This isn’t recency bias talking: The 21st century has given us some pretty great horror films.
Sure, the last millennium was rather awesome, too, with the Universal monsters (Dracula, Frankenstein and friends); villains like Jason Voorhees and Leatherface; Alfred Hitchcock’s seminal “Psycho” shower scene; and every dread-filled minute of “The Exorcist.” All helped create and elevate an entire genre of neato scary movies.
But horror flicks since 2001 have been revolutionary in their own way, using technology and modern issues to examine the darker sides of humanity. The internet gives us more opportunity to be exposed to noteworthy terrors from other countries. And especially recently, there’s been an artful bent to horror that allows newer filmmakers such as Jordan Peele (“Get Out”) and Ari Aster (“Hereditary”) to make vital and important films that may also leave you in a fetal position.
Because Halloween is upon us and you might be in the need of a good freakout, here are the 75 best horror films of this century, definitively ranked. (And if you don’t see your favorite here, just assume it’s No. 76.)
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75. ‘The Babysitter’ (2017)
Samara Weaving is the cool babysitter who always has a bullied tween boy’s back. That is, until he accidentally witnesses her demonic cult of high schoolers engage in a blood sacrifice in his living room in the Netflix horror comedy.
74. ‘The Blackcoat’s Daughter’ (2015)
“Longlegs” director Osgood Perkins (the son of “Psycho” horror icon Anthony Perkins) crafts this dark and twisty narrative revolving around two boarding school girls (Lucy Boynton and Kiernan Shipka), an escapee (Emma Roberts) from a mental asylum and the murderous demon that connects them all.
73. ‘I Trapped the Devil’ (2019)
A Christmas visit between two brothers turns dark and surreal when one says he’s got a man locked in his basement and claims the dude is the devil. (Fun fact: “This Is Us” star Chris Sullivan is the voice of the guy downstairs in this moody creep show.)
72. ‘The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster’ (2023)
“Frankenstein” is alive again in this fantastic modernization about a gifted teen girl (Laya DeLeon Hayes) who brings her big brother back to life after he’s gunned down in a gang shooting. Obviously, to a monstrous degree.
71. ‘The Guest’ (2014)
In this thriller with a rad ’80s vibe, Dan Stevens plays a charismatic soldier who shows up on a family’s doorstep claiming to be the best friend of their son who died in Afghanistan, and Maika Monroe is the grieving sister who has reason to be skeptical.
70. ‘The Mist’ (2007)
How do you make a Stephen King novella even more bleak? Put it in the hands of director Frank Darabont, who adapts the story of small-town Maine folks stuck in a supermarket thanks to a mysterious mist and monstrous hidden creatures.
69. ‘The Lighthouse’ (2019)
Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson play a pair of 19th-century New England lighthouse keepers stranded on a remote island by a storm. Come for the unraveling of manly sanities, stay for Dafoe’s farts and a scene-stealing seagull.
68. ‘It Comes at Night’ (2017)
The pitch-black psychological thriller centers on survivalists hunkered down in the woods to avoid a deadly virus. They take in a family needing help and that uneasy alliance devolves. Just have “Ted Lasso” on hand for a pick-me-up afterward.
67. ‘Hush’ (2016)
In this mix of home-invasion terror and slasher picture, Kate Siegel puts a different spin on the usual horror heroine as an author unable to hear or speak but who has plenty of gumption when she’s stalked in her home by a masked killer.
66. ‘Deathgasm’ (2015)
This one definitely goes to 11: Two teenage rocker dudes – who yearn to add some excitement to their lives – delve into black magic and accidentally conjure a demonic entity known as The Blind One. Which is a very metal thing to do.
65. ‘The Purge’ (2013)
In the franchise that’s become way too timely for comfort, the first film is tops, with Ethan Hawke trying to keep his family safe from masked maniacs during an all-night legal crime spree.
64. ‘Trick ‘r Treat’ (2007)
This Halloween treasure features four intertwining tales of mischief and menace. The common thread in the anthology? An enigmatic kid named Sam, wearing pajamas and a sack on his head, who punishes those who break holiday tradition.
63. ‘The Lodge’ (2020)
Prepare for despair in this literal chiller, which stars Riley Keough as a woman still haunted by her childhood being the only survivor of a religious death cult who gets snowed in and trapped with her fiancé’s kids in a remote house.
