If you've never seen "The Devil and Daniel Webster" (aka "All That Money Can Buy") 1941, you must see it immediately! I guarantee you'll love it.... nobody that I know of has ever put it on a folk horror list, but it's a prime example of New England folklore that is a really creepy horror movie. Its such a great movie!
I'm glad to see people finally starting to talk about A Dark Song. I feel like it kind of slipped through the cracks because it doesn't have big, corny jump scares and had a generic name that didn't help.
In Serbia we speak Serbian language, so Leptirica (pronouncing as LeptiriTSa,) is filmed in Serbian. BTW, Leptirica means "The Moth", a night butterfly.
@@cobwebschannel Born and raised! Oh, and A Dark Song is nothing short of a masterpiece, with ending that in less skilful hands could be corny, but instead turned out to be absolutely astonishing. And when it comes to the folk horror, The Ritual (2017) with Rafe Spall is also worth checking...
Thank you for including A Dark Song. This movie is so good and too many people have not seen it. Also, if you have not seen Exhuma yet, it's another great South Korean folk horror you definitely need to see.
great recommendations,Daniel, I dont think I have watched any of these!! please check out 'The ritual' from 2017, a British film set out in the Swedish countryside, a group of friend go to the north of sweden for trekking and enjoying the trails and,well you can imagine what they encounter there! I think you might enjoy this one because it is totally this vibe! cheers!
I fail to understand why the Czech masterpiece Witchhammer (1970) is not routinely acknowledged to be one of the all time folk horror greats. It's falls within the films exploring the evil wrought by witch-hunters and withchfinders and is, in my humble opinion, the best one by far. It has the feel of a fly on the wall documentary at times and it's both truly dark and grim. Awesome film 🌟🌟🤩
@@floodkevin4716 Hi. I checked that out as there's a very handy search function here 🙂. It turns out that it was indeed mentioned as an unseen film included within the Severin folk horror box set "All The Haunts Be Ours". Beyond that, no further mention. Be that as it may, I'd double down on recommending this film to all you folk horror lovers.
Fantastic video, thank you! Almost no one talks about The White Reindeer or Jug Face, and this is the first time I've heard of Lord of Misrule so I'll have to check that out.
Thanks again for the Folk horror lists, love them too! I watched a witch one you suggested and really loved it. Can't remember the name 😭 but great Witch list, too and respectfully done!
Have a look at an Australian film called “Alison’s Birthday”, from the 80’s. It’s so folk horror it’s even got a Stonehenge replica in the garden. It’s such a good, fun film and the main actress was Mad Max’s wife at the start of that film. Classic Australian weirdness, the ending is awesome.
Seeing "The Undead" in this is hilarious, given how much I enjoyed the MST3K treatment. "This guy was never in Heaven, he was cast out of community theater."
Love folk horror! I hope you will keep these videos coming as it is such a great genre. I appreciate your spreading the word about Gretel & Hansel as it is one of my favorite movies and deserves to be more well-known. It has some of the most beautiful imagery I've ever seen on screen. Also thought Lord of Misrule had fantastic visuals and was a great one in this genre. A couple I can think of that I don't think you've covered yet are The Golem from 2018 and Starve Acre. Thanks again for a great video!
I'm so, so happy that you ended this list with A Dark Song. I'm a 50 year horror fanatic, and I absolutely adore this movie. In fact, I watched it yet again just yesterday. I fascinated by the history and the lore behind it, and the passion for the material in this film that went into it. If you like this kind of thing (and you obviously do) then please do check out The Alchemists Cookbook from 2016. Not quite as good as A Dark Song, and very low budget, but it's a hidden gem and worth a watch.
I loved this movie the first time I saw it and still have it on vhs ... Warlock. Cry of the Banshee ... oh yes It is incredible and yeah, Witchfinder General. Great movies. I'd add The Manitou to this kind of list. Great cast, made for TV and an incredible ending, all set with Indigenous US linkages. Definite supernatural stuff.
There’s an Indonesian movie from 2022 called The Womb I watched on Netflix that’s great and I think y’all would like too. It’s very Rosemary’s Baby but with even more folk horror edge since it’s rural and there’s rituals. A woman has an unplanned pregnancy and she is directed to an older couple online who promise to take care of her baby if she lives with them out in the country for the rest of her pregnancy. It is dark and so good.
