I love horror but apparently I don't vibe with a lot of recommendations I find online.
I'd seen so much hype about Event Horizon and I absolutely hated it and didn't find it scary. I just watched Late Night With the Devil and whole it was definitely enjoyable, it wasn't the least but frightening. I also just watched Let the Right One In and really didn't like it. It also was not a horror movie in my opinion.
I will say one of my favorites is Sinister or the first Conjuring. Sinister for the stomach twisting dread and suspence throughout and Conjuring for the same.
It Follows. It isn’t the best horror movie, but the premise is one of the scariest for me. An entity that is inevitable, and you cannot get away from no matter what you do or where you go. It’s always there, walking towards you.
Thank you! It felt like they could have done so much with it but turned it into the usual monster movie. The first appearances where "it" could be anyone were the best.
I love this film. No real jump scares or anything, just this unsettling idea that lingers with you long after the film has ended.
For a few nights I was very conscious of where my exits were at any given time
It Follows is definitely one of the best horror movies regarding suspense and general feeling of ... gloom?! Eireness?! Futility?! Darkness?! Whatever it is, I love it!
And the (potentially) underlying message is powerful.
There is a single scene in this movie, involving a door, which makes my skin crawl harder than just about anything I've seen in film. It's also sadly spoiled slightly in one of the trailers, so I'd avoid those, but even if you do see it it's still impactful.
The rest of the movie is a solid 7-8/10 that does a great job of referencing a lot of classic horror.
There is a particular type of emotion which "The VVitch" and "Hereditary" get absolutely perfect. It's actually not really my favorite type of movie; it's not particular scary, per se, but it is just some stuff that is really awful that you don't want to see. If you don't want that, they may not be good, but if you vibe with that particular emotion they are hard to beat for it.
The HBO "Chernobyl" miniseries is absolutely straight-up horror. It has pretty much all the elements of a perfect horror movie, except it's (with tiny exceptions and artistic licenses) all 100% true.
"As Above, So Below" is fairly good "normal" horror of a fairly unspicy flavor.
That's honestly all I can think of that really does it well. Horror books in my experience are far better. "The Shining," "Pet Semetary," "Night Shift," and "Skeleton Crew." Also lots and lots of HP Lovecraft; the "Dunwich Horror" collection is wonderful.
There has got to be a term for the particular type of ... restlessness(?) that movies like VVitch and Hereditary inflict. It's not exactly horror, but a distinct discomfort that I can't quite name. Talk To Me also got close for me but not as far as Hereditary.
Oooh yes. I'm with you and the other commenter that that particular feeling of dread is really really great. Hereditary, Midsommar, and VVitch definitely all fit that bill. I've heard the same for Lights Out, so I'm going to give that a go too.
Also Chernobyl is so so good. I've seen it a few times now and oof.
All films from Robert Eggers with his debut "The VVitch" and Ari Aster with its debut "Hereditary" are highly recommended although not all films are 100 % horror movies.
I know it scared the shit out of me the first time I saw it.
I was 15 and my family rented it. So I didn't get to see it in its full theater screen glory. Just a 25" console TV from a well worn VHS cassette where the top 25% of the screen was wavy.
I think Alien is a great movie (and definitely horror), but whether it scares modern audiences is pretty hit and miss. It's very slow paced and while I love the practical effects, the alien looks downright goofy in some scenes. I certainly don't find it scary having seen it, and new viewers I've shown it to usually aren't that scared unless they're self-identified wimps when it comes to horror. Aliens is scarier I think, even though it's more action than pure horror.
Same goes 10x for The Exorcist. It tops a lot of "scariest movie ever" lists online, but watching it today is more comical than anything. I think you have to be scared of demonic possession actually happening IRL to get scared by that movie.
If you like the supernatural/demon ones, check out The Autopsy of Jane Doe. I loved it, the tension is absolutely perfect and a fantastic cast to boot.
I don’t consider many horror movies genuinely scary. The ones I have, at various times in my life, been actually in some way frightened (or at least shook) by, in no particular order:
The Exorcist (The Version You’ve Never Seen)
Hereditary (a masterpiece in my opinion. Free upvote literally every time I see someone recommend it)
Blair Witch Project
Paranormal Activity
Ouija: Origin of Evil
It (miniseries got me as a kid but Chapter 1 is good too)
Lights Out (not the entire movie but it has its moments and overall a good style)
Candyman (original)
Poltergeist (original)
Autopsy of Jane Doe (another poster reminded me of this one!)
