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10 Best Horror Movies of 2024

From a socially conscious South Korean ghost story to not one but two showbiz satires laced with unsettling scares — here’s what terrified us at the movies this year

Illustration of 2024 horror movies

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MATTHEW COOLEY. IFC FILMS/SHUDDER, 2. MUBI. UNIVERSAL PICTURES

Do you like scary movies? If you answered yes, then 2024 might have been a frustrating, highly unreliable time at the movies. We thankfully got a break from the tried-and-true-franchise reboots/reimaginings for a hot minute, though that didn’t stop us from getting some weak-tea sequels (Alien: Romulus), prequels (The Strangers: Chapter 1), and more than a few films that took advantage of variations on the words “Omen” and “Exorcist.” Genre auteur extraordinaire Ti West concluded the trilogy he kicked off with Mia Goth via an extended ’80s slasher homage, and we pray they dive into another period-piece trilogy ASAP — suggested potential time frames include the 1990s wave of meta-horror, the A24 “elevated horror” boom of the 2010s and a future utopia without American remakes as bad as Speak No Evil. It was a good year if you name was Shyamalan, and an even better year if it was Shudder. If the 2024 success story that everybody will now be scrambling to duplicate next year is Terrifier 3, well… that is something to be genuinely frightened of.

There were lots of valleys, to be sure. But there were peaks as well, and the 10 movies we’re singling out below represent an odd cross-section of genre bedfellows, from a stylistic reimagining of a German expressionist classic to a socially conscious South Korean ghost story to a feminist body-horror satire. The one thing they have in common is they sent chills down our spine, tickled our gag reflexes and made us look over our shoulders more than once, all while engaging us in a way that only horror movies can.

1

‘The Substance’

You’d assume that the latest provocation from French genre expert Coralie Fargeat (Revenge) would be smart, savvy, bold and bloody. Not even a foreknowledge of her past work could prepare you for the instant body-horror classic, which watches as a TV star (Demi Moore) deals with being pitilessly aged out of the industry. She then finds out that a secret subscription service would allow her to foster a younger version of herself, although the plan requires both her and her dewy twentysomething “twin” (played by Margaret Qualley) to abide by a strict set of rules. Let’s just say this this riff on The Picture of Dorian Gray goes ballistic in the best possible way, and gets very gory before the end credits roll. (You want a climactic bloodbath that puts The Shining‘s plasma-gushing elevator to shame? You got it!) The Substance won’t reset society’s fixation on youth or cure Hollywood’s hypocritical, hyper-sexist ills. It will, however, remind you that when you’re chasing your past by any means necessary, you are always your own worst enemy.