As always, a great list. I've seen them all but Jug Face. If you haven't seen it, go to your copy of 'All The Haunts Be Ours' and on the disc that contains Leptirica, watch Devicanska Svirka. You will not be disappointed. Totally agree with your review of A Dark Song. To me it is the most profound work of horror of the past 20 years. Like you, I found the ending amazing, not just for what it shows, but for the thing she asks for. Keep them coming.
One of my favorite sub genres! My recommendation is for a film called Starve Acre (2023) I watched it around the same time I watched Lord of Misrule, and while Lord of Misrule was better ( in my opinion) Starve Acre was a good companion to it. Very 70’s vibe, creepy folk beliefs, a bit of mystery, and a rabbit (hare?) that is very unsettling. Also, since I know you like vampire films, Vampir (2021) is a Serbian vampire film that is downright frightening, if a little disorienting. It is set in modern times, but the folk horror angle is intense and the dream sequences are pretty memorable. Hope you enjoy my recommendations, I always enjoy your videos!
Just a note that the Saami are still very much around and still reside (not past tense) in northern Scandinavia. Great list, some that I've seen and some that I'll definitely need to watch. Feel like some modern folk horror films get lazy and substitute a bad mushroom trip for the supernatural elements.
"Hey diddle diddle, the rat ate the fiddle, the corpse jumped over his tomb, the murderer laughed to see such a sight as he strangled a girl in the gloom, gloom, gloom, as he strangled a girl in the gloom...."
Daniel, I wish to thank you so much for your posts. I get a little bit over excited when I find a new one. I am still getting over my crush on you, so please don’t be afraid!
New to the channel and I'm loving your stuff! taste in movies is wonderful. Do have one gripe thoigh, Just something I have to get used to In This Modern Age is the whole categorization and genre thing. I wish people didn't group movies Because one of the Great experiences Of being a movie buff is having Different tastes in different takes that have been cultured from watching many different movies and finding connections to all in one' own personal repertoire. Don't you kind of agree that categorization and generalization of movies kind of does it a discredit, or am I just being too old foggish? Keep doing what you doing, I love your stuff
Great list, got some more films to watch now! Definitely want to see Dark Song, your take on it piqued my interest. I have The Wailing on my watch list, but like you the length has stopped me from viewing it...
There's a few on here I haven't seen. I've been wanting to check out The White Reindeer for a while. I almost picked up the Eureka release but I think I'm going to try to hold out for a good deal on the all the haunts set. I adored The Wailing but I think it helps that I went into it with zero expectations. The director made another movie I'm a big fan of called The Chaser. Great serial killer thriller. The only folk horror movies I can think of that aren't on either of your lists are The Hallow and The Hole in the Ground. I don't remember The Hallow very well but The Hole in the Ground is pretty good. The director of The Hole in the Ground directed Evil Dead Rise as well.
I can't say I enjoyed Lord Of Misrule like I wanted to. It had all the paint by numbers folk horror set dressing, but to me, it didn't understand what makes the genre scary
At the 5:10 mark, the witch and her imp turn into the same props Corman used in "It Conquered The World!" The little flying bat-like thingies. Well, sure! It would have cost another dollar to slap together some fresh props!
I know someone else has already mentioned it, but I have to second the recommendation of Exhuma. It is so much freaking fun. Frankly, I liked it a lot more than The Wailing, and I enjoyed that movie a lot. Exhuma is simply better.
Interesting recommendations, some of them surprisingly unknown. It is noticeable that , of this genre and unlike with the Giallo, you have researched your own.
I've never seen a Yugoslavian film, but I think I've seen a Serbian film before ;) Ive never heard of Dark Song before, but man you gave it a hellova pitch. Have you seen that huge documentary Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched? It's very comprehensive. I think it's still on Shudder. Thanks my dude 10/10 fricheks
A lot of people like The Wailing, but I found it a bit underwhelming. Exhuma is a better Korean horror film imo. And Noroi is my favorite modern Asian horror film. Onibaba is the best over all.