The Taking of Deborah Logan (for like one scene but IYKYK)
The Dark and the Wicked
The Orphanage
Terrified and When Evil Lurks were both solidly unsettling at least
Event Horizon (though I know you didn’t like this one)
Conjuring 1-2 and Sinister too, all at least solid spookies.
Note that this does not mean these are the only GOOD horror movies. There are LOTS that I consider masterpieces that just aren’t strictly all that scary.
I'm glad I knew the ending was disappointing before going in.
It hit on a very specific fear of mine that I have difficulty putting into words. The fear of developing a fear or maybe the fear of becoming superstitious?
It’s an interesting movie. In a lot of ways it’s annoying or underwhelming and not much actually happens, but I actually loved the ending.
Tap for spoiler
The way the entire film, from the lore that was set up in the early interviews, was all brought together instantly in a single iconic five-second shot blew me away. It stuck with me for a long time.
Can I ask what scared you about The Exorcist? Assuming you watched it as an adult and are not highly religious; otherwise I get it. I watched it for the first time a few years ago after seeing it regularly called one of the scariest movies of all time -- maybe my expectations were too high but I found it almost comical.
I saw it when I was in my early twenties and I’d never seen it before. But tons of pop culture had made jokes of everything in the movie and I expected it to just be a laugh.
The film did such a good job developing dread and helplessness that I forgot all about the jokes.
Tap for spoiler
Plus the spider walk scene hits you in the face like a hatchet.
Oh I agree that they're not the only good horror movies, there are so many out there that are good in other ways and many of which I absolutely love. But I'm really just looking for that something to keep the lights on at night, lol.
Thanks for the list! There are a few I haven't seen in there, I'll give them a try :)
Everything about it is excellent and holds up even now. The musical score is exceptional.
Don't bother with the reboot. It has a message it's trying to send, which I get, but they've done it to the detriment of the horror. Something could've been done with the premise but they fell short.
This movie is incredible. The moment when the protagonist climbs through the wall and it turns out to be a mural is permanently imprinted in my mind. I don't know if the pure horror elements work that well, honestly, and I don't really find it that scary as a result, but it's a fantastic and unique movie with a bold vision and strong themes.
When people say this they're just talking about the one single moment in the first half of the film, right? The rest of the movie was interesting but idk about scary.
I’m pretty dead inside so not a ton can get through in the horror department, but I always thought 28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later did a fantastic job making zombies a bit scary again.
If you want something a bit different, seek out Threads. It's on the Internet Archive (here, in fact)
Not a traditional horror film at all, it's set in the north of England in the early 80s (depending what n where you're from, the accents might prove a challenge!) and shows the ordinary people of a small city gradually coming to terms with escalating tensions between East and West, which result in all out nuclear war.
And then we get to see the actual on the ground nightmare that that would be. Not in a showy Hollywood way but in a grim, horrifyingly real feeling gritty British drama way. Bleak isn't the word.
It's something that's never quite left me since I saw it for the first and so far only time some years ago. Truly disturbing, and not fun at any point after things start getting serious. Brilliant though.
While a great movie, I wouldn't necessarily call it a horror. The Thing is a suspense movie based on mistrust and paranoia, but I wouldn't call it scary.
For me The Shining is one of the scariest movies and The VVITCH also comes really close to that feeling. For different types of horror I'd also recommend La Piel que Habito, Shutter and The Haunting of Hill House (the show).
And if you get the chance try the book version of Let the Right One In. It's much better than the movie and more of a horror imo.
I absolutely love and hate how they mess with your perception of not only time but what's real because I could see myself in situations where I couldn't tell you how long has passed and/or having to question if what I'm seeing is real or not.
Some suggestions from my side - in addition to many already posted suggestions I would add to my list as well:
The series Twin Peaks (all three seasons plus the feature 'Fire Walk With Me') is not 100 % horror but it has it's tense of mystery and some scary scenes as well
Don't Look Now from 1974 - a classic mystery drama with great Donald Sutherland in the leading role - also more mystery/suspense than horror
IT (reboot) - still scarier than the Terrifier movies which are more slasher / fun-splatter
Quarantine - until I saw the original 'REC'
Schock - Italian horror movie classic
Barbarian - I expected different but I was surprised in a positive way
I absolutely love horror movies and have a long list of fantastic ones but not very many of them actually scared me. Most of them have been named already but two I didn't see were The Babadook (2014) and surprisingly a Netflix movie called His House (2020) was actually awesome. One of my favorites in the last few years.
