100 best horror movies, according to critics
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100 best horror movies, according to critics
Anthony Perkins in a scene from Psycho
What makes for a truly great horror movie? Is it the jump scares and buckets of blood? A solid directorial voice? Creativity? Originality? Deeper layers of meaning? These are the questions critics might ask themselves when examining the genre from an analytical perspective. And as one will soon discover, their conclusions aren’t always tuned in to audience expectations. Nevertheless, critically acclaimed horror is usually unique in one way or another, and, therefore, worth checking out. After all, one can only take so many rote formulas and generic clichés, right?
There’s a little bit of everything on this list of top-rated horror films and then some. Movies like “La Llorona” and “Under the Shadow” juxtapose supernatural terror with real-life atrocities. By contrast, films like “Halloween” and “A Nightmare on Elm Street” let the slasher subgenre speak for itself. “Alien” incorporates sci-fi elements, while “The Babadook” and “Rosemary’s Baby” play upon psychological tropes. Meanwhile, horror comedies like “Shaun of the Dead” and “Little Shop of Horrors” have garnered critical acclaim and loyal followings alike.
To celebrate this genre in all its permutations and possibilities, Stacker compiled data on the top-ranked horror films of all time from Metacritic as of September 2022. They’re presented here in order of their Metascore, ranked from low to high. Metascores are only published in whole numbers, but ties are broken in decimals internally at Metacritic. Expect some surprises, and not just because audiences didn’t always agree with the critical assessments. Here are the best horror movies, according to critics.
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Unison Films
#100. What We Do in the Shadows (2015)
A human-like creature with sharp teeth and long fingers wearing a black long coat hisses at a man from inside a closet.
– Directors: Jemaine Clement, Taika Waititi
– Metascore: 76
– Runtime: 86 minutes
Horror genre tropes get the comedic touch in this beloved mockumentary out of New Zealand. It follows a group of ancient and modern vampires who struggle with a contemporary, relatively nonviolent way of life. A similarly acclaimed TV series adaptation followed in 2019.
Paramount Pictures
#99. 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016)
John Goodman and a younger man and woman sit at a dining room table looking up like they hear a noise.
– Director: Dan Trachtenberg
– Metascore: 76
– Runtime: 104 minutes
The second installment in the Cloverfield franchise represents a stark departure from its found footage predecessor. Upon waking from a car accident, a young woman (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) finds herself captive to a man (John Goodman) with suspect intentions. Like the first film, this one benefited from a purposefully elusive marketing campaign.
Rogue Pictures
#98. Shaun of the Dead (2004)
A closeup of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost staring at each other intently.
– Director: Edgar Wright
– Metascore: 76
– Runtime: 99 minutes
Edgar Wright arguably invented his own brand of horror comedy with this British cult smash. It tells the story of a down-and-out slacker named Shaun (Simon Pegg), who proves his worth during the zombie apocalypse. The film makes up part of Wright’s “Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy,” which also includes “Hot Fuzz” and “The World’s End.”
New Line Cinema
#97. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Robert Englund in a scene from Nightmare on Elm Street
– Director: Wes Craven
– Metascore: 76
– Runtime: 91 minutes
Equipped with razors for hands, Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) slices and dices his way into the nightmares of teenagers. He also happened to dominate a newly formed slasher market, spawning a franchise. Few, if any, of the sequels or reboots captured the humor and horror of Wes Craven’s original.
Laurel Tape & Film
#96. The Amusement Park (1975)
A little blonde girl holding a book of bedtime stories.
– Director: George A. Romero
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 54 minutes
Commissioned as an educational film about elder abuse, this Romero effort wasn’t released until 46 years after it was made. The story follows an elderly man (Lincoln Maazel) around an amusement park and captures his increasingly delirious state of mind. A critical darling perhaps, but it has a meager audience score of 46% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios
#95. Village of the Damned (1960)
A man in a trenchcoat stands in the middle of a circle of children staring at him blankly.
– Director: Wolf Rilla
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 77 minutes
Based on a novel, this iconic British horror film welcomes viewers to the small village of Midwich. After a mysterious event, the local children begin to exhibit supernatural qualities. It was followed by both a sequel and a remake, plus it was parodied in “The Simpsons.”
Carver Films
#94. Relic (2020)
Two women crouched over something buried in the ground in the forest.
– Director: Natalie Erika James
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 89 minutes
This Aussie horror flick takes place in a remote country home and offers a unique examination of dementia. When checking in on grandma (Robyn Nevin), a woman (Emily Mortimer) and her daughter (Bella Heathcote) experience nightmarish visions. Irish Times critic Tara Brady called it “both an allegory and a nightmarish descent into this year’s creepiest movie home.”
Les Films du Worso
#93. Evolution (2016)
A person with light eyebrows and blue eyes wearing a medical mask.
– Director: Lucile Hadzihalilovic
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 81 minutes
This French horror drama takes place in a small seaside village that’s populated exclusively by women and young boys. When he discovers a corpse in the ocean, young Nicolas reexamines the local environment and its mysterious customs. Director Lucile Hadzihalilovic’s stylistic sensibilities enraptured critics, but the pacing was a little too glacial for some audiences.
Alcatraz Films
#92. High Life (2019)
Robert Pattinson standing in a doorway holding a baby.
– Director: Claire Denis
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 113 minutes
French auteur Claire Denis heads into deep space for this poetic blend of sci-fi and horror. As part of an interstellar experiment, a group of death row inmates embark on a dangerous mission. Critics loved the movie’s rich atmosphere and willingness to defy convention.
Alta Vista Productions
#91. The Masque of the Red Death (1964)
A person wearing a red hooded robe laughs while handing a child a card in the woods at night.