Have you seen "The Borderlands," aka "Final Prayer" in the U.S.? It has some definite folk horror elements; a church on old pagan ground experiences what seem to be miracles...but, no! It has an ending you will never forget.
I am a huge fan of film, particularly horror, but I'll give anything a chance. I have tried and failed to complete The Wailing several times. It does absolutely nothing for me. I have been told time and again by reviewers across the net that it's a masterpiece, but I'm just not feeling it.
I really want to like it, too. I love movies like 'I Saw the Devil,' which itself is a contemplative, slow-moving, foreign film. 'Memories of Murder' is another I enjoy. 'Oldboy,' of course. I guess I just chalk it up to 'not every movie is for everyone.'
Warlock is really good but Warlock 2 was so bad I didn't even finish it. I thought Lord of Misrule was just okay. I would've put it at the bottom of the list.
Great List! Your original folk horror video is what got your recommended to me, because its one of my favorite genres. I also loved your kids halloween/horror video. I've got spooky kids of my own and I'm always looking for good recommendations. Speaking of recommendations, I have a couple folk horror ones. I got these from the british folk horror book "We don't go back" which clued me to a couple great TV folk horrors. They are obscure, but most are available on youtube! The first is "Robin Redbreast," basically a televised play from 1970 that was a major forerunner of the Wicker Man and is one of the roots of Folk Horror. ua-cam.com/video/OvU2zHMFlfU/v-deo.html The second is "Murrain" by the legendary Nigel Kneale. It was an episode of an anthology show and is a super good very small scale, localized folk horror with amazing dialogue. ua-cam.com/video/b_pTzBqrQ0s/v-deo.html The final one of "Children of the Stones" which is actually a 1977 children's series that's kind of scifi/folk horror for kids. It's really good and (I'm to understand) was deeply traumatic for a lot of kids watching it. ua-cam.com/video/LSIpkxMkT0M/v-deo.html Keep up the good work!
The third day is very good it's not a film it's a tv series, six episodes starring jude law who ends up stuck on an island off the uk. Not sure if you include tv series or just films
Dude- I saw Warloxk when I was waaaay to young for it. I'm just 45 now, so I caught it when it was new to VHS circa 1990. That early scene where the warlock is implied to have cut out that little boy's eyeballs...Jesus. That shit stuck with me. It doesn't help that I have a big problem with eyeball gore....eyeball gore, kneecaps, ankles/tendons, and throat / cheek cutting 🤢🤮 And I'm not gore lightweight, normally. I once upon a time had a huuuuge horror eve collection that included the "Bloodfeast" series and some other nasty ass films. But yeah- that scene in Warlock, the tendon cut scene in Pet Sematary, and the laughing lady in the tin from BlKubrixk's Shining were three scenes that I saw waaay too you (Thabks, DAD, wtf!).
I love The White Reindeer, but it is a vampire movie, not folk horror. The characters are operating within the conventions of their traditional belief system. Folk horror requires modern characters to confront folk belief that is outside the bounds of their own cultural experience.
Are they movies that have subtitles & in a different language? I couldn’t watch the old Godzilla movies either because of the voiceovers not matching up with the actors! Getting older has made me even more irritated!😂😂😂😂😩😢😢😭😭😭😭
What movies should I include in a third Folk Horror list? Let me know!
recent folk horror movies. viking wolf, rare exports and troll hunter earlier films must include curse of the demon
If you've never seen "The Devil and Daniel Webster" (aka "All That Money Can Buy") 1941, you must see it immediately! I guarantee you'll love it.... nobody that I know of has ever put it on a folk horror list, but it's a prime example of New England folklore that is a really creepy horror movie. Its such a great movie!
“Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors” and “Lamb” are great picks, though not exclusively horror!
@@rexzmom5692I actually just bought that movie in the criterion sale! Excited to check it out.
@@cobwebschannel Great score by Bernard Herrmann!
I'm glad to see people finally starting to talk about A Dark Song. I feel like it kind of slipped through the cracks because it doesn't have big, corny jump scares and had a generic name that didn't help.
In Serbia we speak Serbian language, so Leptirica (pronouncing as LeptiriTSa,) is filmed in Serbian. BTW, Leptirica means "The Moth", a night butterfly.
Wow, you’re in Serbia? Thanks for the first-hand knowledge!
