9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

Don’t be fooled by stories about 19th-Century movie audiences because they thought that footage of a moving train was going to run them over. Early cinema could get bizarrely hardcore and hardcorely bizarre, even by today’s standards. In fact, many of the very earliest films still manage to put modern horror movies to shame. For instance …

#9. The Execution Of Mary Stuart (1895)

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

That clip is from freaking 1895 — when film was brand spanking new and people were amazed by any random shit you could project onto a white sheet. But while most early filmmakers chose to shoot boring real-life events, like people walking or a baby being fed, Thomas Edison wanted to . Look, the guy was ahead of his time, okay?

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

So he hired a director, gathered a bunch of actors, and recreated the 1587 beheading of from start to uncensored-head-rolling finish (shit, even Game of Thrones cut away before that blade hit Sean Bean’s neck). actually features the first trick edit, at the moment when the actress playing Mary is replaced with a mannequin. Normally we wouldn’t bother pointing out that a movie didn’t actually kill one of its actors, but when you’re talking about a movie produced by a guy who in order to sell his inventions, anything is possible.

#8. L’Inferno (1911)

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

, L’Inferno was Italy’s earliest feature-length movie. It made use of many pioneering and sanity-noogie-ing special effects, which actually makes a lot of sense for a country that later gave us and . Mostly set in Hell, the movie is full of , such as a decapitated man carrying his own head, the torture of people buried up to their necks in the ground …

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

…and demons whipping a bunch of scared naked people.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

Of course, all of those scenes pale in comparison to the final image of a big-ass, three-mouthed Satan sitting on the horizon and munching on the bodies of Brutus and Cassius.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

#7. The Man Who Laughs (1928)

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

Some movies like to save their most shocking scenes for the end. Then again, some movies aren’t , which opens with a nobleman being sentenced to death in an iron maiden, while his son Gwynplaine is to force his face into a grotesque permanent smile. Flash forward to adulthood and Gwynplaine is making a pittance from working in a sideshow as some horrifying proto-Joker.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

While we are clearly meant to sympathize with him, it doesn’t help that he is smiling maniacally like that for the whole movie.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

Oh, and we were serious with that Joker comment — the comic book character was actually , which itself was based on its director’s hatred of his audience’s ability to sleep at night.

#6. A Page Of Madness (1926)

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

A Page of Madness is a (co-written by a future ) about a janitor whose wife has been committed to an insane asylum for trying to kill their child. It was considered lost for 45 years until we rediscovered it like a bunch of stupid idiots, so now we can all “enjoy” its super creepy ending, in which the janitor realizes that his wife will never get better, has a breakdown, and starts handing out nightmarish “happy” masks to the mental patients.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

After one of the patients starts dancing, the whole asylum follows, and soon everyone is shaking their moneymakers to whatever messed-up music is playing in their heads. Our guess: the rhythmic screaming of children.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

#5. The Peanut Vendor (1933)

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

is one of the many reminders of why we’d never make it a day in pre-WWII times, when people let children watch Slender Man sing and dance in a cheap Halloween costume and thought nothing of it. The star of this 1930s experimental short is a pipe-cleaner monkey puppet and proving that there is no God.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

The director Len Lye was said to have based the puppet’s movements on his . If that’s even remotely true, then it’s pretty obvious to us that The Peanut Vendor was less Lye’s vanity project and more of a secret cry for help from an army of exorcists.

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame

9 Terrifying Old Movies That Put Modern Horror To Shame