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Monday, January 24, 2011

Fear Exchange: BJ-C's Fear of Eye Trauma


Well we're back again with yet another edition of Fear Exchange and so quickly I should add. Never you mind, tackling fears must be done straight away to avoid the inevitable collapse of courage. No comment on when I will finally get around to seeing Jaws 2.

Anyways. This fear exchange is a little different because the first part of the deal happened practically a year ago, maybe longer. BJ-C of Day of the Woman and I embarked on a long journey to bring our readers a list of the most terrifying displays of vomit in horror movie (and other movie) history. This fear battled something I had been struggling with for quite sometime, and when the lists were completed, I felt the tiniest bit better about my situation. I still can't stand the sight of vomit and I guarantee that one day when I have a child and it throws up--I will go hide in a closet....but whatever I still faced my fear.

So now, a year later we are finally conquering the evil monster that is--BJ-C's fear of eye trauma. You know eye trauma. It's that foul beast that rears its head when we least expect it. One minute we're enjoying a delightful movie and the next--EYE TRAUMA! So without further ado, here are 9 picks each of some truly traumatic eye moments.


BJ-C's List



Carrie 2: The Rage



As little Ralphie will tell you, there's nothing worse than a kid with broken glasses. I see his argument and raise him a pair of glasses that have broken WHILE YOU'RE STILL WEARING THEM. In the dreadful "remake" to the Stephen King classic, we see the long lost half-sister of Carrie White being a vindictive little bitch and forcing shards of glass to explode into someone's eyes.




The Evil Dead


Ashley J. Williams may very well be the love of my life, but I'd be a huge flaming liar if I didn't admit that I squeal like a girl every time he jumps on the basement latch and that eye goes flying into a screaming mouth. It's the epitome of adding insult to injury.


The Beyond


Lucio Fulci really has some eye fetish. I had to narrow it down between this one and The New York Ripper and I can honestly say that my choice was based on the fact that I figured this image would be much easier to stomach than the other. It's an eye falling out in a film where a woman has pale eyes....AKA this film is my most freaking nightmare.


Cannibal Ferox


You know, I thought Cannibal Holocaust was bad. AND THEN I WATCHED THIS. What seriously happened to the filmmaker as a child that caused them to create this?! Not to mention that this is the same movie that shows a woman being hung by her rack. Uh...yeah, there's something in this movie for anyone with a bugaboo.


Guinea Pig 2


Right when I think eye trauma can't get anymore traumatic, THEY HAVE TO BUST OUT THE SPOON. It's one thing to show things getting shoved into the corneas, but it's an entirely different creature to show someone literally having their eyeball scooped out like tapioca pudding. The real kicker? This is one of the TWO options I could have done for this film. Oh yea, there's that whole shoving a needle the size of my forearm through the eye as well...


May


......She stabs herself with a pair of pinking shears and then puts the eyeball on her doll made from human body parts. Enough said.



Midnight Meat Train


Ted Raimi can take a blow to the head with a meat pounder like a pro. In what is possibly the most artistically creative use of CGI blood in a movie who's title sounds mysteriously like gay porn, this "eye-popping" (thank you, I'll be here all week) scene made me scream like a little girl. I was expecting his head to just bust open or his brain to fall out, but when his eye popped out of his head like a nerf gun...I freaking lost it.


Opera


OH MY GOD DON'T BLINK! DON'T BLINK! DON'T BLINK! FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, DON'T FUCKING BLINK!



Rocky


Yes, there are movies outside of the horror genre. Horror or not this is by far the most notable eye trauma scene in the history of cinema. Now, I'm Italian and I LOVE me some Rocky Balboa, but I literally have to leave the room when Mick cuts him open just so he can see. Hell no, hizzle no.





