This listing contains a mention of a sexual assault scene.
horror movies They are often set in the woods because we understand that the darkness and sounds of a deep forest can be a scary scene, especially at night. However, while being lost in the woods is a horror trope, trees often take a backseat unless they are central to the story. While horror movie villains can take many forms, it’s often still a surprise when a horror movie features a malevolent tree or plant. Seeing the peaceful embodiment of nature transform into bloodthirsty monsters can make for a hilarious horror comedy or a genuinely chilling horror movie nightmare.
The central plots in biological horror films such as The event They often involve sympathy for plants, as they revolve around people who treat nature without the necessary respect or scientists who go too far in their experiments. Alien landscapes like that beyond”the shine” in Annihilation They are often dangerous in their own right, without any need for the plants themselves to be evil. However, films have featured villainous plants for decades and it seems that even though “plant horror“It’s rare compared to some of the many horror subgenres, trees and plants are underrated horror film villains.
10
The Day of the Triffids (1963)
Seawater is the only weapon humans have against these villainous plants
The Day of the Triffids The film changed some important aspects of the book on which it is based, including the origin of the malevolent plant monsters called “triffids.” In The Day of the Triffidsplants arrive from space in a meteor shower, which scatters plant spores, which then transform into giant, menacing triffids. Like many plants, triffids can continue to grow after being damaged, making the fight against them seem hopeless.
The Day of the Triffids is a classic 1960s horror film and its solution may be a little simplistic for modern horror films, but it’s logical. The characters discover this monster plants are vulnerable to salt waterafter reasoning that if you can kill a houseplant with salt water, maybe you can kill a triffid. The Day of the Triffids is being turned into a TV series, and the premise is still scary today.
9
The girl with all the gifts (2016)
Humanity fights a terrible real-life fungus
The fungal enemy in The girl with all the gifts is based on a terrifying natural phenomenon. The spores of the cordyceps fungus infect the brains of insects, turning them into zombie-like creatures, and the premise of The girl with all the gifts explored what would happen if cordyceps affected humans. The girl with all the gifts It’s a twist on the zombie movieand was released before The last of uswhich has a similar premise.
The plots for many plant-based horror movies can often be campy and silly, but The girl with all the gifts is disturbing, with bloody and scary feral children added to the mix. The ending is dark and unexpected, even for a zombie film. The film has an 86% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a cast full of well-known stars, including Glenn Close, Gemma Arterton and Dragon House actor, Paddy Considine.
8
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
In this remake, anyone can be an evil plant
Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a critically acclaimed horror, with a 93% positive score on Rotten Tomatoes and an impressive cast, which includes Star TrekLeonard NimoyDonald Sutherland and Jeff Goldblum. Invasion of the Body Snatchers is often considered one of the greatest remakes of all time, as it is a remake of a 1950s horror film of the same name. The villainous plants in this film are the disturbing ones.”Pod people.“
The pod people at Invasion of the Body Snatchers are a parasitic alien race that shape-shifts and resembles plants with pink flowers. They take the place of existing humans when humans fall asleep, with the film showing many of the Pod People as half-formed embryos before completely replacing these existing characters. The idea has been so disturbing that there have been four Invasion of the Body Snatchers films.
7
Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
This Iconic Horror Villain Is a Carnivorous Alien Plant
is an iconic musical horror comedy about a shy florist’s assistant named Seymour, who discovers that the strangest plant he owns is both evil and carnivorous. The monstrous plant, which Seymour named Audrey II after his co-worker and love interest, turns out to be an alien from outer space, but resembles a cross between a watermelon and a Venus fly trap. Audrey II convinces Seymour to feed it to people in exchange for fame and fortune for his botanical skills.
The original Little Shop of Horrors was a 1960 film, which was turned into a musical in 1982. The plots are significantly different, although both star a villainous plant, and Audrey II is still one of the best-known horror-comedy villains around. The award-winning 1986 film Little Shop of Horrors changes the musical’s darker ending to a happier conclusion, with a happy ending for Seymour and Audrey.
6
Evil Dead (1981)
The evil tree scene is extremely disturbing
Horror film by director Sam Raimi The Evil Dead is about demonic possession, and the film received positive reviews, including praise from legendary horror writer Stephen King. The Evil DeadThe possessed trees play a key role in the film, as they torture the main characters and try to prevent them from escaping. Although The Evil Dead features many graphic and disturbing scenesIt’s often overshadowed by a controversial scene, which Raimi has admitted to regretting.
