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Horror movie characters are definitely an eclectic bunch! Welcome to WatchMojo, and today weโ€™re counting down the most memorable characters within the vast horror movie landscape. We will be going into a few spoilers.
Transcript
00:00It's alive! It's alive! It's alive! It's alive! It's alive!
00:06Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down the most memorable characters within the
00:10vast horror movie landscape. We will be going into a few spoilers.
00:15All that detail just from memory, sir?
00:17Memory, Agent Starling, is what I have instead of a view.
00:2220. Pennywise โ€“ IT Franchise
00:26Pennywise?
00:27Yes, me George.
00:30Georgie, meet Pennywise.
00:33Every generation, it seems, has an IT. For older horror fans, it's Tim Curry's portrayal
00:39of Pennywise in the 1990 adaptation of Stephen King's novel. Modern audiences, meanwhile,
00:44have been thrilled by Bill Skarsgรฅrd's embodiment of this evil entity that takes the shape of a
00:50creepy, malevolent clown. They're both great, with CGI and practical makeup effects utilized
00:56to induce the proper atmosphere behind the performances.
00:59Do you have Prince Albert in a can? You do? Well, you better let the poor guy out!
01:06Pennywise seems to be eternal, an interdimensional force of evil that preys on fear and stops at
01:13nothing to ensure total nightmare fuel for anybody that gazes upon that scary face.
01:20You'll float down here. We'll float down here. Yes, we do.
01:2419. Sidney Prescott โ€“ Scream Franchise
01:32Some stupid killer stalking some big-breasted girl who can't act,
01:35who's always running up the stairs when she should be going out the front door. It's insulting.
01:38The slasher movie genre possesses a long history of memorable final girls,
01:42smart and capable female protagonists that make it to the end and defeat the killer.
01:47Sidney Prescott from the Scream films embodied that archetype for the modern era,
01:52and was also able to buck the puritanical shackles that formerly held down many final
01:57girls. Prescott is in charge for her sexuality, and the final girl status bestowed upon her
02:03isn't dependent upon any virginal status. Instead, it's Prescott's resourcefulness,
02:08strength, and determination that makes her the bane of just about
02:12anyone who dares to take on the mantle of Ghostface.
02:16I'm an innocent victim. You're a psychotic.
02:20Yeah, well, shh.
02:2218. R.J. McCready โ€“ The Thing
02:26We're gonna draw a little bit of everybody's blood.
02:32Because we're gonna find out who's the Thing.
02:34John Carpenter's reimagining of 1951's The Thing from Another World and its 1938
02:40source novel, Who Goes There?, possessed a very memorable ensemble cast,
02:44including Wilford Brimley and Keith David. It's Kurt Russell's performance as R.J. McCready
02:50that anchors the whole film together, however. He's a de facto leader who takes it upon himself
02:55to uncover what the Thing is, and who's next upon its assimilation checklist.
03:00I thought you'd feel that way, Gary. You were the only one that could've got to that blood.
03:04We'll do you last.
03:06Russell's gruff demeanor and steadiness under pressure is a rock for the audience,
03:11as things gradually become more dangerous and chaotic. Meanwhile, the film's final shot is
03:16a beautifully ambiguous coda to all of the drippy mayhem that we've experienced up until that point.
03:23Why don't we just wait here for a little while?
03:3017. Chris Washington โ€“ Get Out
03:33Why's he dressed like that? It's not that, it's everything.
03:36He came to the party with a white woman like 30 years older than him.
03:39Jordan Peele's Get Out may not have reinvented the wheel when it was released back in 2017,
03:44but it certainly slapped a fresh coat of paint upon horror cinema's established body-snatcher
03:50tropes. The film also possessed a likable protagonist in the form of Daniel Kaluuya's
03:54Chris Washington, an everyman sort of character that's about to enter the fight of his life.
04:00So, is it true?
04:05Is it better?
04:07Wow!
04:08Washington remains optimistic in the face of some very awkward and strange situations,
04:13and he's also resourceful enough to emerge out on the other side
04:16after being betrayed by his girlfriend Rose Armitage. Kaluuya's facial expressions,
04:21in particular, sell his character's desperation at points,
04:24underlying the emotional resonance behind Get Out and its narrative.
