Every A24 Horror Movie Ranked from Worst to Best

Publish date: 2024-10-19

The Big Picture

The indie darling A24 is known for bringing us some of the most critically acclaimed horror films of recent years. Often challenging and experimental, their films are notable for the variety of ways they approach the genre. Reflecting on everything from family, trauma, and loss, to the terrifying beings that can lurk in the recesses of our subconscious, the horror films with the A24 stamp are largely memorable, even if they are often misunderstood as being driven by one force when each individual filmmaker deserves the praise for making them. The creative minds behind these films challenge the form and offer fresh new visions that leave us with exciting new ideas bouncing around in our heads as a result. Thus, here is our ranking of A24’s horror films, from worst to best.

28. Tusk

Director: Kevin Smith

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The unparalleled worst of all the films on this list, it is hard to even fully consider Kevin Smith’s Tusk a movie. An idea born out of a podcast, that perhaps should have stayed there, it places us with Justin Long’s insufferable Wallace on a journey to Canada. Wallace is an arrogant and generally unlikeable podcaster who is making the trip to interview a strange, reclusive man for his show. When he arrives, he discovers not everything is what it seems, as the man seeks to turn him into a walrus. As Smith himself described it, the film is a “more cuddly version of Human Centipede.”

The most notable aspect of the 2014 film is that it certainly challenges the idea of what can actually count as a film. The whole thing feels like a long punchline that doesn’t have the good sense to end. It is, quite literally, a stoned thought turned into a feature. It is defined by something resembling eccentricity and becomes the most boorish body horror film you’ll ever see. The film gets far too side-tracked, including a prolonged Johnny Depp cameo that just keeps on going until you wish it would all stop. Smith certainly gets points for how he somehow tricked all these people into making it with him, though the end result lands with a dull splash.

Tusk
R

A brash and arrogant podcaster gets more than he bargained for when he travels to Canada to interview a mysterious recluse... who has a rather disturbing fondness for walruses.

Release Date September 6, 2014 Director Kevin Smith Cast Michael Parks , Justin Long , Genesis Rodriguez , Haley Joel Osment , Johnny Depp , Harley Morenstein Runtime 102 Main Genre Horror Writers Kevin Smith Expand

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27. Slice

Director: Austin Vesely

In what was just narrowly better than last place, Slice is a film that managed to get a lot of talent involved, though it ended up with almost nothing to show for it. The most goofy of all horror comedies, it is set in a small town where a series of mysterious murders of pizza deliverymen mark the signs of something seriously wrong for the area’s residents. There is an intrepid journalist, some bumbling detectives, and cheesy effects, and it feels like it was trying to be a cult film without ever actually having the good craft to back it up.

Slice never really does anything interesting with the tropes of the genre, more often playing into them as opposed to taking them in a new direction. A stoner comedy without any degree of cleverness, it is about as entertaining as being trapped with a friend who got high and rambled about his idea for a script. Such stoner comedies can and have been great, though they were actually funny. Slice, however, is almost entirely unfunny with hardly a laugh to be found anywhere. There might be a few jokes here or there that land out of sheer volume, though it never really makes any impression before you get hit with a deluge of bits that are met with silence. Horror and comedy can go together — see 2021's hilarious Werewolves Within — though Slice would have been better off if it was left on the cutting room floor.

Slice (2018)
RComedyHorror

When a pizza delivery driver is murdered on the job, the city searches for someone to blame: Ghosts? Drug dealers? A disgraced werewolf?

