
Council of Nine's Five Favorite Horror Films
California based Council Of Nine, whose minimal guitars and screeching dreamscapes have caught our attention before, lists off his five favorite horror films. Included are a Kubrick classic and a Human Centipede entry.
"The Human Centipede 2" by Tom Six
"Not much to say in the way of plot or character development, However there is an edge to this movie that few have come close to. The scenes in this movie are so visecral and raw it left me feeling uneasy and a little bit ashamed for watching it."
"El Topo" by Alejandro Jodorowsky
"Nothing in this film will make any sense, Nor will you want it to."
"The Shining" by Stanley Kubrick
"This movie gives a whole new meaning to disfunctinal family, what seemed like a normal getaway in the station wagon turns into a slowly evolving psychotic metldown and a huge heaping of blood filled hallucinations."
"Return of the Living Dead" by Dan O'Bannon
"Fun! I can't tell you how many halloween nights this has been selected from my dusty VHS collection. It is a horror/comedy really, whether intentional or not the bad acting and obscene writing will leave you in tears. The soundtrack in this movie deserves a mention as well, with classics from
"Hellraiser" by Clive Barker

"Not much to say in the way of plot or character development, However there is an edge to this movie that few have come close to. The scenes in this movie are so visecral and raw it left me feeling uneasy and a little bit ashamed for watching it."

"Nothing in this film will make any sense, Nor will you want it to."

"This movie gives a whole new meaning to disfunctinal family, what seemed like a normal getaway in the station wagon turns into a slowly evolving psychotic metldown and a huge heaping of blood filled hallucinations."

"Fun! I can't tell you how many halloween nights this has been selected from my dusty VHS collection. It is a horror/comedy really, whether intentional or not the bad acting and obscene writing will leave you in tears. The soundtrack in this movie deserves a mention as well, with classics from
TSOL, 45 Grave and the Damned, what's not to love?"

"With it's overtly sexual themes and brutal violence, I will always come back to this Clive barker classic. Also, a fun fact: Barker originally wanted the electronic music group Coil to perform the music for the film, but later had the group's music changed by Christopher Young."
Oct 11 2015

Steven Gullotta
info@brutalresonance.comI've been writing for Brutal Resonance since November of 2012 and now serve as the editor-in-chief. I love the dark electronic underground and usually have too much to listen to at once but I love it. I am also an editor at Aggressive Deprivation, a digital/physical magazine since March of 2016. I support the scene as much as I can from my humble laptop.
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