04:31I don't know, I just thought that if I did, make it real.
04:3816. Leatherface โ€“ The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Franchise
04:44There are few fictional horror tales as scary as reality, and it was the story of a real-life
04:59killer, Ed Gein, that inspired the creation of Leatherface from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
05:04Franchise. The character has progressed a bit throughout the series' lengthy run,
05:08with his iconic debut in Tobey Hooper's 1974 masterpiece
05:12setting the stage for the Sawyer family and their bloody legacy.
05:22Future installments saw Leatherface adopt tones that could vary from sympathetic to comedic,
05:27although this hulking meat-cutter was usually established as a victim of abuse
05:31from his overbearing family. Leatherface's status as a horror icon remains assured through it all.
05:37A harrowing character whose dedication to the blade underlines one enduring sentiment โ€“ the
05:42Saw is family. 15. Annie Graham โ€“ Hereditary
05:58The cultural landscape of horror has shifted over the last decade or so,
06:10with more and more prestige actors dipping their toes into the mayhem. This has given
06:14the genre an air of respectability, heretofore unseen during its lifetime, an existence that's
06:20primarily been defined by lucrative slasher sleaze, grindhouse exploitation, and cult cinema fandom.
06:28Tony Collette's portrayal of Annie Graham in Hereditary was a great example of this coming
06:37of age, an actor that lent her enviable talents to Ari Aster's update of well-worn possession
06:43tropes. Collette sells the feelings of grief and trauma that threaten to break through the
06:48surface of Graham's composed veneer. Meanwhile, the climax of Hereditary goes for broke as Graham's
06:54possession is complete, and total chaos erupts. 14. Father Damien Karras โ€“ The Exorcist Franchise
07:08It speaks volumes to the enduring spirit โ€“ pun intended โ€“ of The Exorcist that this horror
07:25classic remains so scary, despite its thematic elements being endlessly parodied over the years.
07:31We've all seen other demonic possession movies that adapt the movements and cadence of Jason
07:36Miller's performance as Father Damien Karras. Yet the original Exorcist remains so mesmerizing
07:46and compelling thanks to the humanity Miller brings to his performance. Karras is a man with
07:51a crisis of faith, as well as overarching stresses and anxieties over the death of his mother. The
07:56demon Pazuzu seeks to exploit this at every turn, yet we the audience marvel as Karras retains
08:03control โ€“ and even sacrifices himself โ€“ so that young Reagan McNeill may escape from the demon's
08:08clutches. 13. Charles Lee Ray โ€“ A.K.A. Chucky โ€“ Child's Play Franchise
08:20We may not actually see much of Brad Dourif's performance as a cult-obsessed serial killer
08:37Charles Lee Ray in Child's Play. This antagonist, after all, is shot by Chicago detective Mike
08:43Norris, and perishes shortly after transferring his spirit into a children's doll. That said,
08:48Chucky the killer doll probably wouldn't be the horror icon he is today without Dourif's
08:53inimitable talent as a character actor. His vocal mannerisms, profanity, and affinity for long-form
09:03ranting-slash-raving is perfect for Chucky's unconquerable anger and evil. Elsewhere,
09:08the first film in particular actually does a great job in leaving room for doubt as to whether or not
09:14Ray's voodoo spell was successful in the first place. It's classic stuff.
09:2512. Sam Quint โ€“ Jaws There are few genre fans out there
09:38that would argue against Steven Spielberg's Jaws as being the perfect summer movie.
09:43The film's legacy isn't just that of a blockbuster, however, since the adaptation
09:47of Peter Benchley's novel also possesses so many likable and interesting characters.
09:52Roy Scheider brought warmth and pathos to his portrayal of Amity Island's police chief
09:56Martin Brody. Meanwhile, Robert Shaw's Sam Quint is a grizzled and irascible man who
10:02takes to task the capture of a giant killer shark. Shaw's speech about the USS Indianapolis
10:08is one of those movie monologues that grabs you by the throat and never lets go.
10:12It's this emotional connection that makes his death at the movie's climax
10:16all the more difficult to watch.