Release Date September 10, 2018 Cast Zazie Beetz , Chance Bennett , Rae Gray , Marilyn Dodds Frank , Katherine Cunningham , Will Brill , Y'lan Noel , Hannibal Buress , Tim Becker , Joe Keery , Chris Parnell , Paul Scheer Runtime 83 Minutes Writers Austin Vesely Director Austin Vesely

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26. Life After Beth

Director: Jeff Baena

Speaking of other horror comedies, the charming but meandering Life After Beth is one that has a lot of good within it, even as it ranks so low on this list. It follows Dane DeHaan as Zach, who is struggling with the accidental death of his girlfriend. The titular Beth, played by an outstanding Aubrey Plaza, then returns from beyond the grave and re-enters Zach’s life. The troubled lovers will have to work through their fraught relationship and figure out what is going on with her. It is that dynamic that is the core of the film and is equal parts funny as it is engaging. It holds a sweet spot in my heart, though that can’t overcome the rest of what drags it all down to an early grave.

Life After Beth is still by no means terrible, as the performances of the entire cast are universally solid. In particular, Molly Shannon and John C. Reilly as Beth’s parents hit all the right comedic notes. It gets very dark, though not in a way that feels out of place. It should have worked far better, though it just becomes far too repetitive and disjointed. Plaza is a good actor to build a film around as she has been absolutely stellar in subsequent films like Ingrid Goes West, but this film begins to lose steam and can’t regain it. What would have worked as a great sketch or short film gets stretched until it almost breaks.

Life After Beth (2014)
RComedyFantasyHorror

A young man's recently deceased girlfriend mysteriously returns from the dead, but he slowly realizes she is not the way he remembered her.

Release Date August 15, 2014 Cast Aubrey Plaza , Dane DeHaan , Molly Shannon , Cheryl Hines , Paul Reiser , Matthew Gray Gubler , John C. Reilly Runtime 89 Minutes Writers Jeff Baena Director Jeff Baena

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25. The Monster

Director: Bryan Bertino

A straightforward and typical monster flick with a title that tells you most of what you need to know, The Monster is a road trip interrupted when a mother hits an animal on the road while driving with her daughter. Before this, mother Kathy (Zoe Kazan) and daughter Lizzy (Ella Ballentine) already have a strained relationship. Much of this stems from Kathy’s alcoholism, which Lizzy bears the brunt of, often having to be the adult in the relationship and take care of the parental figure who is supposed to be there for her. That will all come into focus when they remain stranded on the road awaiting help as some sort of beast lurks in the forest. Together, the duo will have to find a way to work together and survive the threat facing them.

Writer and director Bryan Bertino has made some interesting work, with 2020's The Dark and the Wicked being particularly praiseworthy, though that excellence never quite materializes here. Everything plays out about as you would expect, with some added degree of emotional growth conveyed through flashback. It just lacks a deeper impact, both in its scares and its story. The Monster is completely uninterested in going down any new paths, instead becoming increasingly predictable and even leaning into moments that fully lose themselves in cliché. It is aggressively simple in its execution. Simple isn’t bad, but it certainly isn’t going to blow anyone away.

The Monster (2016)
RDramaFantasyHorror

A mother and daughter must confront a terrifying monster when they break down on a deserted road.

Release Date November 11, 2016 Cast Zoe Kazan , Ella Ballentine , Keira Knightley , Aaron Douglas , Christine Ebadi , Marc Hickox , Scott Speedman , Chris Webb , Meeko Runtime 91 Minutes Writers Bryan Bertino Director Bryan Bertino

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24. The Hole in the Ground

Director: Lee Cronin

An entry that fully leans into the "creepy as hell kid" vein of horror, Lee Cronin's The Hole in the Ground is about that and so much more. It follows single mother Sarah (Seána Kerslake) who lives with her son Chris (James Quinn Markey) in the rural Irish countryside. One night, Chris disappears behind their home and comes back behaving rather differently. This leads Sarah to believe he may be an impostor and that it is somehow all tied to the titular hole that is in the forest near their home. It soon becomes a psychological nightmare where Sarah begins to notice Chris doing very un-childlike things, though she struggles to trust herself in what she is seeing.

To its credit, The Hole in the Ground does a competent enough job of messing with some of your expectations and has many strikingly horrifying visuals that carry the film through a largely unoriginal story. It never loses your attention as you get drawn deeper in, though you come out the other side feeling like it just missed out on all it could have been. The parental fears of losing your child or, perhaps worse, not being able to recognize them anymore is a story full of potential — potential that, regrettably, never gets realized. There is a good final note that it all ends on, though the journey in which you get there is where it falls into its own narrative pit of playing it safe.