@@cobwebschannel Born and raised! Oh, and A Dark Song is nothing short of a masterpiece, with ending that in less skilful hands could be corny, but instead turned out to be absolutely astonishing. And when it comes to the folk horror, The Ritual (2017) with Rafe Spall is also worth checking...
A Dark Song is one of my favorite films of the last decade. It's crazy that Liam Gavin hasn't directed another feature since.
I love Warlock! RIP Julien Sands.
Thank you for including A Dark Song. This movie is so good and too many people have not seen it. Also, if you have not seen Exhuma yet, it's another great South Korean folk horror you definitely need to see.
I definitely need to see Exhuma!
Exhuma is amazing!
Another Sunday of sipping coffee and spooky stuff. Thanks Daniel!
That’s the goal! ☕️
Cheers!
Folk horror is one of my favorite subgenres, especially Irish folk horror. I recommend The Hallow, You Are Not My Mother, Hole in the Ground.
Thank you for the recs!
@@grey_wulf have you seen Oddity yet?! I loved it..
A Dark Song was so good! I never thought id walk away from a horror movie feeling the way i did.
What a powerful ending
It's a weird movie but its good, shows the occult properly.
great recommendations,Daniel, I dont think I have watched any of these!! please check out 'The ritual' from 2017, a British film set out in the Swedish countryside, a group of friend go to the north of sweden for trekking and enjoying the trails and,well you can imagine what they encounter there! I think you might enjoy this one because it is totally this vibe! cheers!
I fail to understand why the Czech masterpiece Witchhammer (1970) is not routinely acknowledged to be one of the all time folk horror greats. It's falls within the films exploring the evil wrought by witch-hunters and withchfinders and is, in my humble opinion, the best one by far. It has the feel of a fly on the wall documentary at times and it's both truly dark and grim. Awesome film 🌟🌟🤩
I believe he has talked about that movie before
@@floodkevin4716 Hi. I checked that out as there's a very handy search function here 🙂. It turns out that it was indeed mentioned as an unseen film included within the Severin folk horror box set "All The Haunts Be Ours". Beyond that, no further mention. Be that as it may, I'd double down on recommending this film to all you folk horror lovers.
Fantastic video, thank you! Almost no one talks about The White Reindeer or Jug Face, and this is the first time I've heard of Lord of Misrule so I'll have to check that out.
Pretty disturbing, have fun! Loved it (Lord of Misrule)
One gentle nota bene: not the Sámi people *were*, the Sámi people *are*. Thank you so much for another great video.
Ah, poor word choice. Thank you for the correction!
Genetically I'm part of the Sami tribe!! Go Reindeer people!!
Technically a TV mini series, but check out The Dark Secret of Harvest Home (1978) with Bette Davis and Rosanna Arquette.
Thanks again for the Folk horror lists, love them too! I watched a witch one you suggested and really loved it. Can't remember the name 😭 but great Witch list, too and respectfully done!
Great list! The Irish film You’re Not My Mother is a horror film that deals with changeling folklore, though it does have a more urban setting.
I gotta see that for sure.
Have a look at an Australian film called “Alison’s Birthday”, from the 80’s. It’s so folk horror it’s even got a Stonehenge replica in the garden. It’s such a good, fun film and the main actress was Mad Max’s wife at the start of that film. Classic Australian weirdness, the ending is awesome.
Oh THANK YOU for Lord of Misrule. I just finished it and it is now on my favorite movies ever list. Thank you so much.
Seeing "The Undead" in this is hilarious, given how much I enjoyed the MST3K treatment.
"This guy was never in Heaven, he was cast out of community theater."
I loved the limericks :)
SLEEEEEEEEP!!!!
"I'm an imp!"
Didn't expect to see the Undead.. haven't seen it for ages. Love the ending
Hi Daniel. Thank you for showing some love for Warlock ! I love Wicker Man 1973 xx
I love Warlock and The Undead. The Undead is great fun with a super twist at the end. RIP Julian Sands. ❤️ from 🇨🇦
RIP indeed. What a talent.
OMG!!! You really mentioned Leptirica ❤ Thank you for that. Your pronunciation of Leptirica is so funny 😊 Greetings from Serbia.