Yeah I actually think that my favorite horror movies are the ones that get me asking questions, rather than being scared. I like being intrigued by the evil, like in Smile (until the twist at the end, it was a perfectly good psychological horror that did not need a monster)
I don't get scared easily, but Kothanodi had me watching through my fingers. It has four vaguely connected stories, and two of them are very fucked up. There's a decent amount of infanticide and other atrocities inflicted on minors, so be warned if you have any childhood trauma.
Also by the same director, the movie Aamis is about cannibalism acting as a replacement for sex. It's pretty fucked up as well.
What I've learned from this thread as someone getting into horror again is that I really need to watch Hereditary and the original Candyman. Might just bookmark this for all the great recommendations. Only hard part is that my partner isn't into horror so it's hard to watch them.
The Borderlands (2013) is a great found footage horror film with a unique twist on the genre. The ending was particularly horrifying to watch, and I don't normally find horror films scary.
It has a lot of black magic and jinns in it, which are quite consistent with islamic mythology. The horror hits you differently if you have heard stories about it in your childhood.
I mean for me, i can shrug off almost anything with "yeah right" but when it comes to islamic mythology, i kinda believe in it so it's more scary.
Many other good ones have already been mentioned, so I won't repeat those titles. But "Suspiria" (2018 edition) definitely deserves a mention. The ending is just ... well, clearly somebody amongst the original writers had some issues regarding reproductive systems ... but the other 98% of the movie feature brilliant suspense & eiriness at all times. And Tilda Swinton is simply to-die-for in it. ;)
so many recommendations already said and im sure many more to go.
Three that i didnt see mentioned that i enjoyed were:
Martyrs- French Version
The Visit
Session 9
Scenes from martyrs have been memed out of context so i think its fairly familiar. i hadnt watched it until recently and i think one time through was good enough for me. i’m not into a lot of torture style suspense.
The visit was particularly scary for me because If you’ve ever been in that scenario of being dropped off with familial strangers those initial reservations you have running through your head do make you uncomfortable and blossom into horrific thoughts. in the case of this movie a bit more so ;)
Session 9 i watched during the golden age of netflix. it isnt amazing but it was enjoyable.
Talk To Me. I would also say Sinister and The Conjuring are my favorites, and I also struggle to find scary movies that genuinely scare me. Watch this alone in the dark the first time. It is now my all-time favorite scary movie, and it's fairly recent.
I'm noticing a distinct lack of Terrifier and Terrifier 2 in these comments. Art the Clown is perhaps the best antagonist I've ever seen in the horror genre and true originality is rare in the modern horror filmscape.
The Ring is also good for originality as far as modern classics, though it's a whole book series in Japan.
Edit: I also liked The Shrine, forgot to mention that one. Again, originality.
"Ju-On: The Grudge" from 2002 was probably one of the scariest movies I've seen (if you don't mind reading subtitles). The US remake did not do it justice IMO.
I don't know how well it holds up nowadays since it's so old and I was a lot younger when it came out.
I also remembered it as insanely scary, but when I rewatched it recently it really didn't live up to my imagination. Maybe I had hyped it up too much in my head
Megan is Missing (2011) is one of the most horrifying films I've ever seen. Fair warning though, the last ten minutes are excruciatingly painful to watch. It is not for the faint of heart.
In the gore porn genre Cannibal Holocaust (1980) and Hostel (2005) are vile, but so pointlessly gorey the actual horror (the brutality of men) is almost entirely lost.
Funny Games (1997), or the 2007 American remake for those who don't love subtitles, is another unnerving portrayal of ultra violence. It's not gore porn, but is graphic. The original version's pacing will make you squirm in your seat.
Hush (2016) and Creep (2014) are two of my movie-night-with-friends films. Still very much about the human monster, but not overly graphic and prefers to build by making the viewer a partial participant. You have to be a certain level of broken to enjoy some of the others on my list, but these two are disney movies compared to Cannibal Holocaust.