Showing posts with label revenge films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label revenge films. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Revenge Is Sweet: An Exhaustive Countdown Of Messy Vengeance, Part TWO

It's been a while since the first part of this feature, and for that I apologize. (Life gets in the way sometimes, I'm sure all are aware of that and have the same issues sometimes!)

 But here is the second half of my list of favorite revenge films within (or around) the horror genre. 

Please do not take this as a definitive list. I reiterate that these are my favorites.

I'm sure there will be some films that are notably missing, and you're most welcome to post in the comments what your favorites are, whether they are found on this list or not.

So here we go with part two!  Enjoy!


 25) Theater of Blood (1973) - One of my first experiences with revenge films was watching Vincent Price in this 1973 chiller.  Price stars as a begrudged actor, Edward Lionheart, who after being ridiculed by critics and looked over for a prestigious acting award, sets forth to murder each of them in ghastly ways that in fact match the Shakespearean stories he so avidly admired. The ways in which Lionheart dispatches his victims (drowning in wine, electrocution, dragged behind a horse, decapitation, being forced to eat pet poodles, etc.) was pretty shocking for a young child such as myself, but I have always remembered the way I felt when I watched this film. Riveted!


24) Drag Me To Hell (2009) - From the mind of Sam Raimi comes a revenge film about Christine, a young woman (Alison Lohman) who denies an elderly gypsy (Lorna Raver) a loan at the bank she works at. The old woman needs an extension on her mortgage or she will lose her home. Christine, trying to impress her boss and get a promotion, declines the loan and all but throws the old lady out the bank doors. Word to the wise: Don't fuck with gypsies. All manner of hell breaks loose, with the title totally living up to its name.



23) Hard Candy (2005)  - When 14 y/o Hayley (a fabulous Ellen Page) decides to take it upon herself to flirt online with 30-ish Jeff (Patrick Wilson), she finally convinces him to meet with her. Thinking he's about to get lucky, they end up back at his place where she proceeds to knock him out with a drugged cocktail and tie him to a chair, where he wakes up and learns that she has known all along about his fixation on young girls.  She takes it upon herself to become his worst nightmare, a young vigilante who tortures him into admitting not only that he is a pedophile, but that he was involved in the death of a young girl in the neighborhood. Any man that watches this movie cannot help to cover his crotch and cry.


22) Sweeney Todd (2007) - You'd think a musical would be too happy to fit in a revenge category. Not so, however, with the case of Sweeney Todd.  While the 2007 feature film is not the first to tell the story, it stars my favorite actor, Johnny Depp - who plays the crazed barber with relish and wild abandon. Benjamin Barker was a happily married man with a young daughter when a wealthy judge went about framing him for murder so that he could step in and take his wife away.  Fifteen years later Barker returns from a long prison stint and exacts his bloody revenge on the judge (who now lusts after Barker's daughter!), with the help of Ms. Lovett -who makes meat pies out of murdered citizens! You gotta love it.


21) Dark Night of the Scarecrow (1981) - Even made-for-tv movies can pack a punch sometimes. This 1981 flick tells the story of Bubba, a good 'ol boy who is mentally challenged and totally harmless. When he befriends a young girl in his hometown and she goes missing (she is actually unconscious at a doctor's office after Bubba saves her from a brutal dog attack), Bubba is pegged as the guilty party without any kind of investigation. The unforgivable townsfolk form a lynch mob and set about finding Bubba.  Bubba's mother disguises him as a scarecrow, going as far as to hang him on a post in a field. The mob finds him anyway, torturing and murdering him. I think you know where the story goes from here.  Believe me, Bubba is sure to have the last word.

20}Prom Night (1980)  -When a pre-teen prank goes south and a young girl dies, the guilty parties try to cover up the crime. But someone has witnessed the deed and forges ahead with a revenge plot to make the now high school seniors pay for their deadly stunt. Jamie Lee Curtis stars in this 1980 slasher film, and her dance moves in the gymnasium at the titular dance are truly unsurpassed.  While the plot seems trite today by our standards, back then it was one of the classic slashers the early eighties were so populated with.  It's your standard revenge film, and truth be told doesn't hold up as well as say, The Burning, but it has its moments and I'm proud to say it's on my DVD shelf!


