25 Traumatizing Films That Really Messed Us Up
Normally, we watch movies to be entertained. But what if you want to feel like dying instead?
Published 3 years ago in Feels
Over the years, there have been plenty of movies that completely traumatized us. Which ones were the WORST? Thanks to Reddit, here is our definitive list!
1
'Lorenzo's Oil' is a hard film to watch because it's about a child who's dying of an incurable genetic disorder, it sticks pretty closely to the medical facts of the case it's based on, and it unfolds from the parents' point of view. Harrowing stuff even though the story isn't totally bleak and it was nominated for awards. -u/doublestitch
2
'When the Wind Blows' from 1986. For anyone who doesn’t know it, here's a short summary from wiki: “The film accounts a rural English couple's attempt to survive a nearby nuclear attack and maintain a sense of normality in the subsequent fallout and nuclear winter.”
Just thinking about this movie gives me chills and not in a good way. Probably one of (if not) the most disturbing movies I've ever watched. I felt sick for days. -u/HellaWavy7
'Jacob's Ladder' is weird for me because I consider it one of my favorite movies of all time, but I've only seen it three times over the course of 25 years or so. Each rewatch has confirmed to me that a.) it is a cinematic masterpiece, and b.) it leaves me in such a deeply affected headspace that I know I can't watch it again in the immediate future. -u/your_actual_life
15
'Fire in the Sky.' With the exception of the first and last 10 minutes, it's incredibly boring and mundane. Basically a drama about a murder investigation in rural northern AZ.
Then it ends as a proper sci-fi horror with a dude strapped to an exam table on an alien craft being aggressively "examined" by some ugly-ass humanoid aliens while his screams are muffled by some kind of giant full-body alien condom. My 9-year-old a** didn't sleep well for years after seeing that. -u/juan_epstein-barr19
'Pan’s Labyrinth.' Not necessarily the fantasy part of it, but the main antagonist (Vidal) and the ending. Just horrific. I cry every time. Also, for context, the scene with the Pale Man even scared Stephen freaking King, the reigning king of literary horror. It’s a fantastic and beautiful film but it’s not for the faint of heart.
Notable scenes: wine bottle, more scenes with blood and pain than you should shake a butcher knife at, the face cut (as in a cheek sliced open and you can see the blood and flesh vividly), DIY face stitches for the face cut, the Pale Man, the ending, Vidal’s weird obsession with having a son, and Vidal just being the devil incarnate for the entirety of the film. -u/ItStillIsntLupus24
A friend taunted me with 'The Exorcist' when I was 12. I was so terrified. What she didn't know was, when I was 7, I had misbehaved at a fundamentalist Bible camp and was told I was possessed. That became a full fledged phobia that led to other disorders and I needed tons of therapy. So yeah, that movie. -u/FairyDustSpectacular