15. Who’s banging on the walls?
“The Haunting” (G, 1963)
It’s the middle of the night, and there is a strange banging on the walls in the supposedly haunted Hill House.
This scene doesn’t take need any special effects or gore to be scary. It simply uses straight-forward creepy sounds and the fear of the unknown. If you watch it with somebody else, be sure it’s him or her who’s grabbing your hand. You’d hate to find out it’s an uninvited guest. (Insert sinister laugh here.)
14. How’s the ankle?
“Quarantine” (R, 2008)
If you ever wanted to see somebody walk on an ankle that has a compound fracture, here’s you chance. The sight is so horrifying it made it to 14 on my list.
13. There’s something in that last dryer
“Identity” (R, 2003)
While this horror and psychological thriller hybrid may not have made my 10 scariest movies list, it has one of the most memorable scenes out there. A group of individuals is stranded in a desert motel in the midst of a violent storm.
In this particular scene, John Cusack’s character goes into the laundry room where he hears some thumping. There are three dryers going. He opens the first. Just clothes. The thumping continues. He opens the second. More clothes. The thumping is now louder, and it’s obviously coming from the last dryer. What’s inside doesn’t disappoint.
12. The ghost in Cole’s tent
“The Sixth Sense” (PG-13, 1999)
Those little fort-tent things you constructed in your living room when you were a kid were always so fun, weren’t they? Well, this one isn’t so fun, at least for Haley Joel Osmont’s character Cole. He knows a ghost is near, and on the far side of the tent he sees a dead girls with vomit oozing from her mouth. This scene is an awesome surprise if you don’t know exactly when it’s coming.
11. Crazy lady in the kitchen
“The Sixth Sense” (PG-13, 1999)
Another fantastic scene from the sixth sense. It’s late, and Cole has to pee. He runs to the bathroom, and as he relieves himself the room goes cold. Behind him, a figure walks down the hall. After he finishes up, he follows the direction the figure went: into the kitchen. There he finds the ghost of a woman who slit her wrists, and she yells out horrifying cries. Of course for Cole this is just another Tuesday.
10. Don’t you remember your own patients?
“The Sixth Sense” (PG-13, 1999)
Okay, one last Sixth Sense scene. This is the film’s opening scene, and it sets the tone for the remainder of the film. Bruce Willis’ character, psychiatrist Malcolm Crowe, and his wife are drunk together downstairs in their house celebrating an award Crowe recently won. Suddenly, there’s a crash upstairs. Crowe investigates, only to find a skinny man (played by Donnie Wahlberg) in his whitey-tighties standing in the bathroom. (No, I haven’t gotten to the scariest part, believe it or not.)
It’s clear the skinny man has some beef with Crowe, and we find out he is a former patient who yells at Crowe, claiming Crowe failed him. It quickly becomes apparent that this guy isn’t just going to let Crowe walk away from him.
9. Oh yes, they float, Georgie
“It” (Not rated, 1990)

If you ever see a clown in the storm drain, run away. Too bad nobody ever gave little Georgie that advice, and it ended with getting his arm ripped off (which is kind of a bummer for little Georgie). This is one of the first scenes of the two-part made-for-TV movie, and it’s easily the scariest scene from the movie.
Little Georgie loses his boat down the drain, and he’s greeted by Pennywise, who informs little Georgie that there are all kinds of rides “down there” and that Georgie will float when he’s “down there with him.” When Georgie reached down to get his boat back, Pennywise strikes. Don’t worry; you don’t actually see Georgie get his arm ripped off.
8. Linda Blair does the 360
“The Exorcist” (R, 1973)
If you don’t know this scene is coming, it might make you wet yourself, because you just don’t expect somebody’s head to freaking spin around. I’ll be the first to admit, this scene is starting to show its age a little bit, but it still gets me every time. I almost feel like the primitive special effects make it scarier, because computer graphics would probably just make it cheesy and fake.
7. What’s in the basement? Spoiler alert!
“The Blair Witch Project” (R, 1999)
This is scene marks one of the most unsettling endings in motion picture history. One of the three filmmakers, Josh, has disappeared only to be heard screaming from far away at night. The other two filmmakers, Heather and Mike try to find Josh, but end up at a this creepy-ass house. They track the screams, and it first leads them to the attic, and then to the basement. Mike gets to the basement first, and Heather arrives to find assurance that there will be no escaping this house.
6. Welcome to the bone room
“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (R, 1974)
As I said in my 10 scariest movies list, I’ve only seen this movie once. However, this scene stuck with me. One of the girls finds her way into leatherface’s house and winds up in a room filled with trinkets made of bones. Fast cuts highlight the shocking situation and set the tone for the rest of the morbid movie.
5. The twins want you to play with them
“The Shining” (R, 1980)
What’s creepier than little kids? I’m honestly not sure. Poor little Danny keeps seeing these young twins around the Overlook Hotel, and they keep asking him to play. They seem innocent enough until Danny gets a peak at what actually happened. Check it out here, if you dare.
4. Hank takes a midnight trip to the hospital
“Session 9” (R, 2001)
In this scene, Hank, one of the crewmembers working to clean out an abandoned mental hospital, takes a nighttime trip to the hospital to collect rare coins he found hidden in one of the walls in the basement the day before. When he gets there he begins to discover he’s not alone.
As this scene was shot on location, the setting and the sounds coming from the darkness make this scene creepy enough. However, the kicker comes when Hank sees a faint figure of a person at the end of a hallway. Buckle up tight, because by the end of the scene, whoever that is will say hello.
3. They found her in the closet
“The Ring” (PG-13, 2002)
Ah, what would we do without “The Ring.” It may be one of the scariest films to be made in the last 10 years, but it didn’t quite make my top-10 list. However, it features one scene that is completely terrifying.
At the beginning of the movie, two teenage girls are hanging out. One tells the other the story of “the ring,” which you probably already know. They go back and forth about whether the whole “ring” thing is true, but the scene closes with one of the girls falling victim to the strange tape (or whatever force is behind it).
Fast-forward to later, and we are told they found the girl in the closet. There’s a quick cut with sudden boom (to heighten the intensity, of course), and what you see is the girl of my dreams.
2. I am the one who dwells within
“The Exorcism of Emily Rose” (PG-13, 2005)

Even though I’m an agnostic, the whole “Satan” thing creeps me out. This movie shifts back and forth between horror and courtroom drama, and this scene is the climax of the “horror” side. We are in Emily’s family’s barn, where the possessed Emily has fled to and has been chased by a priest, a doctor and family members.
Emily’s voice breaks into two tones, and the evil force inside her presents itself. What makes this scene exponentially creepier is the way the barn animals freak out when this happens. Their instinctive “freak outs” really make the scene convincing.
1. A gift outside the tent
“The Blair Witch Project” (R, 1999)
Taking the cake for the scariest movie moment is quite possibly the most memorable scenes from “The Blair Witch Project.” Josh has disappeared and has been heard screaming at night, and Heather wakes up in the morning to find a bundle of sticks wrapped by a bloody strip of Josh’s clothing. Initially she throws it away, but when she’s alone she takes a look at what’s inside.
Inside the bundle, she basically finds “pieces of Josh.” The rawness of this scene makes it perfect and sets the pace for the remainder of the movie. This scene gives me chills more so than any other scene I can remember.









