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5) Twitches

Tia and Tamera Mowry were both already major stars in the teen sphere thanks to their hit sitcom Sister, Sister, and other made-for-TV film forays like Seventeen Again; therefore there was already a lot of hype for Twitches when it premiered on Disney Channel in 2005. The Mowry sisters play Alex Fielding and Camryn Barnes, orphaned twins who were separated at birth when they were adopted by separate families. However, fate brings them together on their 21st birthday when their magic emerges. Alex and Camryn are then tasked with saving the otherworldly kingdom they hail from and their birth mother with their nascent powers. Twitches is one of Disney’s more lush fantastical films in its lineup, while also delivering a healthy dose of girl power and teen wish fulfillment too. Plus, it was popular enough to launch a sequel, Twitches Too.
4) Mom’s Got a Date with a Vampire

Mom’s Got a Date with a Vampire boasts a clever premise and a surprisingly stacked cast for a Disney Channel Original Movie. The film follows the three Hansen kids, Chelsea, Taylor, and Adam, who will do anything to get their mom, divorcรฉe Lynette, out of the house so they can attend their respective social engagements despite being grounded. Yet when they realize they may have inadvertently set Lynette up with a blood-sucking monster, it’s up to the Hansen kids to save her. Not only does the cast feature 90s sitcom royalty with Caroline Rhea of Sabrina the Teenage Witch playing Lynette and Charles Shaughnessy from The Nanny as her vampiric suitor, but Mom’s Got a Date with a Vampire is also one of Laura Vandervoort’s first credits, who played Supergirl on the WB/CW show Smallville.
3) Don’t Look Under the Bed

Disney pushed the boundaries of its programming with Don’t Look Under the Bed in crafting a truly creepy film that’s the closest to a full-on horror flick on this list. In it, a precocious teenager Frances, finds herself framed for a string of pranks in her small town by none other than the Boogeyman. To stop him, she must accept the help of Larry, an imaginary friend, and their supernatural, scary adventure teaches Frances that her childhood sense of wonder is worth retaining as she barrels toward adulthood. The film’s scares hold up, and it also includes non-binary representation well ahead of its time.










