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Entertainment February 10, 2026

NETFLIX NIGHTMARES: 25 Films That Will Haunt You!

NETFLIX NIGHTMARES: 25 Films That Will Haunt You!

For some, spooky season begins sometime in late August, when Home Depot puts out the animatronic skeletons and ghost projectors, and when every vacant retail space is possessed by a Spirit Halloween. For others, it's a no go until after Labor Day. Still other gorehounds believe there's no better time for a heart-rending scares than Valentine's Day.

Whatever timing you prefer, there's a horror flick worth catching on Netflix—or 25 of them.

28 Years Later(2025)

As much as I enjoyed the earlier28movies, I didn't expect to care much about a legacy sequel. Danny Boyle, Alex Garland, and co. have still got it, though, grounding this visceral, sweaty, post-COVID installment in the story of Alfie Williams' Spike, a young boy coming of age amid the apocalypse alongside a distant dad and a dying mom—and then Ralph Fiennes comes along to steal the movie with his bone temple (not a euphemism).

28 Years Later (2025)
28 Years Later (2025)
at Netflix

Deadstream(2022)

There’s life in the found-footage genre yet, as proven by this fun and inventive horror comedy that cleverly calls back to the originalEvil Deadwith its blend of goofy good humor and wonderfully gross practical effects. Director/star Joseph Winter plays Shawn, a once-popular YouTube personality working on a comeback (one of the movie’s most clever conceits is in tricking you into liking a character whodoes notdeserve your love). Popular for his outrageous stunts, he builds an all-night livestream around locking himself in a purportedly haunted house. You can certainly see where this is going, but Winter and company deftly blend solid scares, technical wizardry, and a few laughs to create a movie that’s loaded with scares and still manages to get in some good digs at our toxic social media landscape.

Deadstream (2022)
Deadstream (2022)
at Netflix

Heart Eyes(2025)

Director Josh Ruben is on a roll, from clever two-handerScare Me, to the surprisingly effective video game adaptationWerewolves Within, toHeart Eyes, a clever slasher that’s also a very solid rom-com. Olivia Holt plays Ally, a pitch designer for a jewelry company who doesn’t quite understand why her “doomed couples” commercial is seen as offensive. Love, she’s pretty sure, is dumb, so the Heart Eyes Killer running around murdering lovers doesn’t quite register—she’s not dumb enough for romance. At least until consultant Jay (Scream’s Mason Gooding) shows up, their will-they-won’t-they chemistry putting them firmly in the sights of the killer.

Heart Eyes
Heart Eyes (2025)
at Netflix

The Blackening(2022)

A horror comedy that serves both genres pretty darn well, Tim Story's modern slasher updates that horror trope wherein the Black character dies first. Here, everyone is Black, so who's the killer going to go for? A group of friends show up at a cabin in the woods to celebrate Juneteenth, only to discover their hosts are nowhere to be found, and that they're being targeted by a masked killer who wants them to play aScream-esque game of Black culture trivia, with deadly stakes. Satire aside, the threats are intense and the would-be survivors (played by Grace Byers, Jermaine Fowler, Melvin Gregg, Sinqua Walls, Jay Pharoah, and Yvonne Orji) are better developed (and funnier) than in many a slasher, in tht you might actually care who lives and who dies.

The Blackening (2022)
The Blackening (2022)
at Netflix

Train to Busan(2016)

BeforeParasite, Yeon Sang-ho’s film was, perhaps, the biggest South Korean film to break into the American market, even if some of the subtext gets lost stateside (Busan was a haven for refugees during the Korean War). The 2016 film follows Seok-woo, a workaholic divorced dad who comes to feel that he’s running out of time to be the father he ought to be for his daughter Su-an. He hasnoidea how right he is. The train trip he plans for them as bonding time becomes something much more desperate when a zombie-infected woman hops aboard just before departure. What follows is one of the best action-horror movies of the past decade, but also a surprisingly moving story about a father and daughter reconnecting at the end of the world, as well as one that doesn't shy away from some pretty pointed critiques of modern capitalism.You can streamTrain to Busanhere.

Train to Busan (2016)
Train to Busan (2016)
at Netflix

Frankenstein(2025)

I think we're supposed to call this a gothic drama—its cast is too A-list, and it's been written and directed by perennial Oscar-fave Guillermo del Toro, so it must be more than mere horror. And yet! This unusually faithful version of Mary Shelley's classic novel finds the humanity in the monster, but there's plenty of existential horror on offer, aplus some of the gnarly, stomach-churningly grisly special effects sequences in recent memory It's up for nine Academy Awards, which doesn't mean that it isn't disturbing.