– Director: Roger Corman
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 89 minutes
This Roger Corman outing is one of a number of Edgar Allan Poe adaptations from the prolific director and producer. Set in medieval Italy at the height of a deadly plague, it stars Vincent Price as the sadistic Prince Prospero. While trying to evade infection inside castle walls, the prince soon learns that no one is above their own mortality.
Blumhouse Productions
#90. The Gift (2015)
A man standing inside a home looking out of a big glass window.
– Director: Joel Edgerton
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 108 minutes
Joel Edgerton wrote, directed, and starred in this gripping Blumhouse thriller. When a business executive (Jason Bateman) reconnects with an old schoolmate (Edgerton), it kicks off a series of dangerous mind games. The movie’s psychological tension is more impactful than most horror tropes.
Universal Pictures
#89. Nope (2022)
A man riding a horse in front of a large historic home with a woman on the porch.
– Director: Jordan Peele
– Metascore: 77
– Runtime: 135 minutes
Jordan Peele’s third feature offers a clever mix of sci-fi, horror, comedy, and social commentary. As random objects begin falling from the sky, residents of Agua Dulce try to capitalize on their potential UFO sighting. Peele has hinted that he might revisit this story in future films.
Likely Story
#88. i’m thinking of ending things (2020)
A girl peers curiously at something around the corner with Jesse Plemons blurred in the background.
– Director: Charlie Kaufman
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 134 minutes
Adapted from a novel by Iain Reid, this psychological thriller puts a surrealist spin on both existential themes and classic genre tropes. It follows a young woman (Jessie Buckley) to a remote farm for a nightmarish stay with her boyfriend’s parents. This is heady horror as only someone like Charlie Kaufman can deliver.
Dweck Productions
#87. We’re All Going to the World’s Fair (2022)
A girl looking into a computer screen with watering eyes.
– Director: Jane Schoenbrun
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 86 minutes
This unconventional horror film stars Anna Cobb in her debut feature role as a lonely teen named Casey. What begins with a viral internet challenge becomes a hallucinatory breakdown as the story unfolds. General moviegoers were far less receptive than critics, hence the film’s audience score of just 27% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Alta Vista Productions
#86. Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
Four people stand together looking concerned.
– Director: Roger Corman
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 80 minutes
Roger Corman and Vincent Price reunite for another Edgar Allan Poe adaptation, with Richard Matheson back on scripting duties. While investigating his sister’s death in 16th-century Spain, a man (John Kerr) uncovers grave horrors. Consciously exploitative, the film nevertheless retains an authentic atmosphere.
Lacmé
#85. Saloum (2022)
Three men dressed like warriors walk with a sunset and pink sky in the background.
– Director: Jean Luc Herbulot
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 84 minutes
This Senegalese thriller takes place in 2003 against the backdrop of Guinea-Bissau’s violent military coup. Laying low in the wake of a dangerous mission, three mercenaries come up against a vengeful force. Director Jean Luc Herbulot “makes even old genre sights—like a flashlight beam scouring a darkened room—look almost new again,” wrote critic Glenn Kenny for Roger Ebert.
El Deseo
#84. The Devil’s Backbone (2001)
A little boy carrying a box with people and kids moving cages in the background.
– Director: Guillermo del Toro
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 106 minutes
Upon losing his father to the Spanish Civil War, a young boy is sent to a haunted orphanage. In the vein of del Toro’s most acclaimed works, this one layers humanism, history, and horror. On Bloody Disgusting’s list of the Top Films of the 2000s, it lands at #18.
Vortex
#83. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
A man running with a mask on and waving a chainsaw in the air.
– Director: Tobe Hooper
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 83 minutes
One of the scariest movies ever made remains a raw and visceral experience, namely thanks to Tobe Hooper’s realistic approach. While visiting a gravesite in Texas, five friends come up against a sadistic family of cannibals. Despite the relative absence of blood and gore, the film renders an almost traumatic impression.
Animal Kingdom
#82. It Comes at Night (2017)
Two women and a dog in a plastic covered room pointing guns while wearing gas masks.
– Director: Trey Edward Shults
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 91 minutes
Critics and audiences don’t see eye to eye on this dramatic thriller, which takes place in the midst of a zombie-like outbreak. Living deep in the woods, a paranoid man (Joel Edgerton) and his family take in suspicious new houseguests. In lieu of cheap thrills, director Trey Edward Shults opts for a slow burn and shocking finale.
Lorimar Film Entertainment
#81. The Witches (1990)
Anjelica Huston leaning in to taste from a spoon in a formal dining room.
– Director: Nicolas Roeg
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 91 minutes
A young boy crosses paths with real-life witches in this adaptation of Roald Dahl’s classic novel. Under the direction of Nicolas Roeg, the film’s tone and visuals are much creepier than its PG rating would suggest. Executive producer Jim Henson (creator of “The Muppets”) died just before its release in the U.K.
Toho Film (Eiga) Co. Ltd.
#80. Godzilla (2004)
A giant creature resembling a dragon and dinosaur terrorizing a city.
– Director: Ishirô Honda
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 98 minutes
Initially released in 1954, the original “Godzilla” wasn’t officially available to American audiences until 2004. While rife with spectacle, the film also examines themes of nuclear destruction and man vs. nature. It remains the longest continuously running movie franchise in history.
Fox Atomic
#79. 28 Weeks Later (2007)
A man, woman and young boy and girl running through a disaster scene in a city.
– Director: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
– Metascore: 78
– Runtime: 99 minutes
The sequel to “28 Days Later” unfolds six months after the “rage virus” was first unleashed. As various survivors try to repopulate London, the zombie-like infection rears its ugly head once again. When the U.S. military goes to extremes in its containment effort, the story takes on allegorical overtones.
Twentieth Century Fox
#78. The Innocents (2022)
A young boy and girl staring intently.