The Hole In The Ground (2019)
RDramaHorrorMysterySupernatural

A single mother living in the Irish countryside with her son begins to suspect he may not be her son at all, and fears his increasingly disturbing behavior is linked to a mysterious sinkhole in the forest behind their house.

Release Date January 25, 2019 Cast Seana Kerslake , James Cosmo , Simone Kirby , Steve Wall , James Quinn Markey Runtime 90 Minutes Writers Lee Cronin , Stephen Shields Director Lee Cronin

23. MaXXXine

Director: Ti West

There is a good chance that this may be the most controversial part of this list, but there was no way to put the generally disappointing MaXXXine any higher than this. Though the prior parts of this horror trilogy will come later and much higher up, it's this (potentially) closing chapter that sees things go out on a surprisingly lackluster note. Though bursting with references as it sends its titular character into Hollywood where she tries to make it as a star, none of this comes together into anything particularly interesting or even remotely scary. At least, nothing scary except for a frightfully bad finale that nearly entirely undoes what already little good it had going for it up until then.

While there are some more potentially complicated and bittersweet closing notes scattered throughout this, especially when it comes to the final series of shots, the film does nothing to earn them. It is mostly just perplexing about what was actually being attempted here. If it was to satirize the frequent shallowness of the moviemaking process, it did so without any real teeth. If it was to take aim at the conservative panic around satanism, it missed the mark to hit nothing else of substance. Even as it often looks stylish, there is nothing else going on underneath everything it puts forth.

MaXXXine
RHorrorCrime

In 1980s Hollywood, adult film star and aspiring actress Maxine Minx finally secures her big break. As she navigates her path to stardom, a mysterious killer begins targeting Hollywood starlets, leaving a trail of blood that threatens to expose her sinister past.

Release Date July 5, 2024 Director Ti West Cast Mia Goth , Elizabeth Debicki , Moses Sumney , Michelle Monaghan , Bobby Cannavale , Lily Collins , Halsey , Giancarlo Esposito Runtime 103 Minutes Main Genre Horror Writers Ti West Franchise X Prequel X Production Company A24 Expand

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22. In Fabric

Director: Peter Strickland

A film that had so much going for it that it breaks my heart to put it this low, In Fabric tells the story of a killer (in both appearance and in nature) dress. The first part of the film follows a brilliant Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Sheila, a divorcee who stumbles upon a dress that will alter the course of her life. The blood-red gown begins to haunt her and even destroys her washing machine. The film is silly yet hypnotic, making you wonder both at the dress and its witchy properties as well as what will happen with Sheila. She is an interesting character who should have remained the focus of the entire film, and it is to its detriment that they shifted her off-center.

Inexplicably, In Fabric takes a hard turn and removes Sheila from the majority of the story. Instead, we are plopped into a new situation with new characters who come across the dress. While some interesting threads remain, this decision entirely abandons the most compelling part of the story and suffers dearly for it. The remainder of the film feels like a retread of everything that was already seen, going back through the discovery of the dress and its properties. The ending does prove to be appropriately over the top and redeems it slightly, though not nearly enough. It is a huge narrative misstep as it tears the audience away from the far better character it was building and dumps you with others who just can’t compare.

In Fabric

In Fabric is a haunting ghost story set against the backdrop of a busy winter sales period in a department store and follows the life of a cursed dress as it passes from person to person, with devastating consequences.

