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We’ve put together a list of the most imaginative of these TV terrors. Whether mutant parasites or fungus-stuffed revenants, these ghouls delight in finding new and unique ways to scare viewers. So turn off the lights, and cozy up to the screen as we present the 10 most creative monsters to ever possess a television set.
1) Tooth Child – Channel Zero

Syfy’s Channel Zero was a horror anthology for the creepypasta generation. While the series lasted for four seasons, each based on a different online ghost story, its lasting legacy is Season 1 antagonist the “Tooth Child.” Candle Cove, based on a creepypasta of the same name, introduced the world to a horrifying golem crafted from thousands of children’s teeth.
You may not remember Channel Zero, but chances are you’ve seen the Tooth Child once or twice. The dental demon still lurks in a liminal internet space, waiting to pop up and scare the life out of anyone not careful with their Google image searches.
2) Gulper – Fallout

The Fallout video game series is home to some gruesome mutations, but Prime Video’s Fallout streaming series might have it beat. The Gulper is a human/salamander hybrid large enough to swallow a human whole. On the outside, his grotesque beast resembles a bus-sized axolotl covered in long, fleshy tendrils. Inside is somehow worse โ a large gaping maw lined with human fingers all the way down its throat.
Being eaten by a large predator is already scary enough, but the thought of thousands of fingers grabbing at you and slowly dragging you into oblivion is the stuff of nightmares.
3) Mouse Monster – Creepshow

For four seasons, Shudder’s Creepshow has been doing its part to fill the same niche that Tales from the Crypt once occupied. This campy, lowbrow horror anthology is more concerned with having a bloody good time than scratching a cerebral itch like The Twilight Zone or Black Mirror. Nothing represents this unserious but still horrifying tone like the Mouse Monster from Season 4’s Twenty Minutes with Cassandra
The Mouse Monster โ a human-sized manifestation of a mouse the main character caught in a glue trap โ isn’t super creative on the outside. The horror makeup, while expertly done, resembles any hairy, werewolf-style monster. What earns the mouse monster a place on this list is its penchant for philosophical discussion in lieu of physical violence. While the monster turns out to be a physical representation of an internal fear, taking the hulking chatterbox at face value is a surreal and fairly unique experience.
4) Flukeman – The X-Files

The X-Files may have ended up an alien conspiracy show, but early seasons followed more of a monster-of-the-week format. The best โ or should we say, worst? โ of these weekly ghouls was Flukeman, a Chernobyl-born cross between a man and a parasite. Flukeman only appeared in a single Season 2 episode, but it was enough to make an impression. To this day, the mutant worm-man stands out as one of the creepiest monsters to plague Agents Scully and Mulder and proof that X-Files creator Chris Carter has a sickness deep within his mind that no amount of therapy can ever cure.
5) Weeping Angels – Doctor Who

While not a horror show in the traditional sense, Doctor Who has been terrifying viewers since the first Dalek raised its toilet plunger in anger. Though many frightful villains have menaced The Doctor over the years, The Weeping Angels are easily the scariest of all. These statue-like creatures subvert the childlike belief that as long as you don’t look at the monster, it can’t hurt you by presenting a monster that can only be held at bay by staring directly at it.
The minute a potential victim stops looking โ even if it’s a momentary blink โ the Weeping Angels strike. Not content to simply kill their prey, the Angels banish them to the past and consume the potential energy they would have exerted over a lifetime if left alone. Weeping Angels aren’t just creative, they’re scary as hell, making them the definitive Doctor Who monster of the modern era.