– Director: Eskil Vogt
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 117 minutes
In this Norwegian stunner, four children discover the supernatural. But as they test the boundaries of their newfound powers, innocent child’s play turns into something sinister. Variety’s Jessica Kiang said the film serves as “both a satisfying genre exercise and a minute observation of the process by which young children acquire morality.”
Seda Spettacoli
#77. Suspiria (1977)
A woman with an ice pick in her grasp up in the air.
– Director: Dario Argento
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 98 minutes
With its gothic palette and eerie score, this Italian horror classic retains a perennial atmosphere of unease. It goes behind the scenes at a prestigious dance academy to uncover something sinister. Critics and fans alike consider it one of director Dario Argento’s finest hours.
Overture Films
#76. Let Me In (2010)
A dark haired man wearing a clear face mask standing in front of a mirror with a knife.
– Director: Matt Reeves
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 116 minutes
Like its Swedish predecessor, this Hollywood adaptation centers on the unlikely bond between a bullied outcast and young female vampire. Blending heartfelt drama with shocking violence, it straddles two genres and defies easy categorization. Director Matt Reeves honors the source material while injecting just the right amount of original storytelling.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
#75. Poltergeist (1982)
A little blonde girl screaming in horror.
– Director: Tobe Hooper
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 114 minutes
According to legend, Steven Spielberg ghost-directed this suburban ghost story. It chronicles a haunting and puts a novel twist on some good old-fashioned scares. There’s also sly commentary about America’s TV diet and cultural norms.
Recorded Picture Company (RPC)
#74. Only Lovers Left Alive (2014)
Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston stand together talking, her with a leather jacket and gloves on and he wearing all black with black long hair.
– Director: Jim Jarmusch
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 123 minutes
Director Jim Jarmusch brings his indie sensibilities to the vampire subgenre and the results are predictably offbeat. Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston play vampires Adam and Eve, whose on-again, off-again romance is quite literally one for the ages. Already struggling to adapt in modern society, their love undergoes another stress test with the arrival of Eve’s sister.
Broad Green Pictures
#73. Green Room (2016)
Patrick Stewart and another man get a drink at a bar.
– Director: Jeremy Saulnier
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 95 minutes
Punk rock band The Ain’t Rights have just arrived at a skinhead bar in the Pacific Northwest and that’s the least of their problems. So goes this thriller from Jeremy Saulnier, who kicks things off with a grisly murder and then keeps the tension running high. The Daily Telegraph critic Patrick Smith called it a “pulverizing piece of Seventies-style grindhouse exploitation.”
Boulder Light Pictures
#72. Barbarian (2022)
A woman crying while climbing up a dark ladder.
– Director: Zach Cregger
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 102 minutes
Comedy icon turned horror director Zach Cregger delivered one of the wildest rides of 2022, in which a short-term property rental becomes the stuff of nightmares. Its premise was inspired by a self-help book called “The Gift of Fear,” about the various red flags women should look out for in men. The less one knows going in, the better the viewing experience.
El Ministerio de Cultura Y Deportes de Guatamala
#71. La Llorona (2020)
A ghostly looking woman in a white gown standing in the woods.
– Director: Jayro Bustamante
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 96 minutes
A former general and his family are literally haunted by ghosts from the past in this Guatemalan horror. The film takes inspiration from an ancient folktale as well as real-life historical atrocities. It’s not to be mistaken for less acclaimed “The Curse of La Llorona,” which makes up part of “The Conjuring” franchise.
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Werner Herzog Filmproduktion
#70. Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
A pale bald man with long fingers and sharp teeth dressed in all black.
– Director: Werner Herzog
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 107 minutes
Employing lurid and saturated hues, director Werner Herzog updates a silent-era classic. Frequent collaborator Klaus Kinski takes on the title role and even uses the same makeup style as his 1922 predecessor. Upon moving from Transylvania to a remote German village, Count Dracula preys upon a new host of victims.
Causeway Films
#69. You Won’t Be Alone (2022)
A woman wearing a dress outside at night covered in mud.
– Director: Goran Stolevski
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 108 minutes
Macedonian Australian filmmaker Goran Stolevski makes his feature debut with this disturbing and atmospheric period piece. In a remote 19th-century Macedonian village, a young girl becomes a witch. Detroit News critic Adam Graham describes it as being “like ‘The Witch’ by way of Terrence Malick.”
Paramount Pictures
#68. Annihilation (2018)
Natalie Portman standing in a dark hallway.
– Director: Alex Garland
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 115 minutes
Director Alex Garland followed up the cult hit “Ex Machina” with this similar blend of sci-fi and horror. When her husband goes missing, a biologist (Natalie Portman) must enter a mysterious realm to find him. Brimming with stunning, otherwordly visual effects, part of the experience of the film is figuring out what it all means.
SLM Production Group
#67. The Fly (1986)
Gina Davis crying with her hands pressed against a glass window.
– Director: David Cronenberg
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 96 minutes
A brilliant scientist (Jeff Goldblum) falls victim to his own ghastly experiment in this tale of love and obsession. By remaking a 1958 classic, director David Cronenberg found the perfect venue for his body horror fixations. The special effects practically drip off the screen and stick with the viewer long after the credits roll.
A24
#66. X (2022)
A group of filmmakers and castmembers walk through a field by a red barn carrying film equipment.
– Director: Ti West
– Metascore: 79
– Runtime: 105 minutes
In the spirit of “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” comes this graphic slasher, which takes place in 1979. A porn crew rents out a rural guest house for their next shoot, only to incite murderous envy from their elderly hosts. It makes up part of a trilogy, and director Ti West is currently working on the final installment.
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Film4
#65. Under the Skin (2014)
Scarlett Johansson in a black short wig sitting on a bus as a man sitting behind her watches her.
– Director: Jonathan Glazer
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 108 minutes
A sci-fi movie quite unlike any other, this one juxtaposes hallucinatory visuals with stretches of stark realism. Graced with a human body and blank expression, an alien seductress (Scarlett Johansson) cruises Scotland in search of new victims. Viewers expecting the standard invasion fare are bound to be disappointed.