Release Date December 6, 2018 Director Peter Strickland Cast Gwendoline Christie , Sidse Babett Knudsen , Caroline Catz , Julian Barratt , Marianne Jean-Baptiste , Hayley Squires Runtime 118 Main Genre Horror Writers Peter Strickland Expand

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21. Climax

Director: Gaspar Noé

A hallucinatory drug trip of a film, Climax is a horror film that could only be made by the auteur director Gaspar Noé. It is more restrained and straightforward than some of his prior films, like the expansive masterpiece Enter the Void, though it still contains the director’s indelible stamp of surrealness. It focuses on an ensemble cast of a dance troupe who are drugged and begin to descend into madness that will leave them uncertain of what is real. It is a technical marvel with many extended shots of both dancing and violence (sometimes where they are occurring at the same time). These scenes are impossible to look away from, even if you may want to, as it boggles the mind to comprehend how it all came together and where it is all going next. It always keeps you on your toes, shifting from comedy to horror in the blink of an eye. It is truly a spectacle.

There is some degree where the story and the acting leave much to be desired. Much of this is forgivable as many of the cast were selected for their dancing prowess as opposed to their acting. However, in moments where acting is required, it falls flat. Sofia Boutella as Selva is an exception, though no one else can match the levels of genuine terror she creates as she begins to lose her mind. The story itself feels like a secondary aspect, leaving a regrettably empty and exhausted feeling at the core of it by the time it all ends. Climax is by no means a bad movie, though it just can’t quite hold a candle to what is to come on this list.

Climax
RHorrorDrama

French dancers gather in a remote, empty school building to rehearse on a wintry night. The all-night celebration morphs into a hallucinatory nightmare when they learn their sangria is laced with LSD.

Release Date September 18, 2018 Director Gaspar Noe Cast Sofia Boutella , Souhelia Yacoub Runtime 97

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20. Enemy

Director: Denis Villeneuve

Before you even say it, yes, Enemy is not entirely a horror film in the conventional sense. Most would describe it as more of a psychological thriller, though that ends up leaving out a lot of the more horrifying aspects, especially its visuals. Loosely based on the novel The Double by Jose Saramago, Enemy has Jake Gyllenhaal pulling double duty as two men who look the exact same, though are opposite sides of the same coin. When one discovers the existence of the other, their worlds begin to blur as their lives become intertwined. It is quite unsettling with many sequences that alarm and intrigue in equal measure, throwing the audience off balance at nearly every chance it gets.

The film is less one to be taken literally, in that there aren’t two identical men walking around at the same time. It is more about how they express different sides of who this person is. There is the creepy use of spider imagery, including a particularly unnerving moment where a woman has the head of an arachnid, that makes your skin begin to crawl. These images are what draw from horror cinema even as it is much more about the internal horrors of what one man is capable of. The outside terrors are manifestations of his inner turmoil. Once you begin to pick up on what is happening, it is all rather blunt, while still being a flawed yet intriguing look at the psyche.

Enemy
RMysteryDramaThriller

A man seeks out his exact look-alike after spotting him in a movie.

Release Date February 6, 2014 Director Denis Villeneuve Cast Jake Gyllenhaal , Mélanie Laurent , Sarah Gadon , Isabella Rossellini , Joshua Peace , Tim Post , Kedar Brown , Darryl Dinn Runtime 91 Minutes Writers José Saramago , Javier Gullón

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19. Saint Maud

Director: Rose Glass

A film that deserved a far better release than it got, Saint Maud marks the point where this list starts to get really good. An incredible feature debut from writer-director Rose Glass, it's a film about faith and loneliness that proves to be a brutally painful study of its central character. It stars a convincing Morfydd Clark as Maud, a nurse who is caring for Jennifer Ehle’s ailing Amanda. Maud believes that she is being directed by her faith and begins to drift increasingly into deeper levels of delusion that stem from that. It is a nightmarish descent that comes from both a deeply felt performance as well as many expertly captured sequences that make the most of haunting visuals. It is truly unsettling, cutting right to your very soul with each scene.

Saint Maud is all centered around pain, both physical and spiritual, that deepens the dread the longer it goes on. It isn’t a long film, though at some moments it feels like an eternity. This is not a critique but a compliment, as the ability to make time feel like it is weighing upon you while watching a person in such agony is a true achievement. Every injury Maud inflicts on herself as she spirals out of control just twists the knife further and further until you almost can’t take it anymore. The final moments drive this all the way home, creating one of the most impactful final frames of any film on this list. It is an image that will remain forever seared in your mind.