Andre's List


Kill Bill Volume 2


I always think of this immediately when I think about eye trauma. I can't imagine what it would feel like to get your eye plucked out of your head. Just the thought that someone or something could pull your eye ball out, and that those...eye...root things could snap off and then things would hurt really bad....yeah. Bad news. Also, Uma Thurman stepping on the eyeball does nothing to make me feel any better about this situation.


Hostel


I'm never actually sure what this dude was doing to that Asian girl, but all I know is that there is a gnarly eye ball hanging out of that poor girl's head. Thanks to Paxton's quick thinking, his easy solution is to cut the eye ball off---resulting in a very sudden, unexpected and horribly gooey blob of....eye juice plopping out.





The Birds

When I was a little one, this scene caused me a great deal of stress and unhappiness.


It's very unfortunate that birds have the easy ability to peck someone's eyes out, and it was very unfortunate that Alfred Hitchcock made an entire film about birds being crazy assholes.


Audition


I know I already brought this up in my list about needles, but duh it applies here as well. That squish squish noise in the eyeballs is very traumatizing. Would YOU like to have 5 little needles plunged into your eyeballs by a psycho like Asami? Didn't think so.


Session 9

Did you ever take a class about psychology and learn about Phineas Gage? He was a railroad worker who in a freak accident had a large iron rod driven straight through his head and brain and he was okay after, just a little... different. This incident has been used when talking about t the unfortunate side effects of lobotomies. Lobotomies for some reason remain a creepy cornerstone of old mental institutions. In one of the creepiest scenes in Session 9, Warren from Empire Records finds Hank on the stairwell after he had been missing. Hank wears sunglasses and seems a little...different. It is not until later that we discover why Hank was acting all funny.... inpromptu lobotomy!


Seeing the orbitoclast being slowly pulled out of Hank's eye socket is one of the most traumatic things I have ever seen. Why did they make me look at that? Why? And yes I used the word orbitoclast. Jealous?

Dead Hooker in a Trunk

The Soska sister's Dead Hooker in a Trunk was one of the more entertaining and eye opening experiences in my indie horror watching career. A film that takes exploitation and runs with it and a film that is stuffed to the max with gore, gore and beautiful gore. One moment in particular however had me exclaiming with wonder, confusion and holy eye trauma madness. After the peak of the greatest scene in the film, Geek (played by Jen Soska) is standing in a parking garage when some dude with a baseball bat smashes her head---causing her eye ball to pop out.



I stopped trying to figure out how this scene was possible seconds after it happened because I realized it was just too fantastic to be talking logistics about. It is at once fantastic and extremely cringe inducing when you imagine such a thing happening to yourself.


Saw 2

This opening moment in Saw II may never have come to actual fruition but it's really the thought that counts. I will set the scene for you. Imagine you wake up and find yourself hooked up to one of Jigsaw's cute little death traps. You find out that he has hidden the key to your heinous trap somewhere on you....or shall I say in you. An x-ray is shown to give you a clue, showing that the key is implanted behind your eye. You now have to dig out the key with a scalpel or you DIE. Would you do it?


I gotta be honest here and say that if push should ever come to shove, I would be dead pretty quickly. I really don't care if it means I die--if I have to cut my own eye with a scalpel to free myself from some loony contraption that some loony created so that I could value my life better--I am peacing out of that world. No thanks. I'd rather take my chances with Satan.


Un Chien Andalou


This 16 minute surrealist short film from 1929 was produced in part by the master of Surrealism himself--Salvador Dali. In its early opening sequence a man sharpens a razor, next we see a close up of a woman's face being held by the man. Then without warning the man uses the razor to slice her eye ball open!


If you have ever held onto the belief that old silent films lacked the same kind of brutal gore that films today have---check this out for yourself. It's on Netflix Instant Watch and you won't be disappointed. It is to this day one of the sickest things I have ever seen--and it does not hold back one bit. The moment may be quick, but it's sure to stay with you for a very long time.