Snowfort Pictures
#64. The Endless (2018)
Two men hiking uphill towards a statue in the mountains.
– Directors: Aaron Moorhead, Justin Benson
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 111 minutes
Two brothers thought they were out of a wacky UFO death cult, but now a mysterious VHS tape has pulled them back in. Banking on the power of talent and creativity, the film squeezes palpable tension out of its micro-budget. The less one knows going in, the better.
Telewizja Polska
#63. Demon (2016)
A shirtless man arching over backwards and screaming while surrounded by a crowd of people.
– Director: Marcin Wrona
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 94 minutes
Inspired by Jewish folklore, this absurdist horror dramedy hails from Poland and takes place during a wedding. An unruly spirit lurks inside the groom and continues to disrupt the ceremony. At the movie’s core is a story of history and revenge.
Tippett Studio
#62. Mad God (2022)
Clay looking figures walking across a bridge in front of fire.
– Director: Phil Tippett
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 83 minutes
Visual effects wizard Phil Tippett reportedly spent 30 years bringing this stop-motion horror epic to life. It welcomes viewers into a savage and fully realized underworld, where a masked assassin embarks on a final mission. The project would have sat on the shelf forever if not for a successful Kickstarter campaign, which raised over $124,000 in funding.
Illuminations Films
#61. Berberian Sound Studio (2013)
A man in a suit looks perplexed in a studio.
– Director: Peter Strickland
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 92 minutes
Director Peter Strickland pays homage to 1970s Italian giallo horror films with this psychological nightmare. It tells the story of a British sound effects engineer (Toby Jones), whose latest assignment uproots his grip on reality. An erratic narrative and jarring visual style together maintain the dream-like aesthetic.
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Rustic Films
#60. Resolution (2013)
A man sits at a small table holding up a mirror to a guy across the table.
– Directors: Aaron Moorhead, Justin Benson
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 93 minutes
Shot on a reported budget of just $20,000, this friendship-themed horror flick opens with a story of intervention. That gives way to a series of mysterious occurrences as a much graver plot unfolds. It’s all brought to viewers from the same filmmaking team behind “The Endless.”
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
#59. Freaks (1932)
Circus performers posing together.
– Director: Tod Browning
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 64 minutes
Director Tod Browning cast real-life sideshow acts for this unique and controversial effort. Hoping to inherit a fortune, a trapeze artist attempts to seduce a carnival performer. Infused with palpable pathos, the work arguably delivers sincerity over exploitation.
Maljack Productions
#58. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986)
An angry man staring at himself in the mirror.
– Director: John McNaughton
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 83 minutes
Follow a drifter (Michael Rooker) as he commits a series of murders in this disturbing cult classic. Tightly executed and totally uncompromised, the movie’s shocking authenticity is one of its best attributes. It was one of the first films to prompt the creation of an NC-17 rating.
Nicolás Astiarraga P.C.
#57. Arrebato (1979)
A man driving a car with a woman pointing and waving in the passenger seat.
– Director: Iván Zulueta
– Metascore: 80
– Runtime: 105 minutes
This freshly restored Spanish arthouse flick is waiting to be rediscovered by lovers of cult horror. It follows a drug-addicted filmmaker as he tries to capture his delirious state of mind on celluloid. Roger Ebert critic Carlos Aguilar writes that it “invokes cinema as an otherworldly entity that possesses, just as addictive and destructive as mind-altering substances injected into the bloodstream.”
Ulrich Seidl Film Produktion GmbH
#56. Goodnight Mommy (2015)
A young boy hiding while a mom with bandages on her face opens the door.
– Directors: Severin Fiala, Veronika Franz
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 99 minutes
Things are not what they seem in this Austrian psychodrama. When their mother undergoes cosmetic surgery, two twin brothers are convinced that she’s been replaced by someone else. The National Board of Review named “Goodnight Mommy” one of its top foreign films of 2015.
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Haxan Films
#55. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
An extreme closeup of a crying woman’s face in the dark.
– Directors: Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sánchez
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 81 minutes
The found footage subgenre probably wouldn’t exist if not for this seminal indie film. It follows three documentarians deep into the woods as they search for a mythical witch. Preceded by one of the first viral marketing campaigns, it became a critical and commercial smash.
Warner Bros.
#54. The Exorcist (1973)
An angry and sick looking little girl.
– Director: William Friedkin
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 122 minutes
Audiences weren’t quite prepared for the horror of this benchmark blockbuster—not that it stopped them from attending in droves. It portrays the demonic possession of a 12-year-old girl (Linda Blair) and the two priests who try to save her. Winner of two Academy Awards, it remains one of the highest-grossing films of all time (when adjusted for inflation).
20th Century Fox
#53. The Wailing (2016)
An old man sits wrapped in a blanket with cuts on his face.
– Director: Na Hong-jin
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 156 minutes
The surprises keep coming in this beloved horror flick from South Korea’s Na Hong-jin. It takes place in a small village, where the arrival of a stranger coincides with a series of disturbing events. Don’t be intimidated by the 156-minute runtime, as the story moves at a brisk pace.
Monkeypaw Productions
#52. Us (2019)
An older man and three young people stand holding hands wearing red jumpsuits in the dark.
– Director: Jordan Peele
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 116 minutes
Director Jordan Peele followed “Get Out” by once again infusing the horror genre with social commentary and occasional comic relief. The story takes place in Santa Cruz, where a family of vacationers squares off against their doppelgängers. Featuring a highly acclaimed dual-role performance from Lupita Nyong’o, the film closes out with a twist ending.
Say Ahh Productions
#51. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (2014)
A serious looking young woman with dark hair.
