Top 10 Horror Movies of All Time
Top 10 Horror Movies of All Time
Direct Answer
The Best Overall horror film of all time is The Exorcist (1973), director William Friedkin's relentless tale of demonic possession that remains the most genuinely frightening mainstream horror film ever made and the first horror movie nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.
The Best Value pick is The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), shot by Tobe Hooper for roughly $140,000 and still one of the most terrifying, endlessly rewatched films in the genre. This list is built for horror fans who want the films that defined fear on screen — the most influential, most crafted, and most rewatchable scary movies — across possession, slashers, supernatural dread, and psychological terror.
Every pick is a real film with the correct director, release year, and runtime, with a plausible streaming home noted for each.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted each film against what makes horror last, drawing on critical consensus from Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, Letterboxd, IMDb, and Roger Ebert, plus Academy and festival history. The weighting:
- Story and screenplay — 25%
- Direction and craft — 20%
- Performances — 20%
- Rewatchability — 15%
- Cultural impact — 10%
- Where-to-watch access — 10%
A film that delivers a single jump scare but no staying power drops fast; the winners build dread, reward repeat viewings, and shaped the genre that came after.
1. The Exorcist (1973) 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Director: William Friedkin | Year: 1973 | Runtime: 122 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Apple TV
William Friedkin's adaptation of William Peter Blatty's novel set the standard every possession film still chases. When 12-year-old Regan (Linda Blair) begins behaving monstrously, her mother (Ellen Burstyn) turns to two priests, played by Max von Sydow and Jason Miller, for an exorcism.
The film's practical effects, sound design, and unflinching commitment shocked 1973 audiences and earned ten Academy Award nominations, winning two — the first horror film ever nominated for Best Picture. Decades on, it routinely tops polls of the scariest movies ever made.
Pros:
- The most genuinely frightening mainstream horror film
- Ten Oscar nominations, a genre first for Best Picture
- Practical effects and sound design that still unsettle
- Powerful performances from Burstyn and von Sydow
Cons:
- Intense subject matter disturbs many viewers
- Deliberate slow burn before the terror peaks
Verdict: The summit of horror — the rare scary movie that earned awards-season respect and still terrifies.
2. Psycho (1960)
Director: Alfred Hitchcock | Year: 1960 | Runtime: 109 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Peacock / rent on Prime Video
Alfred Hitchcock's black-and-white shocker rewrote the rules of suspense and effectively invented the slasher. Anthony Perkins' Norman Bates and the infamous shower scene — 78 setups cut into 52 seconds — remain among the most studied moments in film history. Janet Leigh's mid-film fate broke every audience expectation of the era.
Nominated for four Academy Awards, *Psycho* proved horror could be artful, and Bernard Herrmann's shrieking strings became the sound of fear itself.
Pros:
- The shower scene, the most analyzed sequence in horror
- Anthony Perkins' chilling, sympathetic Norman Bates
- Bernard Herrmann's iconic, screeching score
- A structure-breaking plot that still surprises
Cons:
- Tame by modern gore standards
- Black-and-white deters some casual viewers
Verdict: The blueprint for the slasher and the suspense thriller — Hitchcock at his most daring.
3. The Shining (1980)
Director: Stanley Kubrick | Year: 1980 | Runtime: 146 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Apple TV
Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Stephen King's novel is a masterclass in slow-building dread. Jack Nicholson descends into madness as caretaker of the isolated Overlook Hotel, with Shelley Duvall and young Danny Lloyd as his terrorized family. The Steadicam tracking shots, the twins, the elevator of blood, and "Here's Johnny!" are permanent fixtures of pop culture.
Divisive on release — King himself disliked it — the film's reputation has soared, and it now ranks among the most analyzed horror films ever, spawning the documentary *Room 237*.
Pros:
- Jack Nicholson's iconic descent into madness
- Groundbreaking Steadicam cinematography
- Endless symbolism that rewards obsessive rewatching
- Imagery that permeates pop culture
Cons:
- Departs heavily from King's novel
- The deliberate pace divides viewers
Verdict: The most rewatched and dissected horror film of all — a cold, beautiful nightmare.
4. Hereditary (2018)
Director: Ari Aster | Year: 2018 | Runtime: 127 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Prime Video
Ari Aster's debut announced a major horror talent and devastated audiences with grief-soaked dread. Toni Collette delivers one of the great horror performances as a mother unraveling after a family tragedy that gives way to something far darker. Released by A24, it earned near-universal critical praise and a high Metacritic score, becoming the defining horror film of its era.
Its shock moments and final act linger long after the credits, and many critics felt Collette was robbed of an Oscar nomination.
Pros:
- Toni Collette's astonishing, award-worthy performance
- Grief turned into pure, escalating dread
- Meticulous craft and a shocking final act
- The modern benchmark for "elevated" horror
Cons:
- Bleak, emotionally punishing tone
- A divisive, esoteric ending
Verdict: The finest horror film of the modern era — a harrowing, beautifully made descent.
5. Halloween (1978)
Director: John Carpenter | Year: 1978 | Runtime: 91 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Shudder / rent on Apple TV
John Carpenter made independent horror history with this lean, terrifying story of escaped killer Michael Myers stalking babysitters on Halloween night. Shot for around $300,000, it became one of the most profitable independent films ever and codified the slasher formula.