Zombie

And of course how could we talk about eye trauma and leave off the most agonizing traumatic eye scene of them all? Even if you have only seen Zombie once and remember very little about it--you will remember this scene. You will remember it because it is the longest scene ever. Much in the Lucio Fulci style of things that make you want to pull your hair out as you wait anxiously for the big pay off---this giant splinter in the eye moment will have you yelling. Just get it over with Fulci, god.


It's gross, funny, horrifying and extremely trauma inducing for anyone who gets the least bit anxious from eye gore. It's the ultimate in eye trauma! And it's so horrible yet you just can't look away...kind of like how Paola is forced to look right at that giant splinter as it comes right for her eye...


Don't forget to go to Day of the Woman and taunt BJ-C for being afraid of eye trauma! Just kidding that was a joke don't do it, being afraid of a fake shark and vomit is way more of a reason to make fun of someone....I know...sigh.







12 comments:

  1. For me, Midnight Meat Train takes the prize, that scene was so awesome!

    Another addition to this list would be Warlock, I seem to remember the warlock ripping the eyes out of a fortune teller or something so he could see where he had to go...or something like that.

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  2. I haven't seen Midnight Meat Train, but I love how everytime I see stills of Ted Raimi's death (like on My New Plaid Pants), he always looks like he's kind of squeeing.

    I have a fear of sharp things, especially razors, penetrating skin, so I always have to look away during the eye slicing scene in Un Chien Andalou. The first time I saw it in an art history class, the entire class freaked out.

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  3. Glad to see Dead Hooker in a Trunk get in there. Andre - If you left out Zombi 2, I would have gotten really angry.

    Eyes would have been poked.:-)

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  4. People keep talking about Warlock FC---are they trying to send me a message, do I need to see it ASAP?

    Sarah-that is a serious fear. How do you watch horror movies with such a fear?! And I thought Shark week was bad.....yikes.

    Also---I am jealous of that Art History class.

    Jaded- Leaving it out would not have been an option! It's usually the one I think of immediately. Darn that Fulci.

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  5. Jamie--I have never heard of Betty Blue. I just did a quick Netflix check, how bad is this eye trauma, explain yourself!

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  6. I have to say one of the most hilarious experiences I've had with 'Un Chien Andalou' was at a Dali exhibit at the MoMA here in NYC. They were holding an exhibit featuring Dali's work in film and 'Chien' was of course the first thing shown when you walked into the exhibit. Now being a Dali lover I had seen the film so I knew what to expect but I also knew that most of the lovely sophisticated museum goers didn't. So I stood there waiting till the film reset and that eye-cutting scene came up (mind you it was on a HUGE screen)...the entire room gasped. Like a good 60 people gasped and went sheet white, frozen in place, mouth agape...I think I was the only one that was smiling, LOL!!!! It is really a powerful scene. I'd say the most powerful one on your list.

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  7. Andre, yeah, you should check out Warlock. Its a gory slice of 80's horror. Its got lots of gooey effects, it Satanic, its got magic in it, and some nice gore. Plus we get Julian Sands playing the Warlock in one of his most memorable roles. I think you would like it. It aint a bad 80's horror flick.

    The sequels went down in quality with the years though.

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  8. Betty Blue isn't quite a horror film, but its sensitivity to humanity, passion and love make the dangerous and terrifying scenes overwhelming. The eye trauma isn't graphic (actually, I may have been hiding so I can't say for sure...), but it is remarkable for its emotional realism.
    Also, it is gorgeous and amazing in general. I hope you will see it!

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  9. I can't believe you haven't included 'Deranged: Confessions of a Necrophile' (1974) – the removal of an eye from the socket of a disinterred skull – and the noise ... aarrgh!!!! 8I very nearly hurled :P

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  10. Never seen it Elizabeth, I am intrigued though !

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  11. Why isnt Feast on the list? It has an eye being pulled out with a satisfying snap from the nerves ripping and later has maggots crawling inside the eyehole of the guy while he is still alive and talking.

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