Frankenstein (2025)
Frankenstein (2025)
at Netflix

El Conde(2023)

The spectre of the fascist rule of Augusto Pinochet continues to loom large in Chile, despite his having died a couple of decades ago. This is hardly unusual in the history of dictatorships—there are always those who remember the horrors, and those who made out OK and wonder if things weren't better back in the bad ol' days. This dark comedy/horror from Pablo Larraín (Spencer) turns that psychological omnipresence literal: Pinochet (Jaime Vadell) is a 250-year-old vampire who faked his own death, continuing his bloodsucking habits on a less public stage, while a determined nun seeks to exorcise him for good. There are bloody bits, and also some wild, but well-deserved swings at other dictatorial world leaders you might have heard of. With a nod to the originalNosferatu, the gorgeous black-and-white cinematography earned an Academy Award nomination.

El Conde (2023)
El Conde (2023)
at Netflix

Blood Red Sky(2021)

German widow Nadja is taking a flight to New York with her kid, Elias. She seems sick—we and her fellow passengers are meant to think that she has cancer, which makes her an easy mark for the terrorist hijackers who board the plane and shoot her out of pique. Big mistake. The vampires-on-a-plane high concept at work could have been silly, but at no point does the movie forget that we're seated for gory bloodsucking action.

Blood Red Sky (2021)
Blood Red Sky (2021)
at Netflix

Nightbooks(2021)

So,Nightbooksis technically for kids, and therefore might not provide quite the volume of scares that a grown-up horror audience might be hoping for. That being said: There are some legit frights here, frankly a little beyond what you’d expect from a kids’ movie. It’s the old story of kids kidnapped by a witch (Krysten Ritter), with the added twist that one of the kidnapped, Alex (Winslow Fegley) writes scary stories, and has to tell one each night that he’s trapped in the witch’s apartment in order to stay alive. There’s imagery here to creep out just about anybody.

Nightbooks (2021)
Nightbooks (2021)
at Netflix

Incantation(2022)

Taiwan's biggest-grossing horror movie of all time inspired a TikTok challenge a couple years ago, asking viewers whether they could watch the whole thing without looking away. Possibly a little overly dramatic, butIncantationis certainly an intense found-footage horror film that draws us in by asking us, as viewers, to chant along with characters to help save a cursed child. Six years before the film's start, pregnant Ronan and her boyfriend interrupt a rural ritual while attempting to document it for their YouTube channel, and their lives have been very messed up ever since.

Incantation (2022)
Incantation (2022)
at Netflix

Apostle(2018)

If you’re familiar with the wild tower action spectacleThe Raid, you might have some sense of the energy that director Gareth Evans brings toApostle’ssecond half, even if the styles are very different. This one’s pure folk horror, with nods toThe Wicker Man: Dan Stevens (Downton Abbey,The Guest) plays Thomas Richardson, a now-faithless missionary who returns home to discover that his sister has been kidnapped by a religious cult on a remote Welsh island. What starts out feeling a bit like a sleepy period drama evolves into a truly wild gorefest before it’s done.You can streamApostlehere.

Apostle (2018)
Apostle (2018)
at Netflix

His House(2020)

As fraught (and snooty) as theterm“elevated horror” has become, it’s good to remember that a movie can have deep emotional resonance and a social conscience, all without sacrificing the haunted-house chills. Here, Bol and Rial (Sope Dirisu and Wunmi Mosaku), with their daughter Nyagak, flee war-torn Sudan to find refuge in a quiet English town, only to find that there’s evil waiting there for them.

His House (2020)
His House (2020)
at Netflix

Don't Listen(2020)

If the neighbors refer to your house as the "house of voices," I genuinely hope that you find that outbeforesigning the papers—which obviously did not happen here. House flippers Daniel and Sara movie into a new place with their 9-year-old kid, Eric, who very quickly starts hearing voices coming from pretty much everywhere. The family hires an EVP (electronic voice phenomenon) expert to help, with very mixed results. This Spanish import works as a haunted house movie, but it's far more brutal than the usual, with a strong visual flair to top things off.You can streamDon't Listenhere.

Don't Listen (2020)
Don't Listen (2020)
at Netflix

Gerald’s Game(2017)

Gerald’s Game, from the 1992 Stephen King novel, never seemed terribly filmable. The story is set entirely in an isolated cabin in the woods, and involves a single immobilized character for much of its page count. Enter director Mike Flanagan—who, in addition to his successful miniseries projects (The Haunting of Hill House,Midnight Mass,The Midnight Club), did the impossible in crafting a killer adaptation of King’s lesser-lovedShiningsequel,Doctor Sleep. Carla Gugino stars as a married woman trapped when her husband, played by Bruce Greenwood, dies after having handcuffed her to the bed. Increasingly delirious, she’s forced to face not only her past trauma, but the hungry dog that keeps sniffing around.

