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The 10 Scariest Movies of All Time According to AI

The 10 Scariest Movies of All Time According to AI

This article is published by AllBusiness.com, a partner of TIME.
There's something irresistible about a good scary movie. The thrill of fear, the pulse-pounding suspense, and the sheer adrenaline rush make horror films a favorite for audiences worldwide. Whether it's the unsettling quiet before the scare, the psychological torment, or the grotesque imagery, scary movies have the power to keep us on the edge of our seats and haunt our dreams long after the credits roll.
The best horror films are not just about jump scares—they tap into our deepest fears, from the fear of the unknown to the terror of losing control. They weave compelling stories, feature unforgettable characters, and create an atmosphere so tense that viewers feel like they're part of the nightmare. These movies stand out because they not only scare us but also stay with us, making us think about what fear truly means.
This article showcases the 10 scariest movies of all time, using research assistance from ChatGPT. These films have defined the horror genre, terrified audiences, and left an indelible mark on pop culture. From supernatural hauntings to visceral psychological horror, these movies represent the pinnacle of fear-inducing cinema.
1. The Exorcist (1973)
'The Exorcist' is a story about a young girl possessed by a demonic entity and the lengths her family goes to for her salvation. The film's chilling depiction of possession, combined with groundbreaking special effects and an unforgettable soundtrack, solidified its place as one of the scariest movies ever made. Its psychological and spiritual terror resonates with audiences to this day.
2. Hereditary (2018)
Ari Aster's 'Hereditary' is a modern masterpiece of psychological horror, exploring grief, family secrets, and supernatural terror. The film builds an overwhelming sense of dread, culminating in a shocking and unforgettable finale. Toni Collette's haunting performance elevates this tale of familial disintegration.
3. The Shining (1980)
Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Stephen King's novel is a chilling exploration of madness and isolation. Set in the eerie Overlook Hotel, 'The Shining' follows Jack Torrance's descent into insanity as supernatural forces take hold. Its iconic imagery and unforgettable performances make it a horror classic.
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Key Stars: Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd
Notable Scenes: 'Here's Johnny!' and the blood-filled elevator
Box Office: $47 million worldwide (original release)
Awards: Now considered a masterpiece, though snubbed during its release
Legacy: Influenced countless horror films and pop culture references
4. Halloween (1978)
John Carpenter's 'Halloween' introduced the world to Michael Myers, the masked killer who stalks babysitters on Halloween night. With its simple yet terrifying premise, the film popularized the slasher genre and became a cultural phenomenon. Its eerie score remains one of the most recognizable in cinema.
Director: John Carpenter
Key Stars: Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence, Nick Castle
Notable Scenes: Michael's slow stalking and the final confrontation
Box Office: $70 million worldwide (on a $300,000 budget)
Awards: Received critical acclaim for its direction and tension
Legacy: Inspired countless sequels and the slasher subgenre
5. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
Tobe Hooper's low-budget horror film shocked audiences with its raw, visceral depiction of terror. Following a group of friends who fall victim to a family of cannibals, 'The Texas Chain Saw Massacre' is an unrelenting and disturbing experience. Its documentary-style realism adds to the horror.
Director: Tobe Hooper
Key Stars: Marilyn Burns, Gunnar Hansen, Edwin Neal
Notable Scenes: Leatherface's first appearance and the dinner scene
Box Office: Over $30 million worldwide
Awards: Cult status despite initial controversy
Legacy: Established Leatherface as a horror icon
6. Psycho (1960)
Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho' is a psychological thriller that redefined horror with its shocking twists and groundbreaking approach to suspense. The story follows Marion Crane, who meets her untimely fate at the infamous Bates Motel. The film's shower scene is one of the most famous moments in cinematic history.
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Key Stars: Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles
Notable Scenes: The shower scene and the final revelation about Norman Bates
Box Office: $50 million worldwide
Awards: 4 Academy Award nominations
Legacy: Considered the blueprint for modern horror films
7. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Wes Craven's 'A Nightmare on Elm Street' introduced Freddy Krueger, a supernatural killer who stalks his victims in their dreams. Combining slasher horror with surreal imagery, the film is both terrifying and inventive. Freddy's burned visage and razor glove are iconic.
Director: Wes Craven
Key Stars: Robert Englund, Heather Langenkamp, Johnny Depp
Notable Scenes: Freddy's first kill and the ending twist
Box Office: $57 million worldwide
Awards: Launched a highly successful franchise
Legacy: Cemented Freddy Krueger as a horror legend
8. The Ring (2002)
Gore Verbinski's remake of the Japanese horror film 'Ringu' brought the haunting tale of a cursed videotape to Western audiences. The film's eerie atmosphere and shocking imagery, particularly Samara crawling out of the television, terrified viewers worldwide.
Director: Gore Verbinski
Key Stars: Naomi Watts, Martin Henderson, David Dorfman
Notable Scenes: The videotape sequences and Samara's well
Box Office: $249 million worldwide
Awards: Critical acclaim for its atmosphere and cinematography
Legacy: Sparked a wave of Japanese horror remakes
9. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
'The Blair Witch Project' popularized the found-footage genre with its terrifying story of three filmmakers lost in the woods. The movie's minimalist approach and suggestion of unseen horrors created an unparalleled sense of dread.
Directors: Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez
Key Stars: Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams, Joshua Leonard
Notable Scenes: The final scene in the house and the tent attack
Box Office: $248 million worldwide on a $60,000 budget
Awards: Praised for its innovation and marketing
Legacy: Reinvented the horror genre with its realism
10. It (2017)
The modern adaptation of Stephen King's 'It' brought Pennywise the Clown back to terrify a new generation. With a mix of psychological horror, jump scares, and emotional depth, 'It' became a critical and commercial success. Bill Skarsgård's portrayal of Pennywise is as terrifying as it is unforgettable.
Director: Andy Muschietti
Key Stars: Bill Skarsgård, Finn Wolfhard, Sophia Lillis
Notable Scenes: The sewer introduction and the projector scene
Box Office: $701 million worldwide
Awards: Nominated for multiple critics' awards
Legacy: One of the highest-grossing horror films of all time
Conclusion on Scary Movies
Scary movies are more than just entertainment—they're an art form that taps into our primal fears and emotions. The films on this list showcase the creativity and brilliance of filmmakers who have mastered the craft of horror. Whether it's through psychological tension, supernatural terror, or outright gore, these movies have left an indelible mark on the genre and our collective psyche.
From the timeless suspense of Psycho to the modern psychological dread of Hereditary, these films prove that fear is universal and endlessly captivating. As horror continues to evolve, these classics will remain benchmarks, reminding us of the enduring power of a good scare. Whether you're a lifelong fan or new to the genre, these movies are essential viewing for anyone brave enough to experience them.
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About the Authors:
Richard D. Harroch is a Senior Advisor to CEOs, management teams, and Boards of Directors. He is an expert on M&A, venture capital, startups, and business contracts. He was the Managing Director and Global Head of M&A at VantagePoint Capital Partners, a venture capital fund in the San Francisco area. His focus is on internet, digital media, AI and technology companies. He was the founder of several Internet companies. His articles have appeared online in Forbes, Fortune, MSN, Yahoo, Fox Business and AllBusiness.com. Richard is the author of several books on startups and entrepreneurship as well as the co-author of Poker for Dummies and a Wall Street Journal-bestselling book on small business. He is the co-author of a 1,500-page book published by Bloomberg on mergers and acquisitions of privately held companies. He was also a corporate and M&A partner at the international law firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. He has been involved in over 200 M&A transactions and 250 startup financings. He can be reached through LinkedIn.
Dominique Harroch is the Chief of Staff at AllBusiness.com. She has acted as a Chief of Staff or Operations Leader for multiple companies where she leveraged her extensive experience in operations management, strategic planning, and team leadership to drive organizational success. With a background that spans over two decades in operations leadership, event planning at her own start-up and marketing at various financial and retail companies, Dominique is known for her ability to optimize processes, manage complex projects and lead high-performing teams. She holds a BA in English and Psychology from U.C. Berkeley and an MBA from the University of San Francisco. She can be reached via LinkedIn.