19} Audition (1999) - Oh hell. This consummate Takashi Miike movie is really an odd sort of revenge film, as the lead character of Asami is so psychologically fucked up that I'm not sure she even feels she is committing acts of vengeance.  It so happens that she has a penchant for torturing men that claim first to love her and then don't devote every waking moment to her happiness. Asami (Eihi Shiina) is so demented and obsessed that she can just sit by her phone for DAYS waiting for it to ring. When her latest conquest, Aoyama, does not return her calls immediately, she can't seem to move on. Worse yet, when she finds a photo of his deceased wife in his apartment, that is the final straw. She drugs him and proceeds to maim and torture him in what is one of the most famous (and ghastly) scenes of uncomfortable horror I've ever seen. 

18}The Grudge (2004) - This film is the epitome of revenge. It is said that when someone dies in the grip of a powerful rage, a curse is born.  Which is precisely what happened here. You can either watch the original Japanese film (Ju-on) or the Americanized version, but either way it's a fine slice of vengeance. Housewife Kayako unfortunately falls in love with her young son's American teacher and obsesses about him manically in her diary. Which her husband finds. Uh-oh.  He murders Kayako and then his son, along with his pet cat. And everyone that enters the doomed house ends up dead. It's how they get that way that makes the film a really spooky tale.  Some may say there are too many jump-scares in the 2004 version I mention here, and I don't disagree. Nevertheless, the core of the film and the revenge that stirs the plot are a force to be reckoned with.

17} Irréversible (2002) - A brutal film – at times almost unwatchable, Irreversible has the unique distinction of being told in complete reverse order. Which means the revenge comes near the beginning of this one, and it’s only later that you see – or should I say experience?- the brutality that warrants it.
Suffice it to say that it is only well after a man gets his head bashed in with a fire extinguisher that the attacker understands that the victim wasn’t even the man who deserved it.


16} The Descent (2005) – I don’t think our ‘final girl’ Sarah could have possibly had it any worse. First her hubby and daughter are killed in a freak accident, then she goes on a caving expedition in which the system of subterranean caverns are not actually known or mapped. Next, the freaky nocturnal humanoid crawlers show up. After which she finds out the girl that lead them down there not only led them astray, but previously slept with Sarah’s husband. Later in the caves, Juno leaves their mutual friend to die a horrible death, one which Sarah prevents by giving her a quick but gut-wrenching demise. So it’s no surprise to feel elated when Sarah wounds Juno in the leg with a pickaxe (ouch!) and leaves her for the crawlers to catch, making her own escape.

15} The Loved Ones (2009) - Australian horror films are some of my favorites, and this one has got to be at the top of the bunch. From 2009 comes a film starring the beautiful Xavier Samuel as Brent, a young man whose father passed away in a car accident in which Brent was the driver.  Six months (and a whole lot of cutting and maryjane) later, Brent is set to attend his high school prom with his girlfriend. He politely declines an offer from Lola (Robin McLeavy), who is utterly (and dangerously I might add) fixated on him. She attacks him when he is alone, drugs him, and when he wakes he is tied to a chair in Lola's house. Her father has decorated the house for a "dance" and after Lola injects bleach into Brent's voice box so he cannot talk (or scream), the torture just kind of worsens as you go. This. Film. Is. Awesome.

14} Hostel (2005) – While this isn't truly a typical "revenge" film, sometimes just a scene or two of feel-good vengeance can make a whole movie. I can’t express my feeling of gratification when that Dutch businessman got his comeuppance in the train station bathroom at the end of the film. Matter of fact, I do believe the entire theater where I saw it exploded in applause. That dude was creepy from the using-his-hands-as-utensils (!) get-go.


13} Pumpkinhead (1988) - People, I absolutely LOVE Pumpkinhead. It's a great kick-back to the old 'scary monster in the woods' type of film, and it delivers in spades.  Plus, you get Lance Henriksen!! Who can top that?  Story goes like this: Ed Harley (Henriksen) owns a general store out in the lower-class country. He and his little boy Billy are happy as clams until a group of asshole twenty-somethings come a callin'. The biggest dick of the bunch ends up killing Billy in an accident with a dirt bike. Harley is beyond vengeful and finds himself looking up a local witch who can help him conjure a murderous creature, Pumpkinhead, who will wreak havoc and dispatch every last asshole in a truly horrifying manner. As you would expect, things go off course fairly quickly.