Omg love the shirt bro ⭐
Love folk horror! I hope you will keep these videos coming as it is such a great genre. I appreciate your spreading the word about Gretel & Hansel as it is one of my favorite movies and deserves to be more well-known. It has some of the most beautiful imagery I've ever seen on screen. Also thought Lord of Misrule had fantastic visuals and was a great one in this genre. A couple I can think of that I don't think you've covered yet are The Golem from 2018 and Starve Acre. Thanks again for a great video!
I'm so, so happy that you ended this list with A Dark Song. I'm a 50 year horror fanatic, and I absolutely adore this movie. In fact, I watched it yet again just yesterday. I fascinated by the history and the lore behind it, and the passion for the material in this film that went into it. If you like this kind of thing (and you obviously do) then please do check out The Alchemists Cookbook from 2016. Not quite as good as A Dark Song, and very low budget, but it's a hidden gem and worth a watch.
This channel is so impressive. You find so many movies I've never even heard of.
I'm pumped to watch this. I saw a bunch from the last list I had never seen before, and it has me hooked on the channel.
So happy you checked out Lord of Misrule
So glad I found it because of comments like yours.
I loved this movie the first time I saw it and still have it on vhs ... Warlock. Cry of the Banshee ... oh yes It is incredible and yeah, Witchfinder General. Great movies. I'd add The Manitou to this kind of list. Great cast, made for TV and an incredible ending, all set with Indigenous US linkages. Definite supernatural stuff.
There’s an Indonesian movie from 2022 called The Womb I watched on Netflix that’s great and I think y’all would like too. It’s very Rosemary’s Baby but with even more folk horror edge since it’s rural and there’s rituals. A woman has an unplanned pregnancy and she is directed to an older couple online who promise to take care of her baby if she lives with them out in the country for the rest of her pregnancy. It is dark and so good.
I agree. Quality movie.
A couple of films to add to your list; Wake Wood is amazing, and The Ghost of Mae Nak. Folk horror and witch movies are some of my favorite sub genres
Great list!
Thanks!
Great list! A Dark Song was one of my favorite movies of 2017! Love the ending.
As always, a great list. I've seen them all but Jug Face. If you haven't seen it, go to your copy of 'All The Haunts Be Ours' and on the disc that contains Leptirica, watch Devicanska Svirka. You will not be disappointed. Totally agree with your review of A Dark Song. To me it is the most profound work of horror of the past 20 years. Like you, I found the ending amazing, not just for what it shows, but for the thing she asks for. Keep them coming.
Thank you. I'm always looking for this genre.
Glad you enjoy it!
Your praise of A Dark Song made me a subscriber. I love folk horror, and A Dark Song is in my top five movies of any genre.
Welcome aboard!
One of my favorite sub genres! My recommendation is for a film called Starve Acre (2023) I watched it around the same time I watched Lord of Misrule, and while Lord of Misrule was better ( in my opinion) Starve Acre was a good companion to it. Very 70’s vibe, creepy folk beliefs, a bit of mystery, and a rabbit (hare?) that is very unsettling.
Also, since I know you like vampire films, Vampir (2021) is a Serbian vampire film that is downright frightening, if a little disorienting. It is set in modern times, but the folk horror angle is intense and the dream sequences are pretty memorable.
Hope you enjoy my recommendations, I always enjoy your videos!
I watched Cry of the Banshee today and enjoyed it. Watched Eye of the Devil too. David Niven, Donald Pleasance, Sharon Tate!
Eye of the Devil is definitely a Wicker Man precursor.
A Dark Song was my pic for movie of the year in 2016. The angel in the film us just awe inspiring. A masterpiece!
Great video. Thank you Daniel
Thanks for watching!
Check out "Wer" directed by William Brent Bell if you haven't already. Highly underrated, in my opinion.
Oh man, I didn’t know that was him! I need to see that.
Yes!!!!!
Here we goooooo
Cry of is a masterpiece ✨️
I love the Jug Face soundtrack!
Lord of Misrule was SO good. I'll watch Ralph Ineson in pretty much anything, which is how that one came onto my radar to begin with.
Just a note that the Saami are still very much around and still reside (not past tense) in northern Scandinavia.