– Director: Ana Lily Amirpour
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 99 minutes
Dubbed “the first Iranian vampire western,” Ana Lily Amirpour’s feature debut emanates with pure indie spirit. It takes place in the desolate town of Bad City and follows the exploits of a drifting vampire (Sheila Vand). The unique aesthetic and killer soundtrack make up for any narrative shortcomings.
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Rook Films
#50. In Fabric (2019)
A middle aged woman sews a red dress on a vintage looking sewing machine.
– Director: Peter Strickland
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 118 minutes
From the director of “Berberian Sound Studio” comes another surrealist nightmare in the giallo tradition. At the heart of the story is a cursed red dress, which unleashes terror as it passes from one owner to the next. Equal parts comedic and disturbing, the film makes for a sly satire of modern capitalism.
The Geffen Company
#49. Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
A monster that resembles a venus fly trap holds a woman in its tentacles.
– Director: Frank Oz
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 94 minutes
Existing in a category all its own, this horror musical never loses its theatrical or comedic edge. To satisfy his alien plant (voiced by Levi Stubbs of The Four Tops), a lonely florist (Rick Moranis) goes to murderous extremes. Steve Martin’s turn as a sadistic dentist is a performance not to be missed.
M.E.S. Productions
#48. Revenge (2018)
A blonde woman smiling.
– Director: Coralie Fargeat
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 108 minutes
Hailed by Vogue as an “exploitation movie for the #MeToo era,” this graphic feast doubles as a feminist parable. Assaulted and left for dead, a woman (Matilda Lutz) embarks on a blood-soaked warpath. Director Coralie Fargeat turns every dial all the way up.
Petit Film
#47. Raw (2017)
A young dark haired woman with blood running from her nose.
– Director: Julia Ducournau
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 99 minutes
A devout vegetarian (Garance Marillier) gets a taste of meat and goes full cannibal in this French horror drama. Indisputably graphic, the film also features plenty of subtext on the nature of innocence and experience. According to critic Kate Muir, it stays with the viewer “long after the sight of a nice trainee vet snacking on a fellow student’s severed finger has gone.”
Warner Bros.
#46. Wait Until Dark (1967)
Audrey Hepburn stands in front of a dressing table and mirror while a man wearing gloves talks to her.
– Director: Terence Young
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 108 minutes
Audrey Hepburn delivers an Oscar-nominated performance in this gripping thriller. Playing blind housewife Susy Hendrix, she must contend with three ruthless robbers as they search her house for drugs. Alan Arkin co-stars and gives a heralded performance of his own.
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SpectreVision
#45. Mandy (2018)
Four people ride motorcycles in the dark with a red light beaming behind them.
– Directors: Panos Cosmatos, Chris ‘Casper’ Kelly
– Metascore: 81
– Runtime: 121 minutes
Somber opening music and a dense visual palette set the tone for this hallucinatory saga. Upon losing the love of his life to a dangerous cult, Red Miller (Nicolas Cage) unleashes the ultra-violent fury of his wrath. Come for Cage’s unhinged performance, stay for the string of psychedelic showdowns.
Anna Biller Productions
#44. The Love Witch (2016)
A dark haired woman in a transparent robe lays on a circular rug covered in pagan symbols with a knife next to her.
– Director: Anna Biller
– Metascore: 82
– Runtime: 120 minutes
Presented in a retro Technicolor style, this gothic horror comedy centers on a witch named Elaine (Samantha Robinson). Unintended disaster ensues when Elaine uses love spells to seduce a string of men. Just beyond the pulpy veneer is a clever exploration of society’s hang-ups and double standards.
EFTI
#43. Let the Right One In (2008)
A young girl with short blonde hair and a bandaid on her face sits with a serious look.
– Director: Tomas Alfredson
– Metascore: 82
– Runtime: 115 minutes
A bullied boy and female vampire forge a unique bond in this Swedish horror film, which inspired the 2010 English-language remake “Let Me In.” Dripping with atmosphere, it punctuates humane drama with sequences of grotesque violence. Those who don’t mind subtitles can skip the American version and go straight to the source.
Mistik Jade Films
#42. Sator (2021)
A creature with a ram skull, fur and other bones sitting in a dark room with light coming in from above.
– Director: Jordan Graham
– Metascore: 82
– Runtime: 85 minutes
Critics went gaga for this low-budget horror film, in which a supernatural entity tries to possess a small family. An audience score of 35% on Rotten Tomatoes and IMDb rating of 5.2 suggests that general moviegoers were far less impressed. It’s drawn comparisons to “The Blair Witch Project” and “The Witch.”
Emmepi Cinematografica
#41. Black Sabbath (1964)
An old man with long curly hair and facial hair in a dark cloak.
– Director: Mario Bava
– Metascore: 82
– Runtime: 92 minutes
Boris Karloff presents a trilogy of featurettes from director Mario Bava, with notable differences between the Italian and American versions. The expressionistic use of color and steamy overtones are defining stalwarts of the giallo subgenre. A certain heavy metal band derived its name from this very film.
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Paramount Pictures
#40. A Quiet Place (2018)
John Krasinski in a cornfield.
– Director: John Krasinski
– Metascore: 82
– Runtime: 90 minutes
This unexpected blockbuster takes place in the wake of a catastrophic alien invasion by creatures who hunt by sound. In order to survive, a family must remain completely quiet at all times. The sequel arrived in 2020 to similarly strong reviews.
DreamWorks
#39. Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007)
Johnny Depp sharpens his barber knife and Helena Bonham Carter sits in the chair talking with him.
– Director: Tim Burton
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 116 minutes
Director Tim Burton reunited with Johnny Depp for this adaptation of the Broadway horror musical. It tells the story of widowed barber Sweeney Todd (Depp), whose business is a front for a bloody revenge scheme. Depp’s work, along with Helena Bonham Carter’s performance as Sweeney’s cohort Mrs. Lovett, brought in rave reviews.