12} Hostel 2 (2007) – Roger Bart is a creep. Well, at least he played one on tv…and in movies. In the second Hostel flick, he’s a swarmy dude who followed his BFF to Slovakia to kill for a price – and for the thrill of it. Initially, his buddy Todd is the one who is all gung-ho to slaughter his little blonde victim. Instead, he chickens out and it is Stuart (Bart) who has the balls to do the dirty deed. Alas, but not for long. He soon loses a certain part of his anatomy to a spit-fire intended victim who gives him up to save her own life. Combination “most oogie/truly bad-ass” part? The dog.


11} Ghost Story (1981) - A great tale of revenge by Peter Straub was turned into a chilling film of the same name in which a superb leading performance by Alice Krige sets the film apart from others of its kind. In small-town Vermont, a foursome of men commit an unspeakable yet accidental murder and pay for the crime for decades to come. Eva Galli teased and flirted with the quartet of young college students until one night a horrible mishap ends in her death, but she didn't stay dead. Isn't that the way it always goes?


10} Martyrs (2008) - This is a film that has so much brutality and awful content it's almost tortuous to watch. But it needs to be seen, and its writer/director, Pascal Laugier, is to be commended for not flinching and for making this ridiculously compelling revenge piece. Basically, we have Lucie, a young girl who has survived unimaginable horrors after being held captive for an unspecified period of time. She escapes and is put in an orphanage where she befriends another girl, Anna. Fifteen years later Lucie believes she has discovered who her captors were and violently murders them in their home, then calling Anna to help her clean up the mess. To tell more would be a disservice to those who have yet to see this gritty and truly fascinating (yet undeniably brutal) film. All I can say is, if you have a weak stomach you may want to steer clear.

9} Misery (1990) – Just the fact that a cast iron pig was used as a weapon of death is enough, right? But after all her “oogie messes” and “cock-a-doodie” comments, it was such a feeling of joy when her eyes finally crossed and we said goodbye to the lovely Ms. Annie Wilkes.
Wonder who got the real pig in her will?

8} Carrie (1976)  - Oh yeah. Now that’s a way to get retribution!  Burn down the whole place with everybody in it.  Perhaps they’re all gonna laugh at you…but then again, I think the joke was on them in the end. Who doesn’t smile (even just a little) when they see those gym doors slam shut?
After the tampon-tossing, name-calling, and fake-friending those assholes were up to, they deserved the wrath of Telekinesis Girl! Sounds like a super hero. I like it.
And you know what else? I’m glad she killed the damn gym teacher. That Betty Buckley kind of creeps me out.

7} Last House on the Left (2009) – I picked this version of LHotL simply because though it was completely implausible (you can’t run a microwave with the door open!), it was unique- and I wanted that jackass to suffer. And it also made a statement by showing that men can be pissed off and get revenge as well. Vengeance is mine, saith the pissed off daddy. In the original film, the mother of one of the murdered girls bites off the penis of the killer. That kind of rocked as well, revenge-wise.


6} Fatal Attraction (1987) – One of my favorite moments in a film…ever. Just when you think Michael Douglas is down for the count, a gunshot rings out. The camera then pans to Anne Archer and the smoking evidence that she is not just a woman scorned, but a woman who stands by her man. Then back to Glenn Close, sliding down the wall and leaving that lovely red streak while she falls into a lump. Redemption then gratified the hell out of us.


5} The Woman in Black (1989) - This film version of this chilling story by Susan Hill is in my top five favorite films, any genre. Yes, it was just remade last year (starring Daniel Radcliffe), and while that was an acceptable offering from Hammer films, the original is just a far better spook-fest.  Arthur Kipps is a lawyer sent to a small village in rural England to close up the affairs of one Alice Drablow, who lives across the marsh in a remote old estate that is unreachable until low tide. As if the isolated location isn't eerie enough, the titular character (who first shows herself in a graveyard, standing in the distance) is downright chilling. She appears like a breath of evil and startles the viewer into submission every time. This film emotes a devastating and dreadful tone that lasts until the very last minute on screen. I just cannot recommend it enough, if you can find it. I've written about it several times here on the blog, so check it out.