Great list, some that I've seen and some that I'll definitely need to watch. Feel like some modern folk horror films get lazy and substitute a bad mushroom trip for the supernatural elements.
"Hey diddle diddle, the rat ate the fiddle, the corpse jumped over his tomb, the murderer laughed to see such a sight as he strangled a girl in the gloom, gloom, gloom, as he strangled a girl in the gloom...."
That's brilliant. Is that from something
Subscribed,I like the way you review. the Wailing for the first hour pure comedy,however it does descend....
Daniel, I wish to thank you so much for your posts. I get a little bit over excited when I find a new one. I am still getting over my crush on you, so please don’t be afraid!
haha It’s all good! I really appreciate that you enjoy the videos. 😊
New to the channel and I'm loving your stuff! taste in movies is wonderful. Do have one gripe thoigh, Just something I have to get used to In This Modern Age is the whole categorization and genre thing. I wish people didn't group movies Because one of the Great experiences Of being a movie buff is having Different tastes in different takes that have been cultured from watching many different movies and finding connections to all in one' own personal repertoire. Don't you kind of agree that categorization and generalization of movies kind of does it a discredit, or am I just being too old foggish? Keep doing what you doing, I love your stuff
Great list, got some more films to watch now! Definitely want to see Dark Song, your take on it piqued my interest. I have The Wailing on my watch list, but like you the length has stopped me from viewing it...
I just ordered “The Undead” off EBay!! 🎉😅
Nice!!
There's a few on here I haven't seen. I've been wanting to check out The White Reindeer for a while. I almost picked up the Eureka release but I think I'm going to try to hold out for a good deal on the all the haunts set. I adored The Wailing but I think it helps that I went into it with zero expectations. The director made another movie I'm a big fan of called The Chaser. Great serial killer thriller.
The only folk horror movies I can think of that aren't on either of your lists are The Hallow and The Hole in the Ground. I don't remember The Hallow very well but The Hole in the Ground is pretty good. The director of The Hole in the Ground directed Evil Dead Rise as well.
They aren't psychics, they are psychologists. The Undead is hilarious, I LOVE this movie!
I watched A Dark Song on prime after watching your recommendationd today. I cant believe id never heard of it!!
That’s amazing to hear you checked one of these out so fast!
I can't say I enjoyed Lord Of Misrule like I wanted to. It had all the paint by numbers folk horror set dressing, but to me, it didn't understand what makes the genre scary
At the 5:10 mark, the witch and her imp turn into the same props Corman used in "It Conquered The World!" The little flying bat-like thingies. Well, sure! It would have cost another dollar to slap together some fresh props!
Jugface 💚
I know someone else has already mentioned it, but I have to second the recommendation of Exhuma. It is so much freaking fun. Frankly, I liked it a lot more than The Wailing, and I enjoyed that movie a lot. Exhuma is simply better.
The wailing is the best film in this list and it’s not even close.
Interesting recommendations, some of them surprisingly unknown. It is noticeable that , of this genre and unlike with the Giallo, you have researched your own.
I've never seen a Yugoslavian film, but I think I've seen a Serbian film before ;)
Ive never heard of Dark Song before, but man you gave it a hellova pitch. Have you seen that huge documentary Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched? It's very comprehensive. I think it's still on Shudder. Thanks my dude 10/10 fricheks
Yeah dude, I love that doc! It’s the first film in that folk horror boxset from Severin.
Not to be ghoulish but a fucked up fact about Warlock is its connection to an actual murder with an obsessed fan.
A lot of people like The Wailing, but I found it a bit underwhelming. Exhuma is a better Korean horror film imo. And Noroi is my favorite modern Asian horror film. Onibaba is the best over all.
Have you seen "The Borderlands," aka "Final Prayer" in the U.S.? It has some definite folk horror elements; a church on old pagan ground experiences what seem to be miracles...but, no! It has an ending you will never forget.
Yes indeed! It’s on my “Top 10 Creepy Church Horror Movies” list.
If you want a unique vampire film check out Aswang 🤘💿🤘
You weren't joking about A Dark Song!
I am a huge fan of film, particularly horror, but I'll give anything a chance. I have tried and failed to complete The Wailing several times. It does absolutely nothing for me. I have been told time and again by reviewers across the net that it's a masterpiece, but I'm just not feeling it.