62. ‘Paranormal Activity’ (2009)
The found-footage and haunted house subgenres went together like peanut butter and jelly in this low-budget chiller that chronicles the demonic threat to a young couple through the always-watchful lens of a home video camera.
61. ‘May’ (2003)
One of the more criminally underrated films of the genre, this Frankenstein-esque tale stars Angela Bettis as the title woman, a lonely sort whose sole friend is a doll made by her mom. As May starts to look for more personal connection, and struggles to find it, she decides to craft her own human pal, piece by piece.
60. ‘Late Night With the Devil’ (2024)
David Dastmalchian has a hell of a role in this discomforting and mind-bending retro flick, starring as a 1970s late-night TV host tired of iffy ratings who brings on a supposedly possessed girl in a Halloween gambit that spirals supernaturally out of control.
59. ‘The Ring’ (2002)
A cursed videotape that kills anyone who views it seven days later falls into the hands of Naomi Watts for a neat spook show. (Guys, ghost girl Samara is STILL freaking us out.) More importantly, it sparked an American interest in the original “Ringu” and other outstanding Asian horror of the time.
58. ‘Saint Maud’ (2021)
A deeply devout hospice nurse (Morfydd Clark) tries to save her lesbian client’s soul and wrestles with her own dark backstory in director Rose Glass’ unholy and twisted film. Worth it for one absolutely fiery finale.
57. ‘Donnie Darko’ (2001)
Is this crazy psychological thriller a horror movie? Jake Gyllenhaal dealing with an aircraft engine falling into his bedroom and interacting with a giant rabbit named Frank – who tells him doomsday’s afoot in 28 days – is all the answer you really need.
56. ‘Werewolves Within’ (2021)
In a bloody good mix of horror comedy and murder mystery, Sam Richardson plays a naive but good-hearted forest ranger new to a small Vermont town out to catch a killer (who may or may not be a werewolf) among the various kooky residents.
55. ‘Halloween’ (2018)
The 11th film featuring machete-wielding masked man Michael Myers rids itself of unneeded previous canon and acts as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 original, pitting the villain vs. the woman (Jamie Lee Curtis) who’s waited four decades for a rematch.
54. ‘Drag Me to Hell’ (2009)
Sam Raimi’s flick starred Alison Lohman as a loan officer who, wanting to impress her boss, refuses to extend an old gypsy woman’s mortgage. Suffice it to say, not the best decision, considering the three nightmarish days that follow. And that title? That’s some real truth in advertising.
53. ‘REC’ (2007)
Got claustrophobia? Then maybe ease gently into this Spanish found-footage chiller. A night news crew enters a building with firefighters called in to help an old woman trapped in her apartment, she gets a little too bitey and, before you know it, zombies everywhere.
52. ‘The Boy Behind the Door’ (2021)
Those holding out for a young hero will find one in Lonnie Chavis’ terrorized kid, who has to rescue his best pal (Ezra Dewey) after they’re kidnapped and taken to a strange country house in a survival thriller with a welcome twist.
51. ‘V/H/S’ (2012)
Using a found-footage framing device, the anthology unleashes a bevy of shorts revolving around a second honeymoon gone wrong, a freaky sci-fi story told through video chats, and some pervy dudes who make a deadly mistake recruiting a mysterious young woman for their amateur porn.
50. ‘Ju-On: The Grudge’ (2004)
No, not the Sarah Michelle Gellar version. (Come on now.) The original Japanese flick featured a social worker (Megumi Okina) seeing all manner of freaky ghost children in her house. And there’s a timeless quality, too, because, well, ghastly kids are always ghastly.
49. ‘We Are Still Here’ (2015)
Set in 1970s New England, the spin on the haunted house template centers on a couple who moves to a sleepy hamlet following the death of their college-age son and into a place that still contains the dark, ashen souls of the Dagmar family that lived there and a supernatural force that awakens every 30 years.
48. ‘Annihilation’ (2018)
This is one heck of a WrestleMania main event: Natalie Portman vs. a mutant bear with a skull head. The nightmarish sci-fi thriller features Portman as part of a science group that investigates a Florida swamp where the fauna has been otherworldly transformed.
47. ‘X’/’Pearl’ (2022)
You shouldn’t watch one without the other. Start with Ti West’s “X,” an ode to old-school slashers featuring a 1970s adult-film crew running across a crazy elderly lady on a Texas farm, and chase it with the period prequel “Pearl,” the 1918-set origin story starring Mia Goth as a young woman whose need for fame turns murderous.
