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Clayface has now been delayed, but it’s not as bad a piece of news as it seems. For one, it’s just a month later. Two, its new October 23rd release date really seems to indicate that the “complete horror film” description wasn’t just a sales pitch, but rather an accurate summarization.
The History of Horror in Superhero Movies & How Clayface Is Likely to Stand Out

Clayface will not be the first superhero (supervillain, in this case) movie to have horror elements. The Crow definitely has them, at least in terms of its overall grim vibe. Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy had the faintest but still discernible horror influence, while his Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness more overtly embraced the genre. The Blade trilogy had vampires, the Ghost Rider movies involved demons, the Venom movies and Morbius had a touch of horror, and The Void in Thunderbolts* was creepy, but even still, none were firmly planted in the same genre as Halloween and The Exorcist.
DC has come a little closer than Marvel, with Wes Craven’s underrated Swamp Thing being horror adjacent and the Penguin in Batman Returns certainly scaring tears out of plenty of kids. But even including Constantine, Clayface will be the first time DC has ever put out a full-on scary movie.