I understand. It really takes its time. And I wouldn’t quite say “masterpiece”, personally.
I really want to like it, too. I love movies like 'I Saw the Devil,' which itself is a contemplative, slow-moving, foreign film. 'Memories of Murder' is another I enjoy. 'Oldboy,' of course. I guess I just chalk it up to 'not every movie is for everyone.'
Where did you get that shirt? My wife would love it.
1:41 I prefer Misty Mundae
A Dark Song is a horror movie for people who actually study magic
Great list!! Check out Moloch (2022) and Kill List (2011).
Hagazussa
Sennentunschi
Bad des Teufels (The Devil's Bath)
Thank you! I’ll start compiling a list for Pt. 3.
I thank you for the response and for the great content 🤘
“The Ritual” is good Nordic folk horror
He already covered it, but good pick though. I love that movie 🤘🖤
Oh, I was gonna say “The Witch” too, but I’m sure he covered that elsewhere as well.
New to channel😊
I was just "like" number 666. How appropriate!
Warlock is really good but Warlock 2 was so bad I didn't even finish it. I thought Lord of Misrule was just okay. I would've put it at the bottom of the list.
Great List! Your original folk horror video is what got your recommended to me, because its one of my favorite genres. I also loved your kids halloween/horror video. I've got spooky kids of my own and I'm always looking for good recommendations. Speaking of recommendations, I have a couple folk horror ones. I got these from the british folk horror book "We don't go back" which clued me to a couple great TV folk horrors. They are obscure, but most are available on youtube! The first is "Robin Redbreast," basically a televised play from 1970 that was a major forerunner of the Wicker Man and is one of the roots of Folk Horror. ua-cam.com/video/OvU2zHMFlfU/v-deo.html The second is "Murrain" by the legendary Nigel Kneale. It was an episode of an anthology show and is a super good very small scale, localized folk horror with amazing dialogue. ua-cam.com/video/b_pTzBqrQ0s/v-deo.html The final one of "Children of the Stones" which is actually a 1977 children's series that's kind of scifi/folk horror for kids. It's really good and (I'm to understand) was deeply traumatic for a lot of kids watching it. ua-cam.com/video/LSIpkxMkT0M/v-deo.html Keep up the good work!
The third day is very good it's not a film it's a tv series, six episodes starring jude law who ends up stuck on an island off the uk. Not sure if you include tv series or just films
Sean Young was in Blade Runner and Ace Ventura:Pet Detective.
Sure was! And No Way Out with Kevin Costner, one of my favs.
The Ritual
Wow, you didn't watch MST3K? I saw The Undead on there decades ago.
I think Warlock was March of 92
Dude- I saw Warloxk when I was waaaay to young for it. I'm just 45 now, so I caught it when it was new to VHS circa 1990. That early scene where the warlock is implied to have cut out that little boy's eyeballs...Jesus. That shit stuck with me. It doesn't help that I have a big problem with eyeball gore....eyeball gore, kneecaps, ankles/tendons, and throat / cheek cutting 🤢🤮
And I'm not gore lightweight, normally. I once upon a time had a huuuuge horror eve collection that included the "Bloodfeast" series and some other nasty ass films. But yeah- that scene in Warlock, the tendon cut scene in Pet Sematary, and the laughing lady in the tin from BlKubrixk's Shining were three scenes that I saw waaay too you (Thabks, DAD, wtf!).
I love The White Reindeer, but it is a vampire movie, not folk horror. The characters are operating within the conventions of their traditional belief system. Folk horror requires modern characters to confront folk belief that is outside the bounds of their own cultural experience.
Are they movies that have subtitles & in a different language? I couldn’t watch the old Godzilla movies either because of the voiceovers not matching up with the actors! Getting older has made me even more irritated!😂😂😂😂😩😢😢😭😭😭😭
haha Every non-English film I mentioned has subtitles.
Hated Jugface. Also, as someone who learned English with movies, all I could think when I saw the movie name was "jug" face = tit face 😂
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I get as an American you mispronounce a lot of foreign names and places, but when you butcher English names I can only question your intelligence.
I've watched "a dark song" twice and i still don't get the ending lol
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