Northern Lights Films
#38. It Follows (2015)
A troubled looking girl with shorts, a tank top and high heels on in the middle of the street.
– Director: David Robert Mitchell
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 100 minutes
With its nightmarish premise and synth score, this indie horror classic draws upon the works of John Carpenter. The “it” that follows is a sexually transmitted entity, which takes the form of deadly human stalkers. Shot on a budget of under $2 million, the film debuted at Cannes and later earned a loyal cult following.
Escape Plan Productions
#37. Saint Maud (2021)
A levitating girl arched over backwards in a bedroom.
– Director: Rose Glass
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 84 minutes
The feature debut from director Rose Glass, this psychological horror film tells the story of a hospice nurse named Maud (Morfydd Clark). Going to religious extremes, Maud tries to save the soul of an afflicted patient. In his review for IndieWire, critic David Ehrlich described it as a “cross between ‘First Reformed’ and ‘The Exorcist.'”
Amour Fou Vienna
#36. Taxidermia (2009)
A man in clear goggles holding a small taxidermied animal.
– Director: György Pálfi
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 91 minutes
With a name like “Taxidermia,” graphic body horror is all but guaranteed. Hungarian director György Pálfi also brings plenty of dark comedy to this surrealist yarn, which spans three generations of idiosyncratic men. It’s best watched on an empty stomach.
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Universal Pictures
#35. Drag Me to Hell (2009)
A woman in all black with her head tilted to the side and black eyes.
– Director: Sam Raimi
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 99 minutes
“Evil Dead” helmer Sam Raimi returned to his horror roots with this supernatural tale. The victim of a deadly curse, Christine Brown (Alison Lohman) has just a few days to save her soul from damnation. Raimi’s hyperkinetic style and comic sensibilities lend the film a signature aesthetic.
Sigma Cinematografica Roma
#34. Tenebrae (1984)
A woman soaking wet from the pouring rain screams clutching her head.
– Director: Dario Argento
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 101 minutes
Italian director Dario Argento returned to the giallo subgenre he helped popularize with this subversive slasher. The story takes place in Rome and puts a horror writer in the crosshairs of a twisted killer. Originally censored and reedited for theatrical distribution in the U.S., it was critically reappraised decades later after being released in uncut form.
A24
#33. The Lighthouse (2019)
Willem Dafoe shirtless and exhausted.
– Director: Robert Eggers
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 109 minutes
Mental torment is its own kind of horror in this black-and-white psychodrama. Set off the coast of New England in the late 19th century, it chronicles the contentious relationship between two lighthouse keepers (Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe). Playing to his strengths, director Robert Eggers effectively transports the viewer to another time.
Parts and Labor
#32. The Witch (2016)
A young woman in a tan cloak looking scared in the woods.
– Director: Robert Eggers
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 92 minutes
Before “The Lighthouse,” Robert Eggers churned out this slow-burn supernatural folktale for his feature film debut. Taking place in 17th-century New England, it depicts a devout Christian family on their farm while evil forces lurk in the wilderness nearby. Rendered with impeccable authenticity, Eggers made his mark as a detail-oriented director by employing Early Modern English for the film’s dialogue.
Wigwam Films
#31. Under the Shadow (2016)
A woman stands looking out a window with the shadow of an X on her face.
– Director: Babak Anvari
– Metascore: 83
– Runtime: 84 minutes
Babak Anvari’s feature directorial debut takes place in 1980s Tehran during the War of the Cities. Grappling with real terror outside their door, a mother and daughter face a new enemy from within. Even at its most supernatural, the story retains a theme of war-torn peril.
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Vonnie Von Helmolt Film
#30. Dracula: Pages from a Virgin’s Diary (2003)
A man with vampire fangs poised to bite the neck of a woman.
– Director: Guy Maddin
– Metascore: 84
– Runtime: 73 minutes
A technical triumph, this ballet version of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula” employs silent-era paradigms. As wild as it may sound, the film is actually quite faithful to the source material. Roger Ebert credited its fragmented style with imparting “the sensation of glimpsing snatches of a dream.”
Red Bank Films
#29. Carrie (1976)
A woman in a bloody prom dress with a crazy look in her eyes.
– Director: Brian De Palma
– Metascore: 85
– Runtime: 98 minutes
Stephen King’s debut novel paved the way for this seminal horror flick, starring Sissy Spacek in the title role. Constantly harassed by her peers, Carrie unleashes her telekinetic power. It all builds toward one of the most legendary climaxes in horror movie history.
Chungeorahm Film
#28. The Host (2007)
A bloody man shoves a long metal pole into the jaws of a giant creature.
– Director: Bong Joon-ho
– Metascore: 85
– Runtime: 119 minutes
Long before “Parasite,” director Bong Joon-ho enraptured global audiences with this South Korean monster movie. Loosely inspired by an actual event, it generates a vicious sea creature out of 200 bottles of dumped formaldehyde. At the time, it was the highest-grossing film in South Korea.
Universal Pictures
#27. Get Out (2017)
A young man with tears running down his cheeks and a shocked look on his face.
– Director: Jordan Peele
– Metascore: 85
– Runtime: 104 minutes
A film that’s become only more prescient with time, Jordan Peele’s directorial debut combines social satire with gripping terror. While visiting his girlfriend’s well-heeled parents, a young Black man (Daniel Kaluuya) finds himself the target of a diabolical scheme. Rarely do various tonal elements harmonize as seamlessly as they do in this Oscar winner for Best Original Screenplay.
ENBU Seminar
#26. One Cut of the Dead (2019)
A man and two women look surprised as they listen to a radio with an large antennae.
