9º – The Thing (John Carpenter, 1982)Amidst the icy climate of Antarctica, a group of American scientists are embroiled in a deadly situation when a strange virus hits the camp where they are housed, starting a climate of inexorable paranoia. ‘The Thing’ is one of the greats of the genre of science fiction, with a plot that frightens in the same proportion that it attracts.
8º – The Lost Boys (Joel Schumacher, 1987)After moving to a small town with his mother and older brother, a boy finds himself completely convinced that the place is, in fact, a great lair of vampires. The plot gains its substance when the suspicions of the young man become more and more clear, leaving him in an unpleasant situation. ‘The Lost Boys’ is a vampire movie that knows how to take advantage of every nuance of the subgenre, proposing a truly memorable set of scenes, a very good direction from Joel Schumacher and a cast with the best of the teenage team of that era, with presences of Corey Haim, Corey Feldman and Kiefer Sutherland.
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