@@lisakwaterski6707 Re-Animator is at least done in a deliberately campy matter .. Human Centipede is fairly relentless with the demented Doctor. Avoid the sequels. Take Care 👋
About the first Oscar for Make-Up, they are "wrong". One was awarded specially to William Tuttle, for his 1964 George Pal film, "The 7 Faces of Dr. Lau". In which Tony Randal played all 7 mythological characters. Which, of course, required extensive make-up. Incidentally, it is true that Disney won more Oscars than Any other studio. But, George Pal won 7 Oscars out of his 14 major films. An un-precedented feat !
The Best Make-Up category in the Academy Awards was created in 1982, and An American Werewolf in London was the first film to win that category with Rick Baker as the recipient. He was nominated 12 times and won 7 of them. His last win was for The Wolfman. Other wins for Rick Baker in this category include Harry and the Hendersons, The Nutty Professor, Men in Black, and Dr. Suess' How the Grinch Stole Christmas.
@@davidellis5141 I knew that one. In fact, I checked out a book from my local library about all the movie classics and why they're considered classics and Nosferatu is on the list. So I had to rent it and check it out for myself and I was thoroughly entertained and taken aback by the visual effects that were available to them in the early 20s. It's definitely a cinematic masterpiece.
The answer regarding the Pole Stanisław, should read …. Polish person. The Library of Congress has changed the subject heading Poles to Polish People. You should follow suit as it is not the correct form anymore.
misspellings (such as pashun for passion) don’t change the pronunciation of words leaving off three letters (such as pass for passion) does change the pronunciation of a word
Love the sound effects in the beginning!
The Original " The Wicker Man " is an all time classic 👌 😨
Loved the original and loved that Nicolas Cage punched somebody out in bear suit in the remake! 😅
Elm? Yay!!!!
@@ashleelarsen5002 🌹
@@davidellis5141 😘
"Not the bees!"
Oh, wait...
I'm no horror fan and somehow swept this category.
I only got the nosferatu one
I'm not much of a horror fan
nice pfp
Sarah is a 10 on a 1-10 scale ⚖️ ! 😍
But on a 1-100 scale she's a mere 99.9. Unless you round up.
@@davidjorgensen877 😆
6.5
I'd say 3.8
I love movies; swept this one. Congrats to anyone else who did the same 👏
Me too 😃
Horror's not really my thing
But, I got Nosferatu!
I'm wondering if "What is an American werewolf?" would have been accepted, since that's what I said without thinking.
I'm actually not a scary movie fanatic, I'm more of a comedy person.
Okay Ken, thx 4 sharing.
The Human Centipede is a good laugh 😃 Ken !!
@@lisakwaterski6707 Re-Animator is at least done in a deliberately campy matter .. Human Centipede is fairly relentless with the demented Doctor. Avoid the sequels. Take Care 👋
that's great Ken
Same here! Though I do know a lot about horror
RAN THE CATAGORY!!!!❤
0:05 What is Get Out?
0:14 What is The Wicker Man?
0:33 What is Elm Street?
0:43 What are werewolves?
1:09 What is Nosferatu?
I only got Nosferatu!
The only one I knew was nosferatu
I got the First One Right 🤣🤣🤣
Sarah out here looking like the starring role in the horror movie.
She's 🔥
Looks like Margot Robbie!
As usual I knew them all except the most recent movie. I blanked on that one.
Swept the category
I was so strong and wrong with that daily double
About the first Oscar for Make-Up, they are "wrong". One was awarded specially to William Tuttle, for his 1964 George Pal film, "The 7 Faces of Dr. Lau". In which Tony Randal played all 7 mythological characters. Which, of course, required extensive make-up.
Incidentally, it is true that Disney won more Oscars than Any other studio. But, George Pal won 7 Oscars out of his 14 major films. An un-precedented feat !
They said it was the first Oscar in the new category, not that it was the first Oscar given for makeup.
The Best Make-Up category in the Academy Awards was created in 1982, and An American Werewolf in London was the first film to win that category with Rick Baker as the recipient. He was nominated 12 times and won 7 of them. His last win was for The Wolfman. Other wins for Rick Baker in this category include Harry and the Hendersons, The Nutty Professor, Men in Black, and Dr. Suess' How the Grinch Stole Christmas.
For being a complete wimp when it comes to scary movies, I shockingly ran the category
Sarah is really pretty. And it's for that reason that I was hoping she would win. It's unfortunate she didn't.
She should have known Nosferatu
@@davidellis5141 I knew that one. In fact, I checked out a book from my local library about all the movie classics and why they're considered classics and Nosferatu is on the list. So I had to rent it and check it out for myself and I was thoroughly entertained and taken aback by the visual effects that were available to them in the early 20s. It's definitely a cinematic masterpiece.
@@lisakwaterski6707 Will do. Thanks for the recommendation.
Wow good thing you have priorities in order jaqass
@@analiysanchez9949 I don't need to take this from you. I just lost my cousin a month ago.
She missed Nosferatu. Must not be a Spongebob fan.
How can anyone see that house and not know Elm Street?
Hell I've never seen the movie and still got it, how many horror movies have an address in the title lol
I missed Elm Street...
The answer regarding the Pole Stanisław, should read …. Polish person. The Library of Congress has changed the subject heading Poles to Polish People. You should follow suit as it is not the correct form anymore.
Sarah is a dead ringer for Margot Robbie
Only real horror fans went 5/5
4 outta 5
Jeopardy won't knock you off for misspellings, but fail to complete an answer by 3 letters, well...
misspellings (such as pashun for passion) don’t change the pronunciation of words
leaving off three letters (such as pass for passion) does change the pronunciation of a word