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But then there are the horror movies that intentionally send you out with a big frown and maybe a tear or two. They’re trying to feel like hopeless conclusions, and they succeed in being just that. What follows are the best of the horror movie endings that actively attempted to be bummers and really pulled it off.
7) The Mist

The best sci-fi movie based on a Stephen King work, The Mist is an intense single-locale alien invasion movie. But it’s the ending that actually manages to make it better than the source material.
We watch Thomas Jane’s David Drayton get his son, Laurie Holden’s Amanda, Jeffrey DeMunn’s Dan, and Frances Sternhagen’s Irene out of the grocery store, which had fully descended into chaos. The car is surrounded by these sky-high aliens and, feeling the end is near, David turns a gun on everyone else in the car to mercy kill them. Then, the mist dissipates, and in rolls the military.
Stream The Mist for free with ads on The Roku Channel.
6) The Vanishing

Don’t bother with the 1993 Hollywood-ized remake which added in a more palatable ending, because the original The Vanishing is the true masterwork. But you won’t leave feeling good about the world.
Throughout the movie we follow Rex, whose girlfriend, Saskia, was kidnapped a few years back. The kidnapper reveals himself and tells Rex that he can learn what happened to his girlfriend. But what he means by that is he’ll bury Rex alive just like he buried Saskia alive. Then the kidnapper, Raymond, goes back to his suburban life with his wife and kid.
Stream The Vanishing on The Criterion Channel.
5) Invasion of the Body Snatchers

The second and very best of the four adaptations of Jack Finney’s novel The Body Snatchers, the 1978 remake Invasion of the Body Snatchers took what was established in the book and ’50s movie and perfected it. Part of how it did so was by adding in the point-and-scream.
Throughout the movie we see this increasingly overtaken world through the eyes of Donald Sutherland’s Matthew. But we also spend time with his friend, Elizabeth (Brooke Adams) and Jack and Nancy Bellicec (Jeff Goldblum and Veronica Cartwright). In the third act, Jack is taken over, then we and Matthew learn that Elizabeth has fallen to the same fate. Then, it’s almost as if the movie ends. We’ve gone from night to daylight and, apprehensively, Nancy finds Matthew, who is walking in a park setting. She shows emotion upon seeing him and, stoic for a moment, Matthew then points and screams at her, alerting the other pop people to the fact she’s still human. Matthew has been taken over as well, and now the movie really is done.
Stream Invasion of the Body Snatchers on Prime Video.
4) The Blair Witch Project

A pop culture sensation in the late ’90s, The Blair Witch Project doesn’t feel as revolutionary now that stuff like Paranormal Activity has entered film history. But the ending still really packs a punch.
The whole movie is hopeless, but the ending really makes you feel beaten. One of the three filmmakers is gone, likely dead, which leaves Heather and Mike. They find an abandoned house, Heather loses track of Mike, then finds him in the basement just standing still and staring into the corner. She then screams, falls, and drops the camera. What exactly happened to them? Why is he staring into the corner? We don’t know, but we know enough to be sure they are most certainly not okay.
Stream The Blair Witch Project on Kanopy.











