- The Best Horror Movies To See This Halloween
- Best Horror Movies To Watch
Halloween is just a few days away, and how do you plan celebrating? Don't you think picking up some horror stories, movies is going to be spicy? Horror movies are participatory, inciting fear and demanding a reaction.

Who among us has sat through a slasher without yelling, "Don't open the door!" at least once? My kid sister peed on her pants when watching the Truth Or Dare last year halloween, she screamed all night, have something like that ever happened to you? I guess not.. So today I have some bunch of interesting horror movies you can't resist to see. If you're a scaredy-cat you'll need to bring someone along before watching these movies.
Prey:
Take Blue Lagoon, and make it sinister. Toby Burns (Logan Miller) is a troubled high schooler sent on a unique, Castaway-inspired rehab program: He’s dropped on a remote island and forced to fend for himself. But he’s not alone. The island is also home to a young woman, Madeleine (Kristine Froseth) and her controlling mother (Jolene Anderson). Madeleine is nice. Her mother is not.
Joker:
Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) is a comedian, but he laughs the most when he’s wreaking havoc. Joaquin Phoenix turns Batman’s most iconic arch-nemesis into a creation all his own. Which is fitting, because Joker is completely separate from other movies in the D.C. universe, including the future Robert Pattinson Batman movies. The controversial movie won Best Film at the Venice Film Festival, inspiring discussion among critics, watch and drop your opinions.
Wrinkles the Clown:
How's this for a twist? The scariest movie on this list is a documentary. Wrinkles the Clown is Southwest Florida’s on-demand bogeyman. The 65-year-old Florida man began dressing as a clown for extra cash. Instead, however, he was being hired to scare people especially young kids. It’s not surprising that Wrinkles’ career took a sinister turn: His black eye sockets, stark white makeup, and perpetual frown are nightmare fodder. Imagine finding that face looking through your window, as so many have.
Parasite:
The rumor out of film festivals is that Bong Joon-ho's Parasite isn't just one of the best movies of the year; it's a complete masterpiece. In the Korean film, a family struggling to get by becomes wrapped up with in a much wealthier family's lives. What starts as a satire about class inequality quickly turns into a horror show.
Annabelle Comes Home:
Determined to keep Annabelle from wreaking more havoc, paranormal investigators (Ed and Lorraine Warren) lock the possessed doll in the artifacts room in their house. But when the doll awakens the room's evil spirits, it soon becomes an unholy night of terror for the couple's 10-year-old daughter, her friends and their young baby sitter.
IT: Chapter Two:
Pennywise has been haunting people ever since he appeared in Stephen King’s mammoth 1986 novel. Tim Curry gave IT a surprisingly funny twist in the 1990 miniseries. Then, Bill Skarsgard, with those gigantic eyes and very specific smile, made Pennywise completely anew in 2017 and 2019 IT movies.
Ready or Not:
Grace (Samara Weaving) is about to have a high adrenaline honeymoon. She marries her wealthy husband in a lavish ceremony. But before she becomes an official member of his family, she has to survive them. As the family tradition goes, they’ll try to hunt her down throughout their entire evening. This is hide and seek for grown ups.
Maleficent:
Sure, Maleficent (Angelina Jolie) is supposed to be a villain. She has literal horns and she’s probably used them. But it’s easy to understand where Maleficent is coming from in not wanting her 15-year-old adoptive daughter, Aurora (Elle Fanning), to marry some prince she’s known for approximately one day.
Zombieland: Double Tap:
Ten years after Zombieland’s release in 2009, the horror-comedy is getting a sequel. Finally! Same gang: Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson), Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg), Wichita (Emma Stone), and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin). Newly evolved zombies.
The Lighthouse:
Isolation. Starvation. Madness. These are the real-life horrors that torment Ephraim Winslow (Robert Pattinson) and Thomas Wake (Willem Dafoe), the main duo in this mysterious black-and-white film, face while trapped in a lighthouse in the 19th century. The Lighthouse is director Robert Eggers’ follow-up to The Witch, another period horror.
Countdown:
Download the app and Learn your fate. In Countdown, a new app tells users exactly when they’re going to die. It sounds like a hoax until it starts working. Whether it’s ghosts lurking on Facebook or apps of doom, the horror genre loves to bring technology to its most sinister (and ridiculous) ends. Countdown is the kind of horror movie that prompts shouting at the screen. Don't download it!
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark:
The shadow of the Bellows family has loomed large in the small town of (Mill Valley) for generations. It's in a mansion that young (Sarah Bellows) turns her tortured life and horrible secrets into a series of scary stories. These terrifying tales soon have a way of becoming all too real for a group of unsuspecting teens who stumble upon Sarah's spooky home.
Doctor Sleep:
Keep the Halloween spirit alive by going to the much-anticipated sequel to The Shining. Years after his family’s disastrous stay at the Overlook Hotel, Danny Torrance (Ewan McGregor) is grown up and using his psychic abilities to kill terminally ill patients. Then, he meets another woman just like him. Mike Flanagan, the creator of Netflix’s beloved The Haunting of Hill House and many other horror horror films, supported.
