1987 — Hellraiser

When he solves the puzzle, he doesn’t summon demons to punish him. He summons demons to experience him. The Cenobites don’t offer damnation; they offer a frontier. As their leader, Pinhead, famously intones: "We’ll tear your soul apart." Not to be cruel. To explore. What makes Pinhead so terrifying isn’t the nails in his skull or the ghoulish voice. It’s his demeanor. He isn’t manic. He isn’t gleeful. He is calm, polite, and utterly reasonable. He arrives like a surgeon or a customs officer. "No tears, please," he says. "It's a waste of good suffering."

When the final girl, Kirsty, finally escapes, she isn’t running from a man with a knife. She’s running from the knowledge that inside every human is a little bit of Frank—a desire to solve the box, just to see what happens. hellraiser 1987

The monster is Julia Cotton. A bored, frustrated housewife, Julia accidentally reunites with her dead lover, Frank—now a skinless, bloody pile of sinew hiding in the attic. Does she scream? Call the police? No. She starts luring lonely men from a local bar back to the house so Frank can absorb their bodies and regenerate. When he solves the puzzle, he doesn’t summon

In the pantheon of 1980s horror, most slashers are about the fear of the body being torn apart. Hellraiser is about something far more disturbing: the fear of the body wanting it. As their leader, Pinhead, famously intones: "We’ll tear