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AI influencers compete for followers and brand deals on social media

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AI influencers compete for followers and brand deals on social media

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The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead
The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead

Time​ Magazine

time2 days ago

  • Time​ Magazine

The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead

Jesse Armstrong loves to pull fictional stories out of reality. His universally acclaimed TV show Succession, for instance, was inspired by real-life media dynasties like the Murdochs and the Hearsts. Similarly, his newest film Mountainhead centers upon characters that share key traits with the tech world's most powerful leaders: Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, and others. Mountainhead, which releases on HBO on May 31 at 8 p.m. ET, portrays four top tech executives who retreat to a Utah hideaway as the AI deepfake tools newly released by one of their companies wreak havoc across the world. As the believable deepfakes inflame hatred on social media and real-world violence, the comfortably-appointed quartet mulls a global governmental takeover, intergalactic conquest and immortality, before interpersonal conflict derails their plans. Armstrong tells TIME in a Zoom interview that he first became interested in writing a story about tech titans after reading books like Michael Lewis' Going Infinite (about Sam Bankman-Fried) and Ashlee Vance's Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future, as well as journalistic profiles of Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, and others. He then built the story around the interplay between four character archetypes—the father, the dynamo, the usurper, and the hanger-on—and conducted extensive research so that his fictional executives reflected real ones. His characters, he says, aren't one-to-one matches, but 'Frankenstein monsters with limbs sewn together.' These characters are deeply flawed and destructive, to say the least. Armstrong says he did not intend for the film to be a wholly negative depiction of tech leaders and AI development. 'I do try to take myself out of it, but obviously my sense of what this tech does and could do infuses the piece. Maybe I do have some anxieties,' he says. Armstrong contends that the film is more so channeling fears that AI leaders themselves have warned about. 'If somebody who knows the technology better than anyone in the world thinks there's a 1/5th chance that it's going to wipe out humanity—and they're some of the optimists—I think that's legitimately quite unnerving,' he says. Here's how each of the characters in Mountainhead resembles real-world tech leaders. This article contains spoilers. Venis (Cory Michael Smith) is the dynamo. Venis is Armstrong's 'dynamo': the richest man in the world, who has gained his wealth from his social media platform Traam and its 4 billion users. Venis is ambitious, juvenile, and self-centered, even questioning whether other people are as real as him and his friends. Venis' first obvious comp is Elon Musk, the richest man in the real world. Like Musk, Venis is obsessed with going to outer space and with using his enormous war chest to build hyperscale data centers to create powerful anti-woke AI systems. Venis also has a strange relationship with his child, essentially using it as a prop to help him through his own emotional turmoil. Throughout the movie, others caution Venis to shut down his deepfake AI tools which have led to military conflict and the desecration of holy sites across the world. Venis rebuffs them and says that people just need to adapt to technological changes and focus on the cool art being made. This argument is similar to those made by Sam Altman, who has argued that OpenAI needs to unveil ChatGPT and other cutting-edge tools as fast as possible in order to show the public the power of the technology. Like Mark Zuckerberg, Venis presides over a massively popular social media platform that some have accused of ignoring harms in favor of growth. Just as Amnesty International accused Meta of having 'substantially contributed' to human rights violations perpetrated against Myanmar's Rohingya ethnic group, Venis complains of the UN being 'up his ass for