Gerald’s Game (2017)
Gerald’s Game (2017)
at Netflix

Creep(2014)

One of the better (maybe one of the best) found footage-style films of recent years,Creeptakes place within the camera of Aaron (Patrick Brice, who also directed) and stars Mark Duplass (The Morning Show) as a dying man who hires the videographer to document his final days for his unborn son. The movie builds its tension around, initially, Aaron’s excessive friendliness—there are few better ways to create an atmosphere of unease than by offering up a character who’s a little too nice. Before long, the guy’s effusiveness curdles into an unpredictability that gets, well, creepier and creepier.You can streamCreephere.

Creep (2014)
Creep (2014)
at Netflix

The Platform(2019)

The metaphor might seem a little heavy-handed—but modern life has begun to teach us that even the direst of dystopian sci-fi is just around the corner. The titular platform is a large tower, euphemistically referred to as the “Vertical Self-Management Center,” in which food is delivered via a shaft that stops on each floor from the top down: those near the top get to eat their fill; those at the bottom get scraps. The Spanish-language thriller is wildly violent, but inventive, and it’s not as if real-life capitalism is particularly subtle in its deprivations.You can streamThe Platformhere.

The Platform (2019)
The Platform (2019)
at Netflix

Under the Shadow(2016)

In Tehran during the Iran-Iraq War, a woman estranged from her husband is forced to protect her child from mysterious supernatural forces as the bombs continue to fall. Writer/director Babak Anvari’sUnder the Shadowinvokes the jinn (neither necessarily good nor evil, but potentially threatening) as a way to talk about the strife and turmoil of war and political conflict, as well as about the anxieties of women in oppressive societies. The atmospheric film plays simultaneously as the story of a haunting, and also as one about women and civilians in times of war; each element serves to heighten the other.

Under the Shadow (2016)
Under the Shadow (2016)
at Netflix

The Call(2020)

I love a time-travel horror movie (a tiny but venerable genre that includes movies likeTimecrimes,Triangle, andHappy Death Day). This one involves Seo-yeon (Park Shin-hye) visiting her childhood home in 2019, only to discover that an old cordless phone still works (never a good sign), and connects her to Young-sook (Jeon Jong-seo), living in the house in 1999. The two bond over shared experiences, but things soon go very wrong when Seo-Yeon tells the other young woman about the future, and influences her to make changes. Some events, it seems, are best left alone. Clever and disturbing, with a solid high concept.

The Call (2020)
The Call (2020)
at Netflix

The Block Island Sound(2020)

Strange doings are afoot on the title's Block Island, the most obvious being the vast numbers of dead fish that keep washing ashore. Almost as alarming, though, is the behavior of one of the local fishermen, Tom, who keeps waking up in strange places and generally losing time. His daughter Audry (Michaela McManus) works for the Environmental Protection Agency and is sent to investigate the mass fish deaths; she brings along her daughter and reunites with brother Tom (Chris Sheffield) along the way. Together, they discover that no ordinary environmental catastrophe is to blame (I guess it wouldn't be much of a horror movie if it were), as the film blends family drama and the eerie local events as it builds to a pretty chilling climax.You can streamBlock Island Soundhere.

The Block Island Sound (2020)
The Block Island Sound (2020)
at Netflix

Cargo(2017)

With the always-welcome Martin Freeman in the lead, this is, OK, yet another zombie film, but one that still manages to do things a bit differently. An Australian import, this one tweaks the rules so that the infected have just about 48 hours of humanity before they turn, meaning that everyone has a bit of time to contemplate their fates, and maybe even to think about how to make the best use of their time. It’s a more melancholic take on the zombie apocalypse, full of chilling outback atmosphere and some genuine scares. Don't get confused with the 2020 sci-fi movie of the same name, also on Netflix.You can streamCargohere.

Cargo (2017)
Cargo (2017)
at Netflix

Verónica(2017)

Looselybased onpurportedly true events, this import from Spain is all spooky atmosphere and old-school chills. It's the story of a young woman who conjures up evil demons following some ill-conceived Ouija-play. (Seriously: Stop messing with those things). When some friends try to conjure up lost loved ones during a solar eclipse, they wind up making contact with a spirit they weren't expecting. Because of course they do. It's not the most original chiller, but the creepy fundamentals are sound, and there are plenty of solid scares. The sequel, Sister Death, is also streaming on Netflix.You can streamVerónicahere.

Verónica (2017)
Verónica (2017)

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