When were you last really scared?
We'd been watching the Shining. We were staying in an old church building. In hindsight, taking the shortcut home after midnight, in the mist, through the old graveyard was a bad idea.
I'm not sure what started it, but suddenly all the hairs on my neck had gone up and I was crapping myself. It was almost as bad as when, after a few cups of coffee too many and buzzing on caffeine, I got freaked out by my own reflection in the toilets.
When were you last really scared?
( , Thu 22 Feb 2007, 15:43)
We'd been watching the Shining. We were staying in an old church building. In hindsight, taking the shortcut home after midnight, in the mist, through the old graveyard was a bad idea.
I'm not sure what started it, but suddenly all the hairs on my neck had gone up and I was crapping myself. It was almost as bad as when, after a few cups of coffee too many and buzzing on caffeine, I got freaked out by my own reflection in the toilets.
When were you last really scared?
( , Thu 22 Feb 2007, 15:43)
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Ghostwatch
Ghostwatch: The 1992 BBC1 Halloween haunted house spoof, except no-one told me it was a spoof:
- Sarah Green Locked in a basement with the mutilated ghost of a paedophile.
- Dog foetuses "strewn all over the playground."
- The voice that they all put on when possessed.
- The screaming cats.
- Mike Smith.
- "Pipes"
The crap acting just made it worse. I still can't watch it without remembering my dad, convulsing in fits of laughter as his 12yr old son wept silently and repeated, "turn it off. Please. Please turn it off." until I gave up and just stared blankly at the TV realising I'd never feel quite the same ever again.
( , Mon 26 Feb 2007, 10:02, Reply)
Ghostwatch: The 1992 BBC1 Halloween haunted house spoof, except no-one told me it was a spoof:
- Sarah Green Locked in a basement with the mutilated ghost of a paedophile.
- Dog foetuses "strewn all over the playground."
- The voice that they all put on when possessed.
- The screaming cats.
- Mike Smith.
- "Pipes"
The crap acting just made it worse. I still can't watch it without remembering my dad, convulsing in fits of laughter as his 12yr old son wept silently and repeated, "turn it off. Please. Please turn it off." until I gave up and just stared blankly at the TV realising I'd never feel quite the same ever again.
( , Mon 26 Feb 2007, 10:02, Reply)
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