starting a race war.' Randall (Steve Carell) is the father. The group's eldest member is Randall, an investor and technologist who resembles Marc Andreessen and Peter Thiel in his lofty philosophizing and quest for immortality. Like Andreessen, Randall is a staunch accelerationist who believes that U.S. companies need to develop AI as fast as possible in order to both prevent the Chinese from controlling the technology, and to ostensibly ignite a new American utopia in which productivity, happiness, and health flourish. Randall's power comes from the fact that he was Venis' first investor, just as Thiel was an early investor in Facebook. While Andreessen pens manifestos about technological advancement, Randall paints his mission in grandiose, historical terms, using anti-democratic, sci-fi-inflected language that resembles that of the philosopher Curtis Yarvin, who has been funded and promoted by Thiel over his career. Randall's justification of murder through utilitarian and Kantian lenses calls to mind Sam Bankman-Fried's extensive philosophizing, which included a declaration that he would roll the dice on killing everyone on earth if there was a 51% chance he would create a second earth. Bankman-Fried's approach—in embracing risk and harm in order to reap massive rewards—led him to be convicted of massive financial fraud. Randall is also obsessed with longevity just like Thiel, who has railed for years against the 'inevitability of death' and yearns for 'super-duper medical treatments' that would render him immortal. Jeff (Ramy Youssef) is the usurper. Jeff is a technologist who often serves as the movie's conscience, slinging criticisms about the other characters. But he's also deeply embedded within their world, and he needs their resources, particularly Venis' access to computing power, to thrive. In the end, Jeff sells out his values for his own survival and well-being. AI skeptics have lobbed similar criticisms at the leaders of the main AI labs, including Altman—who started OpenAI as a nonprofit before attempting to restructure the company—as well as Demis Hassabis and Dario Amodei. Hassabis is the CEO of Google Deepmind and a winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; a rare scientist surrounded by businessmen and technologists. In order to try to achieve his AI dreams of curing disease and halting global warning, Hassabis enlisted with Google, inking a contract in 2014 in which he prohibited Google from using his technology for military applications. But that clause has since disappeared, and the AI systems developed under Hassabis are being sold, via Google, to militaries like Israel's. Another parallel can be drawn between Jeff and Amodei, an AI researcher who defected from OpenAI after becoming worried that the company was cutting back its safety measures, and then formed his own company, Anthropic. Amodei has urged governments to create AI guardrails and has warned about the potentially catastrophic effects of the AI industry's race dynamics. But some have criticized Anthropic for operating similarly to OpenAI, prioritizing scale in a way that exacerbates competitive pressures. Souper (Jason Schwartzman) is the hanger-on. Every quartet needs its Turtle or its Ringo; a clear fourth wheel to serve as a punching bag for the rest of the group's alpha males. Mountainhead 's hanger-on is Souper, thus named because he has soup kitchen money compared to the rest (hundreds of millions as opposed to billions of dollars). In order to prove his worth, he's fixated on getting funding for a meditation startup that he hopes will eventually become an 'everything app.' No tech exec would want to be compared to Souper, who has a clear inferiority complex. But plenty of tech leaders have emphasized the importance of meditation and mindfulness—including Twitter co-founder and Square CEO Jack Dorsey, who often goes on meditation retreats. Armstrong, in his interview, declined to answer specific questions about his characters' inspirations, but conceded that some of the speculations were in the right ballpark. 'For people who know the area well, it's a little bit of a fun house mirror in that you see something and are convinced that it's them,' he says. 'I think all of those people featured in my research. There's bits of Andreessen and David Sacks and some of those philosopher types. It's a good parlor game to choose your Frankenstein limbs.'

