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Lost horror fans name the non-horror movies that terrified them

There's an imposter among us.

Toaster, The Brave Little Toaster (1987)
Image via Hyperion Pictures

For those of you old enough to remember, there was a certain spell of time where an animated children’s film had a good to fair chance of including one or three scenes that would go on to form the basis of many a child’s nightmares for the better part of their young life; Dumbo‘s wine-induced hallucination sequence comes to mind, as does the entire runtime of The Secret of NIMH.

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Of course, this has never been limited to children’s animated movies (although it is peculiar that such a genre is the standout); there have been plenty of films over the years that, while they weren’t marketed as horror movies, still managed to carry out such an effect on its viewers, and r/horror has taken to naming some of the most heinous offenders.

The original poster offered up The Brave Little Toaster and its infamous clown scene as a chief suspect for the crime of subsequent night terrors. Plenty of others readily nodded in agreement, with one, in particular, pointing an extra finger at the film’s junkyard scene.

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One user made the jump to live-action and admitted that A24’s 1917 got to them in bone-chilling ways; a warzone on its own is nothing warm and fuzzy, but the sequence in No Man’s Land could certainly launch it into the even more disturbing heights.

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Another responder found themselves in a joking mood and suggested Suicide Squad, not because the film itself was scary, but because knowing that someone in the world was willing to release it, was scary.

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And meeting in the middle with a live-action children’s film, one other user pointed to The NeverEnding Story; stop-motion on its own can elicit some shudders in a few viewers, but this classic family film is all too happy to tango with our trauma directly.

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Usually, one might be happy with the scenario of a film catching them off-guard, but non-horror films that give the gift of cold sweats might just be the exception to that.