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Have you seen any of the following ’70s spooky flicks? Let’s find out if you’re interested in checking any of them out.
7) Home for the Holidays

For the most part, Home for the Holidays is a tame and pretty standard slasher. It aired on television, after all, they could show but so much. But like Black Christmas from two years later it does a very good job of building tension and making the killer feel dangerous without showing any blood and gore.
At just an hour and 14 minutes, Home for the Holidays won’t take much of your time, and it’s worth a watch. At the very least it’s a pop culture novelty, considering it features Sally Field in the lead role and Arrested Development‘s Jessica Walter in a substantial secondary role.
6) It’s Alive

While it was followed by two increasingly outlandish sequels, Larry Cohen’s original It’s Alive is actually a pretty straightforward monster movie slash exploitation of expectant parents’ anxieties. We follow Frank and Lenore Davis, whose attempt to give their son a sibling becomes disastrous when, instead of a healthy baby, Lenore gives birth to a toothed mutant.
It’s Alive‘s birthing scene, where the mutant slaughters the doctors and nurses as soon as it’s born, is pretty great, and it was memorable enough to end up in Bravo’s The 100 Scariest Movie Moments. Admittedly, the rest of the movie isn’t quite as jarring, but it does feature the mutant baby killing a milkman and a convincingly desperate lead performance by John P. Ryan. Not to mention, Rick Baker designed the baby, which is pretty creepy to this day, even if there is definitely a cheese factor involved. But it’s a Larry Cohen (The Stuff, Q: The Winged Serpent) film, so you have to expect some ricotta.
5) Eyes of Laura Mars

Even with Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back‘s Irvin Kershner at the helm, John Carpenter as one of its screenwriters, and a cast that includes Faye Dunaway, Tommy Lee Jones, Child’s Play‘s Brad Dourif, and the late, great Raúl Juliá, Eyes of Laura Mars has mostly been forgotten to time. However, it did well when released in 1978, the same year as Carpenter’s Halloween.
The film, which is rightly considered by many critics to be an American take on the Italian giallo film, follows a well-respected New York City fashion photographer whose works feature realistic stylized violence. But now a killer is in NYC with an ice pick and not only does Laura start seeing the murders through his eyes, but she comes to realize that those killed have some relation to her, as well. Will she identify the killer before she faces his pick?
4) The Crazies

Even though it received an excellent remake in 2010, The Crazies isn’t quite as well-known outside horror loving circles as it should be. Like with his Living Dead movies, George A. Romero showed himself to be someone who merges almost unbearable tension with razor-sharp commentary on society’s flaws.
The narrative takes place in Evans City, Pennsylvania, which has had its water supply tainted by a virus code-named “Trixie,” which turns people into mentally unwell, homicidal versions of their former selves. It’s a look at a world where the government, when faced with a crisis, dispenses of things such as concern for human rights. It’s up to the viewer to decide just how far off that is from the reality in which we find ourselves.
Stream The Crazies on Shudder.