– Director: Shin’ichirô Ueda
– Metascore: 86
– Runtime: 96 minutes
Working on a reported budget of around $25,000, Japan’s Shin’ichirô Ueda squeezed new life into the zombie subgenre. Equal parts clever and gruesome, the story follows a hack filmmaker and his crew as they try to make a horror movie on the cheap. That’s when the real zombies come out to play.
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Screen Australia
#25. The Babadook (2014)
A woman reads a story to her son at bedtime.
– Director: Jennifer Kent
– Metascore: 86
– Runtime: 93 minutes
A visual tour de force, Jennifer Kent’s feature debut walks the fine line between supernatural and psychological terror. It tells the story of a creepy children’s book character, who leaps off the page and not just in a figurative sense. Is the Babadook real or is it a shared delusion between a widowed mother and her son?
Diluvio
#24. The Wolf House (2020)
A family of paper dolls eats dinner at a table with burning bowls in the center.
– Directors: Cristóbal León, Joaquín Cociña
– Metascore: 86
– Runtime: 75 minutes
According to IndieWire, this “grimmer-than-Grimm fairy tale” is “one of the darkest animated movies ever.” After escaping from a Nazi-run colony in the middle of Chile, a young woman enters a new house of horrors. The filmmakers use a full spectrum of styles and moods to examine the nature of trauma.
Double Dare You (DDY)
#23. The Shape of Water (2017)
An amphibious creature touches and looks through glass.
– Director: Guillermo del Toro
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 123 minutes
Straddling multiple genres, this Best Picture winner depicts the unlikely romance between a janitor (Sally Hawkins) and humanistic sea creature (Doug Jones). Set during the height of the Cold War, the fairy tale unfolds against a noirish backdrop. A notable technical element of the film is the Amphibian Man was brought to life by Jones performing in a carefully designed costume rather than through CGI and motion capture.
British Lion Film Corporation
#22. The Wicker Man (1974)
A woman dressed in white with a flower crown being tied up by a clown.
– Director: Robin Hardy
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 88 minutes
Not to be confused with the terrible remake, this cult classic set an early template for the folk horror subgenre. It follows a police sergeant to a remote Scottish island village with strong pagan ties. The film’s influence looms so large that director Ari Aster had to consciously avoid it when making “Midsommar,” which features similar themes.
A24
#21. Hereditary (2018)
A guy in a green hoodie sits with a tray of food at a table by himself looking depressed.
– Director: Ari Aster
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 127 minutes
This unique blend of domestic drama and supernatural terror announced Ari Aster as a new voice in cinema. When a family matriarch passes away, she leaves more than just her genetics behind. Toni Collette’s powerhouse performance is the foundational glue holding multiple threads together.
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Zanuck/Brown Productions
#20. Jaws (1975)
Richard Dreyfuss, Roy Scheider, and Robert Shaw stand on a boat looking terrified at something in the water.
– Director: Steven Spielberg
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 124 minutes
More than a critical and commercial smash, “Jaws” redefined the entire concept of blockbuster cinema. Various production issues forced Spielberg to show less of the shark during earlier scenes, which only made the film that much more terrifying. To this day, the movie continues to make swimmers afraid of the ocean.
American Film Institute (AFI)
#19. Eraserhead (1978)
A tiny little creature head on a regular sized man’s body wearing a suit.
– Director: David Lynch
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 89 minutes
A true labor of love, David Lynch’s feature debut capitalized off of midnight screenings and a loyal cult following. It channels various moods and fears into the story of Henry Spencer (Jack Nance), who grapples with the birth of a mutant child. Story takes a backseat to industrial textures and experimental dirges in what remains a completely singular work.
Compass International Pictures
#18. Halloween (1978)
The killer, Michael Myers, wearing a white face mask and talking on the phone.
– Director: John Carpenter
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 91 minutes
Before the endless string of sequels and reboots, there was John Carpenter’s original classic. Its synth-heavy score and masked murderer would become fixtures of the up-and-coming slasher subgenre. Even today, the film’s influence persists on screens both big and small.
Universal Pictures
#17. The Invisible Man (1933)
A person completely covered with a suit on and cloth wraps all around his head with sunglasses on his eyes.
– Director: James Whale
– Metascore: 87
– Runtime: 71 minutes
With great invisibility comes great insanity in this H.G. Wells adaptation. Director James Whale balances tension and comedy while introducing a number of groundbreaking (for its time) special effects. A 2020 remake starring Elisabeth Moss earned its own share of rave reviews.
Twentieth Century Fox
#16. The Innocents (1961)
A ghostly man looking through a window at a young boy in a coat and tie.
– Director: Jack Clayton
– Metascore: 88
– Runtime: 100 minutes
This adaptation of a Henry James novella stars Deborah Kerr as a governess named Miss Giddens. After moving into a new estate, Giddens is haunted by the spirits of two former employees … or is she? The movie is beloved by critics and filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese, who put it at #10 on his list of scariest horror movies.
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Image Ten
#15. Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Zombie looking people wandering.
– Director: George A. Romero
– Metascore: 89
– Runtime: 96 minutes
Ground zero for an entire subgenre, George Romero’s low-budget horror flick never once uses the word “zombie.” It nevertheless establishes a number of important paradigms, pitting small-town folk against the walking dead. Controversial upon its release, the movie garnered critical acclaim over time.
Brandywine Productions
#14. Alien (1979)
John Hurt, wearing a space suit and helmet, investigates living pods in the ground.
– Director: Ridley Scott
– Metascore: 89
– Runtime: 117 minutes
A benchmark in modern filmmaking, Ridley Scott’s masterpiece follows the crew of spaceship Nostromo. What starts as slow burn sci-fi descends into the stuff of nightmares, as alien cargo picks off the crew one by one. In 2003, a director’s cut was released theatrically to its own rapturous reviews.
Rizzoli Film
#13. Deep Red (1976)
A little boy in a suit stares closely at a bloody knife.