Here's the best advice for the Class of 2025 from 10 notable graduation speakers
Here's the best advice for the Class of 2025 from 10 notable graduation speakers

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

Here's the best advice for the Class of 2025 from 10 notable graduation speakers

High-profile writers, doctors, entrepreneurs, and actors are making their annual rounds through college commencement ceremonies. They're dispensing some of their best advice to new grads preparing to take on the challenges that lie ahead, talking about everything from taking chances, surrounding yourself with the right people, and understanding your place in an AI-enabled workplace. Here are some standout pieces of advice to the Class of 2025 from 10 commencement speakers. Tech journalist Steven Levy "You do have a great future ahead of you, no matter how smart and capable ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Llama get," author and tech journalist Steven Levy told graduates at the Temple University College of Liberal Arts on May 7. "And here is the reason: You have something that no computer can ever have. It's a superpower, and every one of you has it in abundance," he said, according to Wired. "The lords of AI are spending hundreds of billions of dollars to make their models think like accomplished humans. You have just spent four years at Temple University learning to think as accomplished humans. The difference is immeasurable," he said. Actor Jennifer Coolidge "When you find the thing that you want to do, I really want to highly recommend — just friggin' go for it," Jennifer Coolidge, the star of HBO's White Lotus, told graduates at Emerson College on May 12. "You really have to psych yourself up into bleeding absurd possibilities, and you have to believe that they are not absurd because there's nothing foolish or accidental about expecting things that are unattainable for yourself." Kermit the Frog Everyone's favorite Muppet shared "a little advice — if you're willing to listen to a frog" at the University of Maryland's commencement ceremony on May 22. "Rather than jumping over someone to get what you want, consider reaching out your hand and taking the leap side by side. Because life is better when we leap together." Actor Elizabeth Banks "You're about to enter the incredibly competitive job market, so I can understand why you believe that life is a zero-sum game, that there's only so much opportunity to go around," actor Elizabeth Banks told graduates of the University of Pennsylvania on May 19. "And if one person takes a bigger slice, everyone else has to make a smaller slice, and the total size of the pie remains the same. And that is true with actual pie," she said. "But not with life, not with opportunity. So my advice to you is, as much as possible from here on out, take yourself out of that mindset." Physician and author Abraham Verghese Physician and author Abraham Verghese told Harvard graduates on May 29 to "make your decisions worthy of those who supported, nurtured, and sacrificed for you." "The decisions you will make in the future under pressure will say something about your character, while they also shape and transform you in unexpected ways," he said. Verghese also encouraged the Class of 2025 to read fiction. "To paraphrase Camus, fiction is the great lie that tells the truth about how the world lives," he said. "And if you don't read fiction, my considered medical opinion is that a part of your brain responsible for active imagination atrophies." Actor Henry Winkler Actor Henry Winkler spoke about the power of positive thinking in his May 17 address to graduates of the Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences. "A negative thought comes into your mind, you say out loud — you say out loud — 'I am sorry, I have no time for you now,'" he said. "Yes, people will look at you very strangely. But it doesn't matter. Because it becomes your habit." Instead, when faced with doubts and negative thoughts about your goals, "you move it out; you move a positive in," he said. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told graduates of Princeton University on May 25 that "the combination of luck, the courage to make mistakes, and a little initiative can lead to much success." "We risk failure, awkwardness, embarrassment, and rejection," he said. "But that's how we create the career opportunities, the great friendships, and the loves that make life worth living." He reminded graduates that "each of us is a work in progress" and "the possibilities for self-improvement are limitless." "The vast majority of what you need to know about work, about relationships, about yourself, about life, you have yet to learn," Powell said. "And that itself is a tremendous gift." Y Combinator cofounder Jessica Livingston Jessica Livingston, cofounder of startup accelerator Y Combinator, told Bucknell University graduates to "find the interesting people." "Talk to people. Get introduced to new people. Find the people that you think are interesting, and then ask what they're working on. And if you find yourself working at a place where you don't like the people, get out," she said in her May 18 speech. She also advised the Class of 2025 that "you can reinvent yourself" at any time. "If you want to, you can just decide to shift gears at this point, and no one's going to tell you you can't," she said. "You can just decide to be more curious, or more responsible, or more energetic, and no one's going to look up your college grades and say, 'Hey, wait a minute. This person's supposed to be a slacker!'" S&P Global CEO Martina L. Cheung "Don't collect promotions. Collect experiences," S&P Global President and CEO Martina L. Cheung told graduates of George Mason University. In her May 15 address, Cheung shared how lateral moves in her own career later prepared her for promotions. "Most people think of their careers as a ladder," she said. "They see the goal as climbing the ladder with promotions or leaving one job to take a bigger one elsewhere. The truth is, moving up is not the only direction. It's not even always the best direction. Sometimes it's the lateral move." YouTuber Hank Green Writer and science YouTuber Hank Green reminded MIT graduates in his May 29 speech to stay curious. "Your curiosity is not out of your control," he said. "You decide how you orient it, and that orientation is going to affect the entire rest of your life. It may be the single most important factor in your career." Green also emphasized the importance of taking chances on your ideas. "Ideas do not belong in your head," he said. "They can't help anyone in there. I sometimes see people become addicted to their good idea. They love it so much, they can't bring themselves to expose it to the imperfection of reality. Stop waiting. Get the ideas out. You may fail, but while you fail, you will build new tools." He closed his speech on this inspiring note: "Do not forget how special and bizarre it is to get to live a human life. It took 3 billion years for the Earth to go from single-celled life forms to you. That's more than a quarter of the life of the entire universe. Something very special and strange is happening on this planet and it is you."

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