46. ‘Fear Street’ trilogy (2021)
The teen slasher is reinvented yet again, with an eye toward diversity and mythology. A bunch of 1990s kids look into a witch’s curse that’s affected their town since the 17th century while also trying to stay alive.
45. ‘The Conjuring’ (2013)
The fact that paranormal experts Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga) dealt with horrors in real life adds to the fear factor of James Wan’s franchise starter, which focused on a Rhode Island family, their rundown farmhouse and some witchiness.
44. ‘Inside’ (2007)
The French fright fest features a very pregnant widow (Alysson Paradis) who sees her home invaded on Christmas Eve by a mysterious woman in black (Beatrice Dalle) dead set on cutting her baby out with some scissors. Buckle up for fiery mayhem and a “birthing” scene that’s hard to even fathom.
43. ‘The House of the Devil’ (2009)
Director Ti West’s ode to 1970s and ’80s horror is slow-burn dread. A college student (Jocelin Donahue) gets a baby-sitting offer she can’t refuse, which leads to utter satanic insanity for the last 25 minutes. Fun fact: Greta Gerwig shows up in one of her early roles.
42. ‘The Invitation’ (2016)
Karyn Kusama’s cult horror comedy “Jennifer’s Body” was ahead of its time, but the director returned with this twisty treat, which makes the boring dinner party anything but. Logan Marshall-Green stars as a man invited to a shindig by his ex-wife, the revelry goes awry and you’re left with jaw on the floor by a whopper of a last scene.
41. ‘Ready or Not’ (2019)
This movie’s just so darn enjoyable, and that’s maybe not something you expect with buckets of blood, servants getting shot in the head, a catchily kooky Victrola tune and a newlywed bride (Samara Weaving) trying to literally survive a night with her evil in-laws.
40. ‘Sinister’ (2012)
Before writer/director Scott Derrickson did a Marvel-ous “Doctor Strange,” he went full-on creepy video. Ethan Hawke’s true-crime writer finds a box of Super 8 home movies in his attic, playing them and consequently putting his family in grave danger thanks to the appearance of a Babylonian deity named Bughuul.
39. ‘Split’ (2017)
While it was ultimately revealed as a secret sequel to “Unbreakable,” M. Night Shyamalan’s psychological thriller stands on its own, thanks to James McAvoy’s troubled Kevin Wendell Crumb, who has more than 20 distinct personalities and kidnaps a girl (Anya Taylor-Joy) who’s just as damaged as he is.
38. ‘Goodnight Mommy’ (2015)
Full of dread and melancholy, the Austrian import flips the creepy-kid script a bit by centering on two boys (Elias and Lukas Schwarz) who wonder whether their mom (Susanne Wuest), whose head is wrapped in bandages after facial surgery, is actually their mom.
37. ‘Happy Death Day’ (2017)
So what if it’s a slasher-movie “Groundhog Day”? The enchanting time-hopper puts a sorority girl (Jessica Rothe) through her paces as she’s forced to re-live the same day of getting murdered by a serial killer in a baby mask until she figures out whodunit.
36. ‘Don’t Breathe’ (2016)
Another intriguing take on the home-invasion trope has three young robbers wanting fast cash and breaking into the house of a blind Gulf War vet (Stephen Lang) harboring some seriously dark secrets of his own. (You’ll never look at a turkey baster the same way ever again. Promise.)
35. ‘She Dies Tomorrow’ (2020)
A woman believes she’s going to die tomorrow, a doom-ridden viral thought that metastasizes among family and friends in this absurdist, unnerving and trippy film. And you thought COVID was contagious!
34. ‘A Quiet Place’ (2018)
Jim from “The Office” (aka John Krasinski) scared the pants off pop culture with his dystopian directorial debut, where a family (including Krasinski and real-life wife Emily Blunt) has to stay as quiet as possible in order to avoid being gobbled up by blind alien monsters that target their prey though sound.
33. ‘Barbarian’ (2022)
A young researcher (Georgina Campbell) rents a Detroit Airbnb, shows up and discovers it’s already occupied by a kind but creepy sort (Bill Skarsgård, aka Pennywise from the recent “It” movies). That’s all you need to know to buckle up for one wildly unconventional and gleefully grotesque getaway nightmare.
32. ‘You’re Next’ (2013)
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