10 Horror Movies That Were Way Weirder Than Advertised
10. Fall
Grossing $21 million against a paltry budget, Scott Mann's Fall follows a disastrous climb gone wrong. The film sees two friends - Grace Currey's Becky and Virginia Gardner's Hunter - become stranded at the top of a 2000-foot-tall radio tower.
Fall's set pieces are unashamedly bonkers. The visual of our protagonists dangling from the tower's platform with one hand is just one example within the movie that elicits gasps of profanity and the sweatiest of palms.
Trailers for Fall painted a picture of a story that could induce vertigo amongst audiences, but nothing could fully prepare them for what actually unfolds.
However, that's not Fall's headline when it comes to weirdness. The movie makes an unexpected segue into the realms of psychological horror with the reveal that Hunter actually fell to her death while attempting to reach a backpack containing the pair's water supply. Becky has been deliriously hallucinating her presence ever since, leading to an eerie aura when the audience realises she has been conversing with a dead woman all along.