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  1. Get a look at the spookiest, scariest, and Freshest Netflix horror movies, like The Platform, Gerald's Game and more. Best Horror Movies on Netflix: The Scariest Movies To Stream...

    • Creep 2

      Rated 4/5 Stars • Rated 4 out of 5 stars 03/27/24 Full...

    • Pan's Labyrinth

      Rated 3/5 Stars • Rated 3 out of 5 stars 04/26/24 Full...

    • Gerald's Game

      A woman accidentally kills her husband during a kinky game....

    • Silent Hill
    • The Wailing
    • A Nightmare on Elm Street
    • A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge
    • Thanksgiving
    • Backcountry
    • Resident Evil
    • Insidious
    • The Conference
    • 47 Meters Down: Uncaged

    When it comes to video game adaptations, horror-themed ones fare slightly better. Christophe Gans’ adaptation of Konami’s eerie survival mystery Silent Hill is one of the better examples, sticking to what makes the franchise so spooky. It’s got ghoulish figures, solid scares, and plenty of fog. Silent Hill does a solid job of paying respect to Kona...

    The Wailing is a three-headed South Korean horror beast that requires patience but pays off big time. The film follows a police officer who investigates deaths and sicknesses in the remote mountain village of Gokseong. What starts as a skeptical police procedural becomes a more clouded thriller until a full-on possession arc dominates the third act...

    If it weren’t for the Child’s Play movies, A Nightmare On Elm Street would be my favorite of the evergreen horror franchise. Everything starts with Wes Craven’s original, where Robert Englund asserts himself as the snide dreamland killer. The gloves, the perfect shot when he outreaches his arms to create a Stretch Armstrong shadow effect, his laugh...

    As far as Elm Street sequels go, Freddy's Revenge is an underrated continuation. The kills are solid, Robert Englund stays atop his game, and director Jack Sholder does a stellar job keeping the tone set by Wes Craven alive. However, it's become more infamous over the years for different reasons. Mark Patton's performance as Jesse Walsh injects a h...

    If I’m being honest, part of me thought we’d never see a feature-length version of Eli Roth’s Thanksgiving. Kudos to the slasher filmmaker for pressing studios to make Thanksgiving until Spyglass Media Group finally caved, rewarding patient fans with a Massachusetts massacre that carves with the best of ‘em. Roth sells every delicious Thanksgiving ...

    Adam MacDonald’s Backcountry does for hiking what Jaws does for beaches. The film is loosely based on the true story of a 2005 bear attack, which only makes MacDonald’s recreation that much more horrifying. Jeff Roop and Missy Peregrym play an “urban couple” who go camping in the wilderness, bicker about directions, and a man-eating bear ruins thei...

    Paul W. S. Anderson's Resident Evil might take liberties with Capcom's famous video game franchise, but that doesn't make it a failure. Milla Jovovich's Alice leads us into the zombified battleground of Umbrella's doomsday apocalypse, filled with T-Virus vials and salivating Lickers. Anderson's vision is an action-horror take on Resident Evil that'...

    The Conjuring might be James Wan’s best haunted house movie, but Insidious might be his scariest. Between The Further ghouls and “Tiptoe through the Tulips,” Wan proves a mastermind behind morphing the comforts of home into the devil’s playground. From Patrick Wilson to Rose Byrne, Lin Shaye to Leigh Whannell, Insidious is such an expertly cast hor...

    Work sucks, but luckily The Conference doesn’t. It’s a furious “Worksploitation” slasher that puts a knife to the throat of scummy corporate culture. Kills all have a taste of the great outdoors since the film takes place at a woodland work retreat, from machetes through hammocks to a splashy jacuzzi death. The Swedish commentary on greedy business...

    I won’t lie and say the 47 Meters Down sequel is better than 47 Meters Down. The original nails the basics of shark cinema like the best have in the past, which this sequel doesn’t try to match. Uncaged instead leans into the more B-Movie nature of fin flicks, turning the movie into an underwater slasher riff where the sharks are the killer. It’s t...

    • BJ Colangelo
    • X (2022) Directed by: Ti West. Starring: Mia Goth, Jenna Ortega, Martin Henderson, Brittany Snow, Owen Campbell, Stephen Ure, and Scott Mescudi. The first movie in what has become a popular slasher film franchise helmed by Ti West, X is an excellent and over-the-top horror movie following a group of filmmakers determined to break into the adult entertainment industry.
    • The Babadook (2014) Directed by: Jennifer Kent. Starring: Essie Davis, Noah Wiseman, Hayley McElhinney, Daniel Henshall, Barbara West, and Ben Winspear. This Australian horror movie from writer and director Jennifer Kent is based on Kent's short film Monster and follows a widowed single mother who is forced to confront a vicious boogeyman-like monster after it takes up in her home.
    • It (2017) Directed by: Andy Muschietti. Starring: Jaeden Lieberher, Bill Skarsgård, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, Finn Wolfhard, Wyatt Oleff, Chosen Jacobs, Jack Dylan Grazer, Nicholas Hamilton, and Jackson Robert Scott.
    • Train to Busan (2016) Directed by: Yeon Sang-ho. Starring: Gong Yoo, Jung Yu-mi, Ma Dong-seok, Kim Su-an, Choi Woo-shik, Ahn So-hee, and Kim Eui-sung. This 2016 Korean film became a massive hit that went on to launch a franchise that includes an animated prequel and a standalone sequel.
    • The Blair Witch Project. Writers/Directors: Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sánchez. Cast: Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams, Joshua Leonard. Yes, we've all peaked at the witch behind the curtain, and yes, we all now know that The Blair Witch Projec t is not an actual piece of "found footage," an actual document of horrific, unexplainable death, as it was originally presented in 1999.
    • Child's Play 2. Director: John Lafia. Writer: Don Mancini. Cast: Brad Dourif, Alex Vincent, Jenny Agutter, Peter Haskell. The Chucky that we all know and love, the one standing next to the knees of Freddy, Jason, and Michael as a horror icon, didn’t really evolve into his final form until 1990’s Child’s Play 2.
    • Bride of Chucky. Director: Ronny Yu. Writer: Don Mancini. Cast: Brad Dourif, Jennifer Tilly, Katherine Heigl, Nick Stabile, John Ritter. The creative juices of the Child’s Play franchise had run a little dry by Child’s Play 3, so kudos to all involved for taking a full seven years off and returning with the perfect blueprint.
    • The Conjuring. Director: James Wan. Writers: Chad Hayes and Carey W. Hayes. Cast: Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Ron Livingston, Lili Taylor, Joey King, Mackenzie Foy.
  2. Netflix subscribers have commonly made horror films the most-watched on the streaming service, and the original filmmaking factory at the company keeps churning out new ones in time for...

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  4. Mar 5, 2024 · Looking for scary movies on Netflix? Here are the best horror movies on Netflix you can watch right now, from horror classics to new horror movie hidden gems.

  5. Apr 10, 2024 · The best horror movies on Netflix include a who’s who of cinematic nightmares, including certified classics of the genre and new, ambitious additions from modern filmmakers. These movies...

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