4} I Saw The Devil (2010) - This is seriously my new favorite revenge film, ever. From the mind of Kim Ji-woon comes this brilliant South Korean gem about a man who will do anything to find the killer of his fiancé.  Joo-yun (Oh San-ha) is driving home in a snowstorm when she gets a flat tire. Unfortunately, Kyung-chul (Choi Min-sik) is her would-be rescuer. He's a serial killer, and things do not end well for Joo-yun. When her fiancé  Soo-hyun (Lee Byung-hun) finds out about her death, he becomes absolutely obsessed with finding, torturing, and eventually killing Kyung-chul. The best part is the fact that Joo-yun is a secret service agent, which proves to be a very unlucky turn of events for our murderer.  Graphically violent, beautifully shot, surprisingly emotional, and very well acted - I Saw The Devil is one of the best films I have seen in over a decade, at least.

3} Freaks (1932) - A year after Tod Browning gave us Dracula, he bestowed upon us a film so delightfully wicked that it was banned in the UK for decades and was quite the controversial piece. Taking place at a carnival setting, Browning used actual sideshow performers as his cast, giving the film an unsurpassed realism. A trapeze artist, Cleopatra, discovers Hans (one of the midget sideshow performers) has a hefty inheritance and so she seduces and marries him.  His fellow performers (all "freaks" themselves), take it upon themselves to determine Cleopatra's true colors after one of them overhears her plotting with the strong man (she's been sleeping with on the side) to kill Hans. What the group ends up doing to get their revenge for years of ridicule that have culminated in Hans' humiliation is the very best part of this wonderful old film. See it!

2}Ms. 45 (1981) - One of the best revenge films is one perhaps many haven't seen because it isn't strictly marketed as a horror film. It's an awesome movie starring Zoë Tamerlis Lund as Thana, a mute woman who is attacked and raped not once but twice in the same night - by two different assailants! While the possibility seems entirely unheard of, the film doesn't back down from hard-to-believe events one bit. After the second attack, Thana kills the perpetrator (with an iron, no less), keeps his gun (yep, a .45), but loses her sanity. She begins to get a feel for the vengeance, and starts killing off folks like it's free. If you haven't seen this one, may I recommend it wholeheartedly!

1} Day of the Woman/I Spit on Your Grave (1978) – How could this not be number one?  DotW is a hard-ass, suck-it-up-and-take-it kind of film. I saw it oh so long ago when I was waaaay to young to be exposed to something of its lurid and controversial content. The simple premise: a young beauty comes to a cabin in the woods to write a book and is tormented and later accosted and raped by a group of good 'ol boys.  But she doesn't just lie down and take it. Oh HELL no. A powerful statement of revenge, it made me feel all warm inside when Jennifer gives one of her attackers a nice bath…and proceeds to take her revenge, quite literally. Score!

Man, I feel better all the sudden....

Monday, April 8, 2013

Revenge Is Sweet: An Exhaustive Countdown Of Messy Vengeance, Part One

Today feels like a great day for revenge. Revenge in horror films, that is. Or at least films wandering around the horror genre.

First things first. In a related side note, I have to say that most of the men that I know and/or associate with, both here online and in the “real world”, are awesome. I don’t have a complaint to sound and I don’t care which way the plumbing works. But we all know it’s not always that way.

We live in a world of deluded, disrespectful, sometimes even misogynistic men who occasionally seem to disregard all sense of decency and choose instead to objectify and demoralize women.

Well… you know what happens to those dudes in a horror movie? They die a fairly gruesome death. And oh yes, I clap my hands and give a rousing whoo-hoo! when that occurs.

That being said… I have to admit, sometimes women are equally as cruel, unforgiving, and psychotic as men, so I have to give everyone their due. There are a LOT of pissed off women on this list.

Horror seems to be the perfect fit for this type of film, and SO many horror movies are all about revenge in one way or another.  That makes it really hard to pare down a list of hundreds to fifty.

But on that note, I bring you my exhaustive top 50 personal favorite films of revenge and retribution, counting down to my number one. As hard as it is to place any kind of order with these films, I hope you'll just bear with me - my top ten are in part two, and those are pretty much the way I see it - but the rest, well they are all fairly equal.

Oh, and beware ‘ye spoilers!