The Evil Dead shows the possessed creepers sexually assaulting one of the main characters. This infamous scene drew backlash when the film was recently released and even led some countries to ban the film. Raimi spoke about the “tree rape“scene and its controversy, admitting that it was very graphic and brutal. Although director Fede Álvarez kept the scene in his 2013 remake, it was toned down considerably.
5
Godzilla vs. Biollante (1989)
“King of the Monsters” fights a villainous plant
The iconic “King of the Monsters,” Godzilla has battled many foes throughout the 30 films of his long-running franchise. While the Godzilla films tend to be very different depending on the Godzilla era and whether he was cast as a hero or villain, Godzilla vs. Biollante includes more horror elements than other Godzilla films. Biollante is even bigger than Godzilla and resembles a huge plant, with the mouth of a crocodile.
Biollante is a mutant kaijucreated by scientists using a mixture of DNA from a human, a rose and Godzilla himself. This formidable combination makes Biollante one of Godzilla’s strongest enemies. Because Biollante was created by a grieving scientist with some of his dead daughter’s DNA, the monstrous plant retains some human elements, including human voices in its roar, which adds an extra disturbing element to the story. Godzilla vs. Biollante.
4
The Ruins (2008)
Evil plants that can imitate sounds live in abandoned ruins
The ruins starring Jena Malone and Shawn Ashmore among a group of tourists who come together to explore a Mayan ruin in the Mexican jungle. At first, the human guardians of the ruins appear to be the main antagonists, when they immediately threaten and then shoot one of the group, forcing him to flee into the ruins. However, the extreme measure is soon explained, as the evil in The ruins is revealed.
The real danger in The ruins It was in view the whole time. It’s the vine itself, which was hidden in the background in many scenes of the film before the team met the Mayans. The vines are carnivorous, attracting people to the ruins using your ability to imitate sound. This starts with the vines imitating a ringing telephone and, in a scarier alternative, ends to The ruinsthe voice of another character.
3
Poltergeist (1982)
Steven Spielberg wrote this ghostly horror, which features a possessed tree
A remake of the 1982 horror film of the same name Poltergeist revolves around the Bowen family, whose home has been invaded by supernatural and evil forces.
- Director
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Tobe Hooper
- Release date
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June 4, 1982
- Cast
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Jane Adams, Rosemarie DeWitt, Jared Harris, Sam Rockwell, Nicholas Braun
The main villain of Poltergeist is the ghostly force that wreaks havoc on a new house built on top of a cemetery. This force possesses several things in and around the house, including the old oak tree in the garden. Poltergeistthe tree is already scary before the film’s supernatural events begin. It is an imposing, twisted presence that dominates the children in the film, who are afraid of it at night.
After the haunting begins, the tree breaks through the walls of the house, grabs one of the children and tries to eat him as a mouth opens in its bark. The child tries to escape, but the tree roots grab him once more before the tree is defeated by a tornado. The film addresses a common fear among children – scary shadows outside the window – and with an even scarier twist, Poltergeist is based on a horrific true story.
2
The Thing from Another World (1951)
The humanoid plant that inspired a body horror classic
Something from another world is a black and white 1950s sci-fi horrorset in Alaska, where a group of scientists find and defrost a spaceship that appears to have a human occupant. Although the unfrozen villain appears to be a humanoid creature, he is biologically more similar to a highly evolved plant form, which can shape-shift and shoot spores from its hands. This shape-shifting alien antagonist may look familiar to horror fans.
Something from another world is based on a 1938 novel called “Who goes there?” Something from another world shares a location and many scenes with John Carpenter’s critically acclaimed body horror film, The thing, because both films were inspired by the same novel. However, the two films treat the evil plant differently. While Something from another world keeps your monster in the shadows, The thing takes body horror to gruesome levels with practical effects.
1
The Guardian (1990)
A Killer Tree Spirit Is Feeding People From His Tree
The villain in The Guardian is relatively rare, as your evil tree is not an alien from outer space or possessed by malevolent forces. Instead of, The GuardianThe antagonist is a tree spirit who works as a nanny and steals the children she cares for so she can feed them to the tree as human sacrifices. The Evil Dead director Sam Raimi almost directed The Guardianbut he dropped out of the project.
The Guardian was panned by critics and has a Rotten Tomatoes score of just 25% positive. This is surprising considering the film had a horror veteran involved in its production. The Guardian was written and directed by William Friedkindirector of innovator horror movie, The Exorcist. However The Guardian wasn’t Friedkin’s best film, it has an interesting premise and villain, and some unintentionally hilarious gore.