Saint Maud

A pious nurse becomes dangerously obsessed with saving the soul of her dying patient.

Release Date September 19, 2019 Director Rose Glass Cast Morfydd Clark , Jennifer Ehle , Lily Knight , Lily Frazer , turlough convery , Rosie Sansom Runtime 84 Main Genre Horror Writers Rose Glass Expand

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18. Lamb

Director: Valdimar Jóhannsson

Lamb is a story of family and loss that plays out in the most terrifying place in the world: rural Iceland. Actually, it is quite a beautiful, though painfully remote, location, where isolation is precisely the point. The movie follows a farming couple who have lost a child and are now living a life devoid of any joy as they struggle in silence with their grief. That is until they discover an unexpected gift that brings new life to the farm. Initially a joyous moment for the couple, they remain blissfully unaware of a looming presence that is circling their home. It is seeking to take back something, revealing that the gift may actually be a curse in disguise.

Oddly enough, Lamb has a lot of elements that are darkly funny, even approaching some degree of surreal silliness, which may catch some viewers off guard. However, the film plays it almost entirely straight and explores how the whole point is that the couple is willing to accept something so absurd as a way to heal. In particular, Noomi Rapace as the mother instills her character with a quiet grace that masks a deeper sadness which can quickly shift into violence. It plays out against a beautifully shot setting that is expertly juxtaposed against the dark forces at play. The final moments ram the point home with a painful yet fitting conclusion that leaves little hope in the bleak, bleak world the film fully inhabits.

Lamb
RHorrorDramaFantasy

A childless couple discovers a mysterious newborn on their farm in Iceland.

Release Date October 8, 2021 Cast Noomi Rapace , Ingvar Eggert Sigurðsson , Björn Hlynur Haraldsson , Hilmir Snær Guðnason , Ester Bibi Runtime 106 minutes Writers Sjon , Valdimar Jóhannsson Director Valdimar Jóhannsson

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17. Bodies Bodies Bodies

Director: Halina Reijn

Next is the chaotic yet clever Bodies Bodies Bodies. It is a modern horror whodunit whose gags, both big and small, are intertwined with the terror that takes hold of its characters. Set in a swanky mansion as a hurricane descends on the area, it follows seven “friends” who decide to play a game under cover of darkness. This competition is a riff on the game Werewolf, where someone is the murderer and everyone else has to figure out who they are before it's too late. However, the night will take a dark turn when someone actually ends up brutally killed.

A darkly playful tale of paranoia and distrust, Bodies Bodies Bodies is a film all about the chaos the characters create when they go at each other’s throats. This is both physical and verbal, as glorious insults turn into physical confrontations, with everyone wondering who exactly is behind the increasing body count. All the characters feel distinct, yet the performances become universally unhinged as fear begins to consume all of them. While the movie does drag at times, the conclusion is a glorious punchline that ties everything together as perfectly as can be.

Bodies Bodies Bodies
R

When a group of rich 20-somethings plan a hurricane party at a remote family mansion, a party game turns deadly in this fresh and funny look at backstabbing, fake friends, and one party gone very, very wrong.

Release Date August 5, 2022 Cast Pete Davidson , Lee Pace , Amandla Stenberg , Maria Bakalova , Rachel Sennott Runtime 95 minutes Main Genre Horror Writers Kristen Roupenian , Sarah DeLappe

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16. Men

Director: Alex Garland

Alex Garland’s Men is by no means his best work, though it still proves to be something quite extraordinary with a conclusion that is unlike anything you’ve ever seen. The story follows a typically outstanding Jessie Buckley as Harper, who is taking a solo vacation to the quiet of the English countryside. She hopes the trip will provide healing after her life was recently thrown into turmoil following a traumatic loss. Upon arriving, she meets an awkward yet creepy landlord named Geoffrey, who is the first of many characters played by a menacing Rory Kinnear. As Harper settles in, she soon discovers that the peaceful time she hoped to have for herself is doomed to chaos as the men of the town all begin to descend on her.

