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We are not going by when the film was widely released in the United States. Instead, we are going by when the film first debuted. For instance, if a film debuted at a festival in one year and then wasn’t widely released until the next year, we’re counting that festival debut as the start of the film’s existence.
6) A Quiet Place Part II (2020)

One of the few horror sequels to outdo their already impressive predecessor, A Quiet Place Part II wisely devotes most of its focus to Emily Blunt’s Evelyn Abbott as she tries to keep her children alive in a world overrun by super-fast, toothed aliens with dynamite ears but zero eyesight.
Blunt is, of course, fantastic, husband John Krasinski’s direction is once more very impressive, and the whole island set piece is a chef’s kiss of claustrophobic carnage. Toss in two amazing cast additions in Cillian Murphy and Djimon Hounsou and A Quiet Place Part II is one of the 2020s more enthralling horror films. It was also the first film to really get butts back in seats when it debuted wide in 2021, so it’s also a pretty important horror film, too. Runners-up included Possessor and The Invisible Man.
Stream A Quiet Place Part II on Hulu.
5) The Black Phone (2021)

Remember how in the intro we said we were counting a movie’s festival debut as the beginning of its existence? That is why The Black Phone is here in the 2021 slot. And good for it, too, because it wouldn’t win the 2022 slot. It’s very solid and was a big success (big enough to get itself a sequel), but 2022 was particularly crowded with horror.
The Black Phone shows Scott Derrickson doing a great job bringing Joe Hill’s words and style to the big screen, but it’s really Ethan Hawke’s movie all the way. The actor makes the Grabber terrifying, and it’s because of him and the single creepy locale of a dusty basement that makes this one stick in the viewer’s memory. At the top of the runners-up pile was Nia DaCosta’s Candyman.
Stream The Black Phone on Peacock.
4) X (2022)

It’s going to be hard for 2026 to 2029 to top 2022 as the best year of the decade for horror. Bodies Bodies Bodies, Nope, Radio Silence’s Scream, Smile, Talk to Me, the underrated comedy-horror movie Day Shift, Fresh, M3GAN, Prey, Barbarian, they were all released under the same annual umbrella. And, while Barbarian gave it a run for its money, this really has to go to Ti West for X (and Pearl).
X alone is a fantastic throwback to the best slashers of the ’70s and ’80s, with a cast that is all up to the challenge of crafting fully fleshed characters in a subgenre that doesn’t usually allow for such things. They succeed, as does West in creating haunting ambiance and a handful of shocking kills. Toss in how Pearl is equally good but very much different (and an even better display of Mia Goth’s range) and these two make for the first and middle chapters of one of horror’s very best trilogies.
Stream X on HBO Max.
3) Late Night with the Devil (2023)

Whether we counted Late Night with the Devil‘s SXSW debut in 2023 or its wide release debut in 2024, it would win the year. This was finally the movie that gave David Dastmalchian a lead role, and it couldn’t have been more suited to his gothic personality and style. It’s very much like how Crispin Glover, after years and years of playing supporting roles, got the perfect lead role as the title character of Willard. But Late Night with the Devil is even more clever and adept at slowly turning up the temperature of tension until it reaches a boiling point.
Having most of the events confined to a single stage makes the whole narrative feel about as intimate and claustrophobic as it could be. The audience (us included) can easily escape but we’re keeping ourselves there as witnesses, to learn if a little girl truly is possessed or if it’s all one big show. While Late Night with the Devil easily won 2023, it wasn’t for a lack of competition. Beau Is Afraid was divisive but impressive, Evil Dead Rise was a successful injection of new life into the Deadite saga, and the comedic horror movies Cocaine Bear, Renfield, and Thanksgiving all have their fans, and rightfully so. This was also the year of the ambitious but ultimately underwhelming Scream VI and the surprisingly solid Saw X.
Stream Late Night with the Devil on Hulu.