– Director: Dario Argento
– Metascore: 89
– Runtime: 126 minutes
The blood flows red and deep indeed, courtesy of Italian horror legend Dario Argento. His most-acclaimed work sends a hapless pianist on the trail of a savvy serial killer. Despite some “nonsensical qualities,” critic Keith Phipps heralded the film’s “hallucinatory images and unforgettable setpieces.”
Champs-Élysées Productions
#12. Eyes Without a Face (1960)
A man and woman backed into a corner stare at something together looking frightened.
– Director: Georges Franju
– Metascore: 90
– Runtime: 88 minutes
In this French horror drama, a guilt-ridden surgeon tries to give his daughter a new face. With its poetic style and unsparing depictions of surgery, the film was influential for both its decade and decades to come. Critics to this day are still hashing out its hidden meanings and themes.
RKO Radio Pictures
#11. King Kong (1933)
A colossal ape holding a small woman in its clutches.
– Directors: Ernest B. Schoedsack, Merian C. Cooper
– Metascore: 90
– Runtime: 100 minutes
A living legacy began with this 1933 adventure and its groundbreaking use of stop-motion animation. At the behest of a film crew, actor Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) travels to Skull Island and catches the eye of a monolithic ape. The rest is cinematic history.
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Alfred J. Hitchcock Productions
#10. The Birds (1963)
Children running away from a flock of birds.
– Director: Alfred Hitchcock
– Metascore: 90
– Runtime: 119 minutes
Chaos visits the town of Bodega Bay in the form of relentless birds, who attack for no apparent reason. Hitchcock revels in the buildup, pivoting from romantic dramedy to horror with suddenness and precision. The same artistic choices that initially befuddled critics are now viewed as masterstrokes.
Compton Films
#9. Repulsion (1965)
An extreme closeup of a terrified woman’s eyes.
– Director: Roman Polanski
– Metascore: 91
– Runtime: 105 minutes
Alone in her London apartment, a hypersensitive woman (Catherine Deneuve) slowly descends into madness. Polanski cultivates a claustrophobic sense of space to express the character’s mindset. This was the first film in the director’s unofficial “Apartment Trilogy.”
Universal Pictures
#8. Frankenstein (1931)
A man and a human monster creation stare at each other on a hilltop.
– Director: James Whale
– Metascore: 91
– Runtime: 70 minutes
With help from his assistant Igor, a mad scientist reanimates lifeless body parts. This epoch-making adaptation introduces Boris Karloff as the legendary monster. Writing for the Village Voice, Elliot Stein calls it the “most influential horror film ever made.”
Laokoon Filmgroup
#7. Son of Saul (2015)
Two men in 1940’s clothing stare closely at each other.
– Director: László Nemes
– Metascore: 91
– Runtime: 107 minutes
The Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp provides its own brand of horror in this Hungarian World War II drama. Tasked with exterminating dead bodies, prisoner Saul Ausländer (Géza Röhrig) seeks proper burial for a young boy. The movie won a host of major awards, including the Grand Prix at Cannes and the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.
13 Productions
#6. Werckmeister Harmonies (2001)
A worried man.
– Directors: Béla Tarr, Ágnes Hranitzky
– Metascore: 92
– Runtime: 145 minutes
Mystery permeates every minute of this cinéma vérité-style nightmare, which consists of just 39 shots. When the circus rolls into a small Hungarian village, it sparks hysteria and rebellion among the locals. Director Béla Tarr claims the story is as simple as it appears, but most critics point to its philosophical underpinnings.
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Solofilm
#5. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
A man in a suit and a woman in a strapless dress run down the street looking scared.
– Director: Don Siegel
– Metascore: 92
– Runtime: 80 minutes
Rife with subtext, this sci-fi horror classic touches down on humanity’s deepest fears. Aliens are slowly replacing humans with emotionless body doubles and almost no one’s the wiser. The film’s own producer swears it’s all just entertainment, but the sociopolitical allegory resonates nonetheless.
Casey Productions
#4. Don’t Look Now (1973)
Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie talk in front of a brick archway.
– Director: Nicolas Roeg
– Metascore: 95
– Runtime: 110 minutes
Director Nicolas Roeg’s giallo-like adaptation of a Gothic short story doubles as a meditation on grief and obsession. Tormented by their daughter’s death, a married couple (Julie Christie and Donald Sutherland) encounters a series of inexplicable phenomena during a trip to Venice. It all builds toward a horrific and shocking conclusion.
Universal Pictures
#3. The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
Frankenstein stares at his man-made monster bride, who has black hair with a silver lightening strike on the side.
– Director: James Whale
– Metascore: 95
– Runtime: 75 minutes
Director James Whale arguably topped himself with this nuanced follow-up to 1931’s “Frankenstein.” To stay ahead of the competition, the famed mad scientist builds his monster a suitable mate. A TV Guide Magazine review dubbed the movie “one of the greatest films of its genre” that “remains a lasting tribute to the unique genius of director Whale.”
William Castle Productions
#2. Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
A short haired blonde woman talks on a pay phone.
– Director: Roman Polanski
– Metascore: 96
– Runtime: 137 minutes
A woman (Mia Farrow) thinks she’s pregnant with devil spawn in this gothic masterpiece. Steering clear of excessive violence and gore, Polanski inflicts psychological terror upon the audience. Farrow’s pitch-perfect performance likewise generates tangible despair.
Bettmann // Getty Images
#1. Psycho (1960)
A short haired woman screams in the shower.
– Director: Alfred Hitchcock
– Metascore: 97
– Runtime: 109 minutes
On the lam and stuck in the rain, a woman (Janet Leigh) pulls into Bates Motel to crash for the night. Her subsequent murder at the hand of Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) was the scene heard ’round the world. Reviews were mixed upon the film’s initial release, but critics eventually caught up to Hitchcock and his game-changing vision.
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