There is a lot about the film that is evocative and unsettling which can’t be discussed without tipping off what it all ends up being a front for. With that in mind, it is both sinister and spectacular when left subtle. Even when it ends up being quite blunt, spelling things out far more than it should have, there is still an unshakeable impact left by Garland’s command of finding beauty in brutality as he makes the jump into body horror. Both central performances further elevate the material, speaking volumes even when they say very little. Men is a film that sees the director shift away from science fiction to settle into more explicit horror, creating an experience defined by striking visuals and an unending sense of dread.

Men (2022)
RHorrorDramaFantasy

A young woman goes on a solo vacation to the English countryside following the death of her ex-husband.

Release Date May 20, 2022 Cast Jessie Buckley , Rory Kinnear , Paapa Essiedu , Gayle Rankin Runtime 100 minutes Writers Alex Garland Director Alex Garland

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15. Green Room

Director: Jeremy Saulnier

The most brutal and gory of the films on this list, Green Room creates horror from the terrors of real-life white supremacy that befall an unsuspecting punk-rock band. Starring the late Anton Yelchin in a nuanced performance as Pat, he must face Patrick Stewart in rare form as the cruel white supremacist leader, Darcy. When Pat’s struggling band takes a gig in Oregon without knowing who it will be for, they find themselves trapped inside the green room with a group of modern-day Nazis outside seeking to kill them. With nowhere to turn, they will have to fight and scramble to get out alive. It is a gritty, realistic take that is incredibly gruesome.

Yet, that is precisely what makes Green Room such a memorable piece of work. There is so much death and violence that feels terrifyingly real, and the predicament and way that it plays out is intentionally uncinematic. There is no catharsis or emotional triumph, and the life-or-death fight the characters find themselves in is a hell without any redemption to be found. The pain of every loss is felt with a soul-crushing intensity as it hammers home the reality of what is being faced. Green Room is an unrelenting masterpiece that, even with the small victories found in the end, makes it clear there is no happiness to be felt here. There is only death and violence, a grim reflection of our world with the all-too-human monsters within it.

Green Room
RThrillerCrimeDrama Horror

A punk rock band is forced to fight for survival after witnessing a murder at a neo-Nazi skinhead bar.

Release Date April 15, 2016 Cast Anton Yelchin , Imogen Poots , Patrick Stewart , Alia Shawkat , Callum Turner , Joe Cole Runtime 94 Writers Jeremy Saulnier Director Jeremy Saulnier

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14. Talk to Me

Directors: Danny and Michael Philippou

The newest film on this list made a splash when it premiered back at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. Talk to Me is the first feature from YouTubers turned directors Danny and Michael Philippou, and is one of the most interesting movies in recent years. Starring a spectacular Sophie Wilde in what is also her feature film debut, Talk to Me centers on the troubled Mia who is haunted by a devastating loss. When she gets the chance to commune with the world beyond via a dangerous party game involving holding an embalmed hand and surrendering your body to a spirit, she's drawn to the potential that she may hear from her departed loved one.

What ensures that Talk to Me works is the thrill that comes from peering into the great beyond and discovering that something is peering back. It is also a film that will have you pondering deeper questions about life and death, as well as more gruesome ones like "How on Earth is his head still attached?!"

Talk to Me
RHorrorThriller 710

When a group of friends discover how to conjure spirits using an embalmed hand, they become hooked on the new thrill, until one of them goes too far and unleashes terrifying supernatural forces.

