The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (2024)

The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (1)

The big-screen chillers that have scared us senseless this year

Edited by

Phil de Semlyen

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Last year, agenre usually filled with shambling zombies and sentient mounds of carnivorousgoo birthed leftfield successes like M3GAN and Skinamarink, low-budget horror hits that elbowed their way to viral status, even amid the giddy fluorescence of Barbie and prestige awardsiness of Oppenheimer.

By contrast, this year’s slate of scares probably won’t catch too many people sleeping. 2024 is loaded with genre prequels, sequels and spin-offs, from MaXXXine, the third instalment of Ti West’s cult-fave franchise, to the alien-invasion terror of A Quiet Place: Day One, to the extremely-long-awaited Beetlejuice 2. But given that horror is historically a genre of small expectations and big surprises, there’s bound to be something that pops up to frighten the bejeepers out of us when we least expect it. Here’s the best of what’s freaked us out so far.

🎃The 100 best horror films ever made
😱The scariest movies based on a true story
💀The best horror movies of 2023

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Best new horror movies of 2024

The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (4)

1.Stopmotion

British horror is in a happy place – well, as happy as horror gets – with fast-rising filmmakers like Rose Glass, Claire Oakley, Prano Bailey-Bond and Remi Weekes marrying frights with real craft. To those bloody ranks add animator-filmmaker Robert Morgan. He brings his stop-motion skills to bear in a story of an unravelling director (Aisling Franciosi) that plays like a Ray Harryhausen fever dream. The Nightingale actress is magnificently intense, creating a stop-motion horror short that slowly takes over her life. Expect to hear a lot more about her monstrous creation, the relentless, bloody-eyed Ashman.

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (6)

2.Night Swim

A baseball player forced into early retirement (Wyatt Russell) moves into a new family home with a water therapy-friendly pool. All goes swimmingly until, inevitably, the pool turns out to be knee-deep in ghosts. Bryce McGuire (Unfollowed) turns his own short into an effective feature-length horror that taps into our primeval fear of and attraction to water. He gets great performances from Russell and The Banshees of Inisherin’s Kerry Condon, as the partner who prays it’s not her turn to check the chlorine levels.

Helen O’Hara

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Photographer: 20th Century Studios
3.The First Omen
  • Film
  • Horror

Immaculate might have beaten it to the nun-in-peril punch but Arkasha Stevenson’s Damien origin story is a surprisingly smart and insidious paranoid thriller. Backed by a strong supporting cast (Ralph Ineson, Bill Nighy, Sonia Braga, Charles Dance), an intense Nell Tiger Free is a revelation as the American novitiate in Rome who is drawn into a Vatican conspiracy of biblical proportions. Full of ’70s vibes, unsettling imagery, unexpected jolts and interesting things to say about the hypocrisy of organised religion, the result has a strong claim to be the best Omen film since the ‘76 original.

Ian Freer

Photograph: Vertigo Releasing
4.Late Night With the Devil
  • Film
  • Horror

There’s been a legion of riffs on The Exorcist down the years, but few have transplanted its brooding Satanic menace with as much vividness or smarts as Aussie siblings Colin and Cameron Cairnes. Their slowburn possession horror has David Dastmalchian’s ’70s chat show host making a craven bid for ratings that invites the devil onto his TV set – quite literally. The splurge of gore in the final act is foreshadowed by some smart character work and a terrific performance from the still underappreciated Dastmalchian as man whose ego has long since vanquished his wisdom.

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

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Photograph: StudioCanal
5.Baghead
  • Film

What would you give – and what would you risk – for two minutes with a dead loved one? That’s the question under the hood of this fiendish (fingers crossed) franchise-starter about a basem*nt-dwelling monster with a burlap bonnet, offering an audience with the dead. The Witcher’s Freya Allen is terrific as the cash-strapped Gen Z-er who inherits the basem*nt/monster combo, with horrifying consequences.

David Hughes

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The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (14)

6.True Detective: Night Country (HBO)

Regardless of whatever series creator Nic Pizzolatto has been posting on his socials, this fourth run of the HBO procedural is as good as the show has been since Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey were trading philosophical barbs back in season one. Showrunner Issa López applies the unsettling mood of a horror film, plus some outstanding gore, to its case of dead scientists in an Alaskan mining town. Evidence-led policing – okay, with the odd outbreak of brute force from Jodie Foster and Kali Reis’s cops – butts into indigenous folklore scares in a freezing, permanently dark landscape. Everything is scary in this show, even when it’s not.

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

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Photograph: Berlin Film Festival
7.I Saw the TV Glow
  • Film
  • Horror

Horror by dint of its striking neon images, nightmarish foes, occasional shocks and unsuual tackling of adolescent traumas, trans writer-director Jane Schoenbrun’s I Saw the TV Glow is a strange, compelling feature. An allegory about ‘the egg crack’ when a person realises they are trans, Schoenbrun’s second feature looks at the strange friendship and lives of teens Owen and Maddy, avid fans of Buffy-ish horror TV show The Pink Opaque. Fans of unusual coming-of-age stories, Twin Peaks and 90s/noughties pop-culture nostalgia will all get a lot from this fascinating and original tale.