10:2811. John Kramer โ€“ Jigsaw The early millennium wasn't exactly fertile
10:41ground for a new horror franchise icon to emerge. This makes the rise of John Kramer,
10:46aka Jigsaw, all the more impressive. It was the first Saw film from 2004 that signified the rise
10:53of a new horror subgenre. Yet Tobin Bell's performance as a cancer-riddled serial killer
10:59provided a face to the carnage, as well as a perverse sense of morality.
11:12His Jigsaw inserts methods for his victims to potentially escape their deadly predicaments.
11:17This is providing, of course, that they retain what Jigsaw refers to as the survival instinct.
11:23The Jigsaw piece I cut from my subjects was only ever meant to be a symbol that that subject was
11:29missing something. A vital piece of the human puzzle. The survival instinct.
11:3510. Ashley Ash Williams โ€“ Evil Dead Franchise
11:49It's a question that's commonly asked about well-known, established movie heroes.
11:53Do you think character X could have been played by anyone other than actor A? And sometimes the
11:58answer is yes. But that's definitely not the case when it comes to Ashley Ash Williams of
12:03the Evil Dead franchise. That's because Bruce Campbell has embodied the role since 1981,
12:09reinventing a one-time horror protagonist into a ass-kicking, quip-spewing slayer of the deadites.
12:15Campbell's done great work in other films as well as on TV, usually in a supporting capacity. However,
12:29the humour and charm he brings to Ash is something that we'll probably never see again in our lifetimes.
12:409. Carrie White โ€“ Carrie
12:46White The character of Carrie White has been
12:48portrayed by a number of actors after Sissy Spacek put her stamp on the role. Brian De Palma's 1976
12:55adaptation of Stephen King's novel cast a wide shadow, however. It's Spacek who's primarily
13:01attached to the role today, and with good reason, thanks to the performance's doe-eyed innocence
13:06and innate likeability that makes what happens to Carrie all the more tragic.
13:16It speaks volumes as the quality of Carrie that we routinely hope things are going to turn out
13:21differently for its lead, even though we know full well the horrors that are about to unfold.
13:25Carrie White may burn in hell, but her cinematic legacy will live on forever.
13:388. Michael Myers โ€“ Halloween Franchise
13:45This all-time slasher classic possesses a wonderful push and pull between its
13:55protagonist and antagonist. We have, on one hand, perhaps the greatest final girl of the
14:00entire horror medium, Laurie Strode. Then, in the other corner, we have the boogeyman,
14:04Michael Myers himself, a towering icon.
14:15We admit that it does hurt the character slightly that there's no one actor in particular that's
14:21known for portraying Myers. This comes down to the many people that have either donned the mask
14:26or held the knife over the years. That said, Myers' relentless methodology and apparent
14:31immortality make him tons of fun to watch, while the mystery of his youth is something
14:35that's been explored in sequels, requels, and reboots. And it never gets old.
14:417. Jack Torrance โ€“ The Shining
15:04Stephen King notoriously disliked director Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of his novel,
15:09The Shining. King's frustration was so strong, in fact, that he helmed his own version for
15:14television back in 1997. It was actor Stephen Webber that portrayed the doomed Jack Torrance
15:20in that film, with a script that made the character's descent into madness and possession
15:24more doomed and tragic. Kubrick's version, for its part, hung its hat upon a definitive
15:29performance from Jack Nicholson, one that eschews likability in favor of menace and
15:38a barely-there fuse for potential violence. Both performances are good, but it's the atmosphere
15:43and impenetrable darkness of Kubrick's vision that remains the shining to which
15:48everyone turns when they want a good fright. 6. Freddy Krueger โ€“ A Nightmare on Elm Street
16:05It's a classic schoolyard debate, a who-you-got scenario with only one winner. Were you a Freddy
16:20kind of person? Or did your heart belong to Mrs. Voorhees' baby boy? On one hand, it seems perverse
16:26for unrepentant slasher villains like Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees to retain such a
16:31prestigious place within the pop culture zeitgeist. Krueger in particular was a killer
16:42who escaped justice, only to be immolated by an angry local mob. Why, then, did his character
16:48host chat lines, release a record album, and get to spout off one-liners quicker than you can say
16:53Nightmare? It was the 80s doesn't really cut it as an answer. Perhaps we must simply realize that
16:58they both morbidly captured our imaginations. 5. Frankenstein's Monster โ€“ Various
17:22The Universal Studios depiction of Frankenstein's Monster may be the most iconic one today,
17:26but the first filmed version of Mary Shelley's classic novel actually dated back to one produced
17:31by Thomas Edison back in 1910. The monster has taken on many different cinematic looks since
17:37then, from Boris Karloff in the aforementioned Universal Picture to Sir Christopher Lee for
17:42Hammer Films. We just love this character. We also love to interpret the motivations for his
17:47creation as well, with some critics claiming the monster is a metaphor from everything from race
17:52to wealth disparagement. At its core, however, Frankenstein's Monster is a tragic being that
17:57didn't ask for life, is rejected by a bride, and, to paraphrase his own words, belongs dead.
