Thursday, February 24, 2011

'Alien' Voted The Scariest Movie Monster EVER

"Look Ma - No Cavities!"

The Alien monster from Ridley Scott's classic sci-fi horror film "Alien" has been voted the scariest movie monster of all time - and Elepharts simply couldn't agree more. That thing is SCARY! A poll carried out among 4000 of Britain's film fanatics showed that movie-goers are still terrified by the beast thirty two years on from its release. Second place was taken by (da-dun, da-dun, du-du-du-du...) the man-eating great white shark from Steven Spielberg's Jaws while third place was taken by the invisible, laser-wielding alien from 1987's Predator. The top five was completed with the underground sewer dwelling Creeper from Jeepers Creepers in fourth place and Jeff Goldblum's half-man, half-fly in The Fly.


A spokesperson from Jameson (the company conducting the poll) said: "Four of the films that made the top five were made more than 24 years old. They are classic movie monsters by anyone's definition but what's really surprising about these results is that the traditional and iconic monsters of the last hundred years like vampires, werewolves, Godzilla and King Kong were more likely to leave fans snoring than screaming."

The Crawlers from 2005's The Descent came in at number six while the shape-shifting alien from 1987's The Thing was voted number seven. The bloodthirsty werewolves from British horror flick Dog Soldiers came in at number eight and the T-Rex from 1993's Jurassic Park was voted in at number nine. Count Orlok the vampire from German classic Nosferatu completed the top ten.

The spokesperson from Jameson said: "Years ago people would be scared of the unknown – fantastic creatures with fangs and a thirst for blood. These days we have become accustomed to the classic monsters – vampires and werewolves play out romantic teen dramas, the ghosts are friendly, and even the recent remake of King Kong made him out to be a softie.

"Most people we polled agreed that CGI was making monsters much more realistic and scary compared to the special effects of the early first half of the 20th Century. I guess with technology developing the way it does we will have a lot more monsters to give us nightmares in the future."