Halloween is the time of the year when many decide to dress up as their favourite ghoulish characters and where countless kids knock on your door asking for sweets.However, many of us may also decide to pull up in front of our TV and put on a horror movie to indulge in the scare fest.
Screams, blood trails and sinister laughs are things we associate with horror movies, but there is something else which always lingers in our memories of horror movies and that is the car breakdown. The way cars always seem to break down in the worse place possible is common place in several horror movies, especially when the dreaded engine coughs and we hear the stuttering sound of them not starting. But what is the most memorable horror movie and what tends to cause them?
Here at startrescue.co.uk, we conducted a survey in the weeks leading up to Halloween in order to find out not only the most memorable horror movie car breakdown, but also the most common cause of it .
Most Memorable Horror Breakdown Movies
Of the 550 members of the public who took the survey, 40% decided that the most memorable horror movie breakdown was from Wes Craven’s classic, The Hills Have Eyes, in which a family’s car breaks down in a former nuclear testing site, where the resulting radiation has turned the local population into cannibal savages - not really an ideal place to breakdown!
From Jeepers Creepers to Wolf Creek we’ve seen the unsuspecting victims either stumbling across a nightmare scenario with a car failure, or in other situations the helpless sufferers are looking to flee the carnage, until that is, they see a glimmer of hope in the shape of a car, only to find the would-be escape tool ultimately fails.
Top causes of car breakdowns in movies
Lack of fuel was given as the most common cause of a breakdown, with 44% of the vote, followed by battery problems with 22% of the vote, both also happen to be two of the top 10 causes of car breakdowns in the UK.
Top Breakdown Nightmares
The public were also asked what their ultimate breakdown nightmare would be, 58% said the worst place to breakdown would be the woods and 45% said that if they were in a horror movie and their car broke down, rather than try and fix it they’d simply run away to flee any potential chaos that may ensue.
The survey took place from 12th October till 21st October 2015 with 550 people from the UK taking part.