50) Friday the 13th (1980) - It felt right to start on a good note, as this is one of my favorite horror flicks from way back. Vengeance is mine, saith the mother.  Pamela Voorhees had nothing but revenge on her mind when she saw they were opening Camp Crystal Lake again.  I mean, those damn counselors let her baby drown in the lake (which really does beg the question, where were YOU, mom?). So after them she goes, dispatching them one by one with various sharp implements. Everyone remembers that Jason is pissed off because they killed his mother, but we need to remember what started it all in the first place!

49) The Toxic Avenger (1984) - This Troma camp-classic pits scrawny Melvin against four dolts who tease him relentlessly.  One day during a prank the four set up, Melvin falls into a vat of toxic waste that proceeds to burn and horribly disfigure him. Yet Toxie lives to exact his revenge by becoming a bizarre superhero of sorts, at the ready to fight crime and kill each of his tormentors with pluck and determination.  Strange film, but everyone should see this craziness once!

48) The Craft (1996) - I've written about The Craft before and got some backlash about it not being horror. Well to that I say, yeah...whatever.  When Nancy (Fairuza Balk) makes snakes crawl out of toilets to attack a friend, causes her pervy stepfather to have a fatal heart attack and causes teen heartthrob Chris (Skeet Ulrich) to fall out a second story window to his death because he shunned her, you realize this vengeful girl knows her stuff.

47) Sympathy for Mr Vengeance (2002) -Park Chan-wook is pretty much the South Korean master of revenge films, I do think.  In this ridiculously violent film, Ryu (Shin Ha-kyun) is in search of a kidney for his sister, and after finding out he is not a viable donor, takes to the black market to exchange one of his own kidneys for one that will match his dying sibling's. Unfortunately, the deal he makes goes sour when after the operation, he awakes to find both the kidney and his money gone. Yeah, that'd piss me off too.  I think you can take it from here....

46) Sympathy for Lady Vengeance (2005) - Chan-wook is at it again. In this installment, Lee Geum-ja  (Lee Young Ae) has served a long prison term for a murder of a young schoolboy that she did not commit - a murder she was forced to confess to so that the true murderer would not kill her newborn daughter. Needless to say, she's fairly amped up after her early release for good behavior.  And that's where the can of whoop-ass is opened up. In particular after Geum-ja discovers that the true killer has murdered many other children, and made movies of the deaths.

45)  Straw Dogs (1971) Sam Peckinpah's controversial film from the early seventies tells the tale of David Sumner (Dustin Hoffman), a man who takes his beautiful wife Amy (Susan George) back to her quaint home town in rural England where he quickly finds out that the locals aren't too keen on him trying to fit in. Which is the question itself - does he even fit in?  Amy's former lover and his friends come on strong, and when they are hired to renovate part of the property, lines are crossed and Amy ends up raped. Things eventually escalate into a night of violence - one in which David shows the townsfolk just who IS in charge. Remade in 2011 with questionable results.

44) What Lies Beneath (2000) - It's a sad day when you have Harrison Ford in a film but cast him as a villain. A fine little supernatural film, What Lies Beneath tells the story of Clare Spencer (Michelle Pfeiffer), a woman adjusting to a move into a beautiful house by a lake in Vermont. Sounds idyllic, to be sure. But soon it seems a ghost has set its sights on Clare, who thinks it is the murdered wife of the neighbor next door. As she tries to make contact with said entity, other things come into question - such as the sanctity of her marriage to Norman (Ford).  In reality, the ghost isn't after Clare, it's after revenge - or at the very least closure to its own murder.

43) House of Wax (1953) - Forget the remake, I'm talking the Vincent Price version here, of course!  Henry Jarrod (Price) is a museum-caliber sculptor who uses wax to portray people and animals. The museum where his displays are showcased is owned by a greedy business partner who has been asking the exhibits to be more dramatic - vulgar even- in order to increase ticket sales.  Jarrod refuses so the partner burns the museum down to gain the insurance monies. Jarrod, half-crazy and nearly perishing in the fire himself, takes his revenge by sealing his victims in hot wax for all eternity.

