was little. Although Watership Down just used to depress me rather than scaring me. Agree with docemmetbrown and elvisvanhelsing about Superman III though. Saw that at the cinema with my local playgroup - left traumatised!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By picknmix 1 March 11, 2010 04:45:36 PM

In my top three are the flying monkeys in Wizard of OZ, the child-catcher in Chitty (he is bloody terrifying) and the landslide sequence in The Railway Children, which still creeps me out now!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By paulychilds 1 March 16, 2010 11:24:59 PM

The cyborg sequence in Superman III scared the bejeebers out of me. The horse drowning scene in Never Ending Story was also harrowing. But it was the closing 5 minutes of The Black Hole that really put the fear of God into me - especially in the cinema it was truly freaky.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By hellhound666 1 June 13, 2010 02:57:17 AM

"Teenagers from outer space"(1959) scared the holy crap out of us kids when at the beginning of the movie an alien pops out of the top of a flying saucer and fires a ray gun at a cute little dog turning him into a smoking skeleton. That 'skeleton gun' gave me nightmares for a long time. ...And then there was "The Tingler" which made me fear that there was a creature hidden inside my body ready to kill me at any time.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By theyellowpanda 1 June 14, 2010 11:00:54 PM

Pretty much all of Spirited Away made me pee my pants. That is the scariest anime movie Ive ever seen!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By KissyS006 1 June 18, 2010 04:08:26 PM

Just seeing that photo of Christopher Lloyd as the page loaded creeped me out, still! And, although it shouldn't be unexpected in a film about the supernatural, the part in Ghostbusters II where Janosz's eyes glow always freaked me out.

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By KissyS006 1 June 18, 2010 04:10:41 PM

I also now have guilt because having seen Spirited Away as an adult, I found it enchanting and have shown it to my 4 year old son. I hope I haven't scarred him for life!

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By DOLORGIVER 1 July 26, 2010 04:52:07 AM

Pennywise´s head at the shower´s floor!! my son refuses to go to the w.c. alone for years!! the psichologyst said that should be an extra signature in college for psychiatricians just for this movie scene. p.d. forgive my english

Re: The films that gave us childhood nightmares
Posted By nostalgia_ah 1 January 18, 2011 09:33:35 AM

elleisfor, yes, I remember Watcher in the Woods and was quite creeped by it! But I had to comment, no matter how late, to share my nightmare-inducer. I was an Oz girl, a wannabe Dorothy, and watched Wizard of Oz and Return To Oz all the time. Flying monkeys? Scary. Wheelers and Mombi? Very scary. But NOTHING could touch the horror of that subway scene in The Wiz... that creepy peddler guy, with the weird bouncy orange puppet things, that all of a sudden started to grow bigger and bigger and BIGGER (while making really freaky noises) and then chase Dorothy??? Aaaaaaahhhh!!!!!
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