Release Date July 28, 2023 Cast Sophie Wilde , Joe Bird , Alexandra Jensen , Otis Dhanji Runtime 94 minutes Writers Danny Philippou , Bill Hinzman , Daley Pearson Director Danny Philippou , Michael Philippou

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13. The Blackcoat’s Daughter

Director: Oz Perkins

With yet another bleak entry on this list, this one may be the most underseen and underrated of recent horror flicks. A stunning directorial debut from writer-director Oz Perkins, The Blackcoat’s Daughter is a film built almost entirely on atmosphere. The less you know about it, the better. The basic story is that there are two students, played by Lucy Boynton and upcoming Scream Queen Kiernan Shipka, who find themselves left behind at a prep school over the break. Seemingly disconnected from that, a mysterious woman (Emma Roberts) is making her way on a journey through the winter. That all sounds very vague, though trust me when I say this film is truly something special.

From the creeping score that hits every note perfectly to the sense of dread that the film continuously builds, everything in The Blackcoat's Daughter works together to create maximum impact. It is a slow burn containing a raging fire at its core that, much like the furnace seen throughout the film, is just waiting to set the world alight. It's a movie that more people should have seen, as it regrettably, never really took hold, but it's worth taking a chance on even if you aren’t entirely sure where it's going. The ending, in particular, ties it all together nicely, offering up a final scene that reveals the tragic sense of disconnection and loss that the film is centrally about. A hidden horror gem, The Blackcoat's Daughter deserves far more attention than it got.

The Blackcoat's Daughter
RHorrorMysteryThriller

Two girls must battle a mysterious evil force when they get left behind at their boarding school over winter break.

Release Date February 16, 2017 Cast Emma Roberts , Kiernan Shipka , Lucy Boynton , James Remar , Lauren Holly Runtime 93 minutes Writers Oz Perkins Director Oz Perkins

12. High Life

Director: Claire Denis

Another entry that some may object to being considered a horror, High Life is a blend of science fiction and horror from one of the most exciting directors of our time, Claire Denis. A reflective yet still deeply terrifying look at space travel, the film has an absolutely stacked cast of Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche, André 3000, and Mia Goth. The characters all find themselves on an interstellar journey as part of an experiment to see whether life can be born in the most inhospitable conditions of space. The experiment itself is deeply unethical and goes to some truly depressing places, crafting an experience that is wholly one of a kind — one scene portrays a black hole that tears open your mind in a moment of glorious yet terrifying annihilation.

High Life's depiction of space is all its own, frequently playing by its own rules while also showing moments of the awesome power that can be found in the darkest reaches of our galaxy. When I first saw it in a theater, there was a moment where several people walked out, though that just reaffirmed how it challenged the form in the best way possible. A beautiful balancing act of a film, High Life also has a beating heart at the center of it, proving to be a story of father and daughter that is as sentimental as it is sad.

High Life
R Sci-FiMysteryThriller

A father and his daughter struggle to survive in deep space where they live in isolation.

Release Date April 12, 2019 Cast Robert Pattinson , Juliette Binoche , Andre Benjamin , Mia Goth , Lars Eidinger , Agata Buzek Runtime 113 minutes Writers Claire Denis , Jean-Pol Fargeau , Geoff Cox , Nick Laird Director Claire Denis

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11. Hereditary

Director: Ari Aster

Before you pull out your pitchforks that Hereditary is ranked outside the top five on this list, please know that it could have easily been much farther up. The feature debut that made writer-director Ari Aster one everyone wanted to see more from, the film is a haunting tale that flips the script on many common conventions of the genre. It stars a terrific Toni Collette as Annie Graham, the matriarch of a family grieving a tragic loss. It is a deadly and dire look at how familial trauma plays out in painstaking detail. There is horror to be found in every corner of the Graham family home as it becomes increasingly clear that they are doomed to suffer for the rest of time.

If you consider yourself someone who admires horror, then you’ve likely already seen Hereditary. However, for the sake of those who haven’t, suffice to say the ending takes rather unexpected turns that may catch some off guard. It still all works as a cohesive whole, especially when the precise visuals are so haunting in how they resemble the models that Annie creates in the spirals of her grief. The score by Colin Stetson, with the ending use of 'Reborn' in particular, perfectly compliments the artistry on display amidst the tragedy. It is a hard watch, with moments of unimaginable pain, though it all makes for a powerful piece of work.

