Happy Halloween! Favorite horror of the past 5 years
List Criteria
In order to qualify for this list, each movie or show had to be released within the past five years (2016 or later), excluding masterful films like “Prisoners” (2013) and beloved TV series like “The Walking Dead” (2010).
Entries also had to be completed works, excluding ongoing shows such a”Stranger Things” (2016-present), because we can’t truly judge their greatness until we know how they end. Note to Hollywood: Please make more limited series with a tightly-told beginning, middle and end that don’t overstay their welcome.
Didn’t Make the Cut:
Before we start the countdown, here are a few that didn’t make the cut:
- “Don鈥檛 Breathe” (2016) – Killer blind premise ruined by a turkey baster
- “Life” (2017) – Daniel Espinosa鈥檚 underrated space horror recalls “Alien”
- “Black Mirror” (2017-2020) – See 鈥淏lack Museum” and 鈥淪triking Vipers鈥
- “Midsommar” (2019) – Ari Aster’s anticipated follow-up to “Hereditary”
- “Doctor Sleep” (2019) – Ewan McGregor stars in “The Shining” sequel
- “Halloween” (2018) – Solid reboot of the Michael Myers slasher franchise
- “The Haunting of Hill House” (2018) – Mike Flanagan is killing it on Netflix
- “Us” (2019) – Genius premise, sloppy script, unforgettable Lupita Nyong鈥檕
- “Parasite” (2019) 鈥 Not a horror movie, but a Best Picture worthy thriller
- “The Lighthouse” (2019) – Hated it, see Robert Eggers’ 鈥淭he Witch鈥 instead
- “Pet Sematary” (2019) – Better-than-expected Stephen King remake
- “Antebellum” (2020) – Janelle Mon谩e could have used a tighter script
- “Spiral” (2021) – Chris Rock stars in the latest in the “Saw” franchise
- “Candyman” (2021) – Fans of 1992 classic might like Nia DaCosta鈥檚 reboot
- “Malignant” (2021) – James Wan鈥檚 latest is bonkers but rather predictable
- “Titane” (2021) 鈥 Haven鈥檛 seen it yet, but it won Palme d鈥橭r at Cannes
- “Lamb” (2021) –聽Valdimar J贸hannsson tracks childless couple in Iceland
- “Antlers” (2021) – Scott Cooper explores ancestral creature in Oregon
Now, on with the list!
10. ‘The Haunting of Bly Manor’ (2020)
Creator: Mike Flanagan
After “The Haunting of Hill House,” Mike Flanagan delivered a nine-episode Netflix miniseries about a gothic mansion聽similar to the Manderley estate in “Rebecca,” featuring precociously creepy kids who rival “The Others” and “The Orphanage.”
9. ‘Ready or Not’ (2019)
Directors: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillett
If you can buy into the聽absurd hide-and-seek premise, you鈥檒l find this a consistently intense, comedically campy and ultimately surprising addition to the genre with a killer turn by聽Samara Weaving’s bloody bride.
8. ‘It’ (2017)
Director: Andy Muschietti
Stephen King purists will hold onto Tim Curry’s 1990 classic, but Bill Skarsg氓rd was absolutely chilling as Pennywise the Clown holding red balloons and saying, “You’ll float too” with standout child stars Finn Wolfhard聽and Sofia Lillis.
7. ‘Host’ (2020)
Director: Rob Savage
No film better captured our pandemic reality than “Host,” featuring a group of friends holding a Zoom seance that invites evil spirits into the frames of their virtual “Brady Bunch” panels in the next evolution of the “found footage” genre.
6. ‘Alone’ (2020)
Director: John Hyams
This underrated gem follows a widow (Jules Willcox) driving across the Pacific Northwest when a road rage incident sparks a “Deliverance” survival journey evading a sadistic stalker (Marc Menchaca).
5. ‘Hereditary’ (2018)
Director: Ari Aster
Classroom freak-outs. Dollhouse omens. People bursting into flames. Monsters crawling on ceilings. These are some of the unforgettable images by Ari Aster, exploring a聽grieving family haunted by disturbing occurrences as Toni Collette delivers an award-worthy performance.
4. ‘The Invisible Man’ (2020)
Director: Leigh Whannell
鈥淪aw鈥 creator Leigh Whannell revived H.G. Wells’ tale with a聽powerhouse performance by聽Elisabeth Moss, who believes her abusive ex is transparently stalking her. Is she going crazy? Or is it something supernatural?
3. ‘Midnight Mass’ (2021)
Creator: Mike Flanagan
Mike Flanagan’s miniseries of Biblical proportions starts out as slow-burn suspense, making us think we鈥檙e watching an ex-con rehab show like 鈥淩ectify鈥 only to become the best spiritual existentialism since 鈥淭he Leftovers.鈥
2. ‘A Quiet Place’ (2018)
Director: John Krasinski
John Krasinski (“The Office”) delivered a refreshingly original creature feature with a silent-but-deadly premise, in which a family must survive by not making a sound to avoid the attacks of blind, audio-fueled monsters. Emily Blunt delivered a hushed bathtub birth for the ages, then cocked a shotgun before a brilliant cut to black.
1. ‘Get Out’ (2017)
Director: Jordan Peele
To laugh off 鈥淕et Out鈥 as a mere genre exercise in horror/comedy is a profound mistake that will leave you on the wrong side of history, not just socially but cinematically. Jordan Peele paints symbolic聽racial commentary in every shot with deer antlers, cotton picking and American-flag wardrobe, while his Oscar-winning script repays on repeat viewings with new meaning to lines like “We couldn’t bear to let them go.” Not only is it the best horror movie in years, it’s one of the best movies of all time, period.
海角社区app's Jason Fraley salutes modern horror (Part 2)
Jason Fraley
Hailed by The Washington Post for 鈥渉is savantlike ability to name every Best Picture winner in history," Jason Fraley began at 海角社区app as Morning Drive Writer in 2008, film critic in 2011 and Entertainment Editor in 2014, providing daily arts coverage on-air and online.