18:104. Ellen Ripley โ€“ Alien Franchise
18:13Though she was a tough female badass before that cinematic archetype was codified,
18:24a trailblazer for representation in horror and science fiction who only needs to be known by
18:29one name โ€“ Ripley. Sure, it's Ellen Ripley if we're being formal, but this heroine of
18:35the Alien franchise is basically a household name at this point in horror history.
18:43It also speaks highly of Sigourney Weaver's performance in the role that the character's
18:56gender is never brought into question when it comes to capability. Ripley's opinions and actions
19:00are respected by her peers, and her judgment is sound. The screenplay, from Dan O'Bannon,
19:05should be commended for writing Ripley so well that the character's natural leadership qualities
19:10simply rise to the forefront, making her a true hero.
19:223. Hannibal Lecter โ€“ Varius
19:28The character creation from author Thomas Harris has perhaps had the best luck when it comes to
19:32on-screen performances. Hannibal Lecter basically has a perfect score of portrayals, from Brian
19:38Cox in 1986's Manhunter to Sir Anthony Hopkins' bravura performances in both Red Dragon and The
19:44Silence of the Lambs. Meanwhile, both Mads Mikkelsen and Gaspard Ulliel put more modern
19:58spins on Lecter's character, further enriching him for fans of Harris's source material.
20:02It all comes down to The Silence of the Lambs for many horror fans, however,
20:06thanks not only to Hopkins' work but also his chemistry with co-star Jodie Foster as FBI agent
20:12Clarice Starling. 2. Norman Bates โ€“ Psycho Franchise
20:31We've mentioned throughout this list the existence of certain tragic backstories for some of our
20:35favourite horror villains. There is, however, perhaps no performance more palpably tragic
20:40than that of Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates. The actor legitimately sells the internal struggle
20:46and ultimate frustration of simply not being able to control his actions.
20:57This is showcased particularly well in the underrated Psycho sequels, where Perkins
21:02questions what is normal within himself, and if he can ever truly change. Meanwhile,
21:07that performance in Alfred Hitchcock's original Psycho is one for the ages,
21:11a chilling reminder from one of horror's true golden age classics.
21:23Before we continue, be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the bell to get
21:27notified about our latest videos. You have the option to be notified for
21:31occasional videos or all of them. If you're on your phone, make sure you go into your settings
21:36and switch on notifications. 1. Count Dracula โ€“ Darius
21:44This Lord of the Vampires is another horror movie character with a rich history,
21:48one that dates all the way back to the silent era. Count Orlok, from 1922's Nosferatu,
21:54serves as a captivating debut example of the character's appearance on film,
21:58while Bela Lugosi's codified Count Dracula, black-and-white style, for Universal Studios
22:04back in 1931. Meanwhile, Sir Christopher Lee served as perhaps the definitive version of the
22:09bloodsucker during his tenure at Hammer Films, delivering a stately yet menacing Dracula for
22:15the Technicolor generation. More actors stepped into the Count's shoes to wondrous effect,
22:26from Jack Palance in Frank Langella to Gary Oldman in Bram Stoker's Dracula.
22:31All of them remind us of one thing โ€“ how much we love this stuff.
22:44Who's your all-time favourite horror icon? Let us know in the comments.
22:52Did you enjoy this video? Check out these other clips from WatchMojo,
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