Lou Thomas

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Photograph: © 2024 Universal Studios
8.Abigail
  • Film

There is no horror pleasure like a ‘nothing is sacred’ gorefest with its tongue in its cheek and its teeth at your throat. Everyone involved in Ready or Not pair Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett’s vampiric ballet, Abigail, is in playful harmony. Blood and laughs are spilled in equal measure as Melissa Barrera’s final girl tries to outwit Dracula’s daughter while trapped in a mansion with a deranged killer and Dan Stevens in a silly earring.

Sophie Monks Kaufman

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Photograph: Black Bear
9.Immaculate
  • Film
  • Horror

Sydney Sweeney’s overnightenshriningas abona fide scream queenhas beena decade in the making. She auditionedto play Immaculate’stormented nunback in 2014, but the project went away – until, thanks to her new star-power, she resurrected it as producer-star. Unsurprisingly, she brings absolutely everything to the role of Sister Celicia, an innocent outsider in a walled-off religious community that harbours something dark andcultish within its cloisters. Jump scares,gialloshocks and a truly batsh*t ending, combined withsome of the most gutteral screams ever toblast outin ear-piercingDolby Atmos, makeMichael Mohan’s (The Voyeurs) horror a whale of a time at the movies. It may not be immaculate, but thanks to Sweeney, it’s a hell of a lot of fun.

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

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The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (20)

10.Arcadian

Benjamin Brewer, a VFX-er onEverything Everywhere All at Once, teams up with Nicolas Cage for a second time after 2016’s The Trust, withsatisfyingly gnarlyresults. His creature featurehas Cage back in action dad mode to keep his teenage sons alive after an alien invasion. For a low-budget film, theeffects work is minimal but effective. The terrifying aliens’ origins arekept ambiguous, making Arcadian all the more spine-tingling, with a strong sibling rivalry-turned-bromance at its core.

Hanna Flint

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The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (22)

11.Tiger Stripes

British-Malaysian director Amanda Nell Eu lays herself and her Malay heritage bare inabody horror film based on superstitions surrounding puberty. Having left Malaysia to settle in London aged 11, her insights into this critical time in a girl’s life take shape in semi-autobiographical fashion asZafreen Zairizal’s tweenager shapeshifts in monstrous fashion.Tiger Stripes is lit up byits stunninglead, a striking performance in a film that sensitively delves into schoolgirl bullying and takes a gory ride through the Malaysian countryside.

Ashanti Omkar
Film and culture critic and broadcaster

The best horror movies and shows of 2024 (so far) for a scary watch (24)

12.Kill All Neighbors

Someone annoying moved in next door? You’ll have sympathy with struggling prog-rock musician William (Jonah Ray) in an exuberant Gumtree-sploitation horror-comedy that plays like Pacific Heights on peyote. That neighbour from hell comes in the truly memorable form of Vlad, an indestructible goblin-y character, played beneath layers of latex by Alex Winter, who drags William to hell. A blast, not least for the cameo by Kumail Nanjiani as ‘Smelting Refinery Guard’.

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

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Photograph: John Armour/Lionsgate
13.The Strangers: Chapter 1
  • Film
  • Horror

A first-of-three remake of a 2008 Liv Tyler slasher flick might not sound promising, but director Renny Harlin is absolutely determined to scare the hell out of us. Troy Gutierrez andRiverdale’s Madelaine Petsch are the sweet but dim roadtrippers who have to survive the night in a remote cabin –though it looks like somebody else already has the key. Along with a bunch of creepy masks. And an axe. Make sure to stay through the credits, so you’re ready for Chapter 2.

Elizabeth Weitzman
contributor

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Photograph: Signature Entertainment
14.Out of Darkness
  • Film
  • Horror

The Blair Witch Project set the bar for what a low-budget horror movie could achieve when it came to scaring the living crap out of us in a forested setting. This sparse, atmospheric and smartly staged Stone Age horror is working with a slightly bigger wallet, and Scottish director Andrew Cumming gives it all a nice sense of scale, but the same principles still apply: don’t go down to the woods without an excellent exit strategy. A small band of Stone Age-rs reconnoitre a foreign landscape that turns out to be haunted by some form of ultra-violent beast. Their gory fates are left to the imagination, with the unsettling sound design doing most of the heavy lifting, until Out of Darkness shows its hand in a final act twist that lands with the force of a Neanderthal’s club.—Phil de Semlyen

Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

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Photograph: Berlin Film Festival
15.Cuckoo
  • Film
  • Horror

If you’re looking for an enjoyably crazy horror movie that prioritises weird goings on over easily traceable logic, then German filmmaker’s Tilman Singer’s exhilaratingly out-there Alpine hotel-set trip is just the ticket. Featuring Euphoria’s Hunter Schafer, she plays an emo teen hung up on the death of her mum who has been dragged on holiday only to stumble upon a baby-stealing splinter species from the human race and the feverish cult that hopes to harness its mind-controlling, timey-wimey bird call-like powers. Bonkers, in the best way.

Stephen A Russell
Contributor

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