Hereditary
R HorrorPsychologicalSupernatural

When her mentally ill mother passes away, Annie, her husband, son, and daughter all mourn her loss. The family turn to different means to handle their grief, including Annie and her daughter both flirting with the supernatural. They each begin to have disturbing, otherworldly experiences linked to the sinister secrets and emotional trauma that have been passed through the generations of their family.

Release Date June 8, 2018 Cast Toni Collette , Gabriel Byrne , Alex Wolff , Milly Shapiro , Ann Dowd , Zachary Arthur Runtime 127 minutes Writers Ari Aster Director Ari Aster

10. Beau Is Afraid

Director: Ari Aster

A film that is almost certain to be one of the most divisive on this list is Beau Is Afraid. Another work by Aster, this is one of those films that is equal parts unhinged as it is oddly compelling. From the very beginning all the way to its revealing end where everyone is put on trial, Beau Is Afraid is a work of existential horror that is not as conventionally scary, as it always prioritizes being darkly comedic. In this regard, it is more similar to Aster’s shorts than his other features and may prove a bit of a hard pill for many to swallow. However, for those willing to go along with it, there is something both silly and sinister that the director manages to tap into.

Following the journey of the troubled Beau (Joaquin Phoenix) as he tries to go home and see his departed mother one last time, Beau Is Afraid places us completely in his shoes as everything seems to go wrong. Whether it's when his keys are stolen as he tries to go to the airport or when he is hit by a food truck, the blows just keep raining down on Aster’s poor protagonist. The film explores fears of family and the future, and, when all is revealed, the constantly watching audience themselves. As Beau tries to find a better story for himself, the repeated denial of any sort of catharsis in favor of delving further into chaos is what makes this movie a standout that is truly all its own.

Beau Is Afraid
RDramaComedyHorror 810

Following the sudden death of his mother, a mild-mannered but anxiety-ridden man confronts his darkest fears as he embarks on an epic, Kafkaesque odyssey back home.

Release Date April 21, 2023 Cast Joaquin Phoenix , Parker Posey , Amy Ryan , Richard Kind , Nathan Lane , Patti LuPone Runtime 179 minutes Director Ari Aster

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9. It Comes at Night

Director: Trey Edward Shults

It Comes at Night is a great film done dirty by a misleading marketing campaign. Even while the title itself may have been somewhat of a misdirect — though it makes sense when read as being about paranoia — the trailer was the nail in the coffin. People went in expecting a monster movie when it most certainly is not. Instead, It Comes at Night is a much more interesting look at how fear and isolation can drive people to commit monstrous acts. Writer-director Trey Edward Shults was coming off the micro-budget family drama, Krisha, with something utterly unexpected yet completely fascinating, and the result is a tension-filled study of humanity when pushed to the absolute breaking point.

What pushes all the characters to the edge is fear of each other and, in the world of the film, the disease they may carry. All the people in this world are traumatized, and that informs their every action. It Comes at Night is pitch black tonally and visually, often relying on the darkness of the scene to increase the suspicion of what is happening. By the time the tragic conclusion plays out, your emotions are almost completely fried. There is one final scream that still echoes around inside my head because of the sheer agony it conveys — when I saw it in theaters, someone broke into uncontrollable sobbing. The movie completely wears you down to the bone with the final scene alone and is a masterful, bleak portrait of our worst selves.

It Comes at Night
R


Secure within a desolate home as an unnatural threat terrorizes the world, a man has established a tenuous domestic order with his wife and son. Then a desperate young family arrives seeking refuge.

Release Date June 9, 2017 Cast Joel Edgerton , Riley Keough , Christopher Abbott , Carmen Ejogo , Kelvin Harrison , Griffin Robert Faulkner Runtime 97 minutes Writers Trey Edward Shults Director Trey Edward Shults Main Genre Horror Expand

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