42) Cape Fear (1991) - I use the remake gladly when noting this film, as Scorsese really knows how to put a villain on the big screen.  Ex-con Max Cady (Robert DeNiro) has a big grudge against his previous lawyer Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte) due to evidence that was not released during the trial and purportedly increased Cady's sentence in prison.  Naturally, this doesn't sit well with Cady and he tracks Bowden down and starts stalking him, showing up at his house, getting close to his wife and daughter, and finally has a big showdown on the family houseboat. This one really shouldn't be missed, if you haven't seen it yet.  Powerful.

41) Hobo with a Shotgun (2011) - I've already sang the praises of Rutger Hauer in this film, so if you want to you can check that out. Suffice it to say, any film with a title like that just has to be a revenge film, right?  A hobo checks into a random town that ends up being rife with violent crime due to a pair of brothers and their demented father, Drake.  So what is a hobo supposed to do?  Grab himself a shotgun and start dispersing of the filth that is ruining his new town!

40) The Burning (1981) - This early eighties slasher film doesn't really open any new doors as far as revenge films, but it is one of the only ones that has a supposed link to a true crime.  When teen campers play a prank on an unsuspecting caretaker, it goes horribly wrong, leaving "Cropsy" horrifically burned.  Years later he makes his presence known by attacking a new round of campers with his signature weapon of choice: gardening shears.

39) The Hand that Rocks the Cradle (1992) Never has Rebecca DeMornay been more frightening than right here in this thriller. When a pregnant woman's husband is arrested for molesting several patients and he soon commits suicide, the woman not only loses all her assets but her unborn child as well.  She sets off to get revenge on the first patient who initially implicated her dead husband. She gets herself a suitable pseudonym, Peyton Flanders, and suavely weasels her way into the Bartell family home as a nanny.  And it all goes downhill from there.

38) A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) - The arrest of Freddie Kreuger years ago on child murdering charges didn't stick, allowing the madman to walk free. However, the parents of the murdered children weren't having that, so they burned the guy alive. Now Freddie stalks the children of those parents in their dreams, killing them with his finger-knives when they fall asleep.  Was a great concept in its time, and was a solid entry into the slasher sub-genre. Freddy was really scary when he started out, all pissed off and vengeful. Then he unfortunately got silly.  But that first film, revenge central!
 
37) The Fog (1980) - Another great revenge film, The Fog has a group of a seaside townies conspiring together to make sure a clipper ship heading for Antonio Bay doesn't make it any father than the rocks and a watery grave.  The seamen on board apparently wanted to set up a leper colony nearby and the citizens of the town weren't having that. So they coaxed the ship with false lights and made sure it hit the rocks and sank. The townsfolk then stole all the gold and treasure on board and established the town. Needless to say, when the 100 year anniversary came along, so did the ghostly crew of the Elizabeth Dane, seeking retribution.

36) Dead Silence (2007) - Is there anything more creepy than dolls and puppets?  Yep. Vengeful dolls and puppets. Mary Shaw was a famous ventriloquist, but when a child questions her ability and says he sees her mouth moving, that child eventually goes missing. Shaw was held accountable and the people of the town murdered her bu cutting out her tongue.  Coincidentally, those same villagers who killed Mary Shaw ended up dead with their own tongues cut out, some of them turned into living dolls.  Goddamned dolls, anyhow.

35) Urban Legend (1998) - An underrated film of its time, it was inventive with its kills and had a slick edgy feel to it. As each victim is offed according to an urban legend, it is up to our main protagonist Natalie (Alicia Witt) to discover the method to the killer's madness. Turns out, Natalie and a friend made the mistake of playing a joke (the gang-initiation headlights legend) on an unsuspecting young teen, causing him to have a fatal accident.  Now the girlfriend of said victim is killing everyone near and dear to Natalie in acts of revenge against her slain beau.

34) Happy Birthday to Me (1981) - Were we really ready to see Mary Ingalls as a murderer?  Anyway, with a crazy crazy ending that defies common sense, Happy Birthday still has great kills and a coherent plot (at least till they throw that kicker in at the end!).  Ginny is a pretty, popular girl at school, and is in fact a member of the Top Ten Club.  Her 18th birthday is rapidly approaching but there's a killer at large! Someone is pissed at the Top Ten club! Could it be Ginny? After all, Ginny is a little unstable and makes frequent visits to her dead mother's grave. On top of all this, we get a black-gloved killer! Giallo wannabe! Regardless, someone has revenge in their heart - and all will be revealed at the birthday party!

33) Scream (1996) - Scream really set the horror genre on fire back in '96 when it was released, ingniting a fire that was rapidly dying out.  It was witty and fun and killed off Drew Barrymore ( à la Psycho) in the first ten minutes. The revenge factor here comes from Sidney Prescott's mother being a bit of a tramp and sleeping around with half the town, including Billy Loomis's father - causing their marriage to implode and Billy to become a vengeful murderer.  He gets his pal Stu involved and it's havoc and death until the last reel.

32) I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) - While we're talking teen screams, we may as well bring up this gem from '97.  Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) and her friends accidentally hit a man on the road while they are driving recklessly on a ocean-side highway. Thinking the poor soul dead, they throw him in the water, hoping that a shark will make a nice meal of him and all will be forgotten.  But we know that is never how it works, and the fisherman comes a callin', hell-bent on getting his revenge on the stupid, beautiful teenagers that left him for dead.  Is that your hook or are you just glad to see me?

31) Inside ( À l'intérieur, 2007) - God this film is brutal. It's so difficult to watch, and the tension just keeps rising throughout the entire 82 minutes. Sarah (Alysson Paradis) is pregnant and recovering from a car accident that took the life of her husband.  Enter La Femme (Béatrice Dalle), a woman who, for unknown reasons, wants to take Sarah's unborn child. No, scratch that. She wants to cut the baby right out of her abdomen. And now. After a relentless evening of attacks, we finally realize why La Femme has revenge on the mind.  Nasty stuff.

30) Oldboy (2003) - The third film from Park Chan-wook on this list, but with good reason. This is the middle film in the so-called trilogy with Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and the final Sympathy for Lady Vengeance. Oh Dae-Suis is kidnapped on the evening of his daughter's birthday and is held in a prison for fifteen (yes, FIFTEEN) years with no explanation. Naturally, anyone confined to a cell for that long has got nothing but vengeance on the mind.  And he takes his revenge without question or guilt.

29) Terror Train (1980) - You know, people should know better than to play nasty pranks on others. Especially when there is the possibility that the person you're pranking is possibly a little (or a lot) unstable. After a group of college kids engage in a bit of tomfoolery by placing a corpse in bed with a nerdy geek named Kenny.  Kenny doesn't take the joke well and ends up in a mental hospital. Three years later the same group of pranksters board a train for a costume party.  And even though we have known it would happen all along, Kenny does end up on said train with a grudge and a great big knife.

28) The Ring (2001)  - To me, this version of Ringu is really good, which is the reason I am putting the Americanized Ring here.  Rachel Keller gets wrapped up in the mystery of her young niece's death after she apparently died after watching a doomed video tape. What she uncovers is a young girl who was feared by her adoptive parents and subsequently killed by her mother by way of a long fall into a deep well.  The young girl in question, Samara, has alternate plans rather than resting in peace. She wreaks vengeful havoc by somehow creating a tape of fearful and disturbing visuals that condemn whoever watches it to death after seven days. The exact amount of time it takes someone to die of starvation.

27) My Bloody Valentine (1981) - The town of Valentine Bluffs is sick of not celebrating Valentine's Day. Sick of it, I say!  They turn their back on the town legend of Harry Warden, who apparently was trapped in a mining accident twenty years ago.  Harry watched as his four co-workers died but he was rescued several days later, having resorted to cannibalism to stay alive. The bosses at the mine were too worried about getting to the Valentine's dance that they forgot to check the levels of methane gas, causing the explosion that trapped the miners. A year after Harry's rescue, he killed those bosses with a pick axe and vowed that the town had better not ever hold another dance, or there would be Harry Warden Hell to pay.  So what do they do?  Well they hold another party.  In the mine, no less.  Dumb asses.

26) The Crow (1994)  - Eric Draven (Brandon Lee) and his girlfriend Shelly Webster (Sofia Shinas) are randomly attacked and left for dead. Somehow, Shelly survives only to suffer for longer than thirty hours before her death. Upon the beckoning of a single crow, Eric raises from the grave (because you can do that in movies) and avenges his and his girlfriend's death by going after the thugs that murdered them. Best part of this scenario?  He has a crow guiding his vengeful acts. Only in the movies, folks.

                                STAY TUNED FOR PART TWO, COMING SOON!!