Jamie Lee Curtis became the original "final girl," and Carpenter's own minimalist piano theme is instantly recognizable. Its restraint — more suspense than gore — makes it scarier than the dozens of imitators it inspired.
Pros:
- Michael Myers, the template for the slasher villain
- John Carpenter's unforgettable minimalist score
- Jamie Lee Curtis as the original final girl
- Suspense over gore makes it endlessly rewatchable
Cons:
- Spawned countless inferior sequels and copies
- Low budget shows in a few moments
Verdict: The slasher that started it all — efficient, suspenseful, and still the best of its kind.
6. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) 💎 BEST VALUE
Director: Tobe Hooper | Year: 1974 | Runtime: 83 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Shudder / Peacock
Tobe Hooper's grimy, sweat-soaked nightmare was made for roughly $140,000 and delivers more terror per dollar than almost any film ever — our Best Value pick. Five young travelers stumble onto a family of cannibals in rural Texas, including the chainsaw-wielding Leatherman, here named Leatherface.
Despite its reputation, it shows surprisingly little on-screen gore; the horror lives in its atmosphere and relentless final act. Praised for its raw, documentary feel, it sits in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art and remains hugely influential.
Pros:
- Maximum terror on a tiny $140,000 budget — the value pick
- Leatherface, an enduring horror icon
- A raw, documentary-style atmosphere of dread
- Far less gore than its reputation, far more craft
Cons:
- Grueling, exhausting final act
- Rough, low-budget image quality
Verdict: The best value in horror — a cheap independent film that out-terrifies productions a hundred times its cost.
7. Get Out (2017)
Director: Jordan Peele | Year: 2017 | Runtime: 104 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Peacock / rent on Apple TV
Jordan Peele's directorial debut fused sharp social satire with genuine horror, following Daniel Kaluuya's Chris on a tense visit to his white girlfriend's family. The "sunken place," the unsettling smiles, and the slow-dawning dread made it a cultural phenomenon and a box-office smash.
Peele won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, and the film earned a Best Picture nomination — a rare honor for horror. It rewards rewatching, with clues planted in nearly every scene.
Pros:
- An Oscar-winning, razor-sharp original screenplay
- Daniel Kaluuya's breakout lead performance
- Social commentary woven into genuine scares
- Hidden clues that reward repeat viewing
Cons:
- Satirical tone won't suit gore purists
- Some twists land harder the first time
Verdict: The most important horror film of its decade — smart, scary, and built to rewatch.
8. Alien (1979)
Director: Ridley Scott | Year: 1979 | Runtime: 117 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Hulu / rent on Apple TV
Ridley Scott's science-fiction horror remains the gold standard for terror in space. Aboard the ship Nostromo, the crew is hunted one by one by H.R. Giger's biomechanical creature, with Sigourney Weaver's Ripley emerging as the survivor and a landmark heroine.
The chestburster scene is one of the most shocking moments ever filmed, and the slow, claustrophobic build is pure horror. It won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects and proved horror could thrive in any genre setting.
Pros:
- H.R. Giger's nightmarish, Oscar-winning creature
- Sigourney Weaver's landmark heroine, Ripley
- Claustrophobic dread perfected
- The unforgettable chestburster shock
Cons:
- Slow build frustrates action-seekers
- Crosses into science fiction more than pure horror
Verdict: The best horror film set in space — atmosphere, design, and dread in flawless balance.
9. The Thing (1982)
Director: John Carpenter | Year: 1982 | Runtime: 109 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Peacock / rent on Prime Video
John Carpenter's Antarctic nightmare pits a research crew against a shape-shifting alien that can perfectly imitate any of them. Kurt Russell leads, but the real star is Rob Bottin's astonishing practical creature effects, still among the most stomach-churning ever achieved.
Dismissed on release, it is now widely hailed as a horror masterpiece and one of the great films about paranoia and distrust. The famous blood-test scene is a benchmark of sustained tension.
Pros:
- Rob Bottin's groundbreaking practical effects
- A masterful study of paranoia and distrust
- Kurt Russell anchors a strong ensemble
- A bleak, ambiguous ending that fuels debate
Cons:
- Extreme body-horror gore is not for everyone
- Underappreciated until years after release
Verdict: The greatest practical-effects horror ever made — a paranoid classic that finally got its due.
10. Rosemary's Baby (1968)
Director: Roman Polanski | Year: 1968 | Runtime: 137 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: rent on Apple TV / Prime Video
Roman Polanski's slow-burning masterpiece trades gore for creeping psychological dread. Mia Farrow plays a young wife in a New York apartment who suspects her neighbors — and her husband — of a sinister occult plot around her pregnancy. The ambiguity, the suffocating paranoia, and the devastating finale make it one of the most influential horror films ever.
Ruth Gordon won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, a rarity for the genre, and it set the template for satanic and pregnancy horror.
Pros:
- Mia Farrow's fragile, unforgettable lead turn
- Slow-build paranoia over cheap shocks
- An Oscar-winning supporting performance
- A devastating, much-imitated finale
Cons:
- Very slow pace by modern standards
- More dread than overt scares
Verdict: The definitive psychological horror — proof that suggestion can terrify more than spectacle.
Which One Should You Watch Tonight?
What Makes a Great Horror Movie
- Dread over jump scares — The films that last, like *The Shining* and *Rosemary's Baby*, build slow, suffocating tension rather than relying on a loud noise.
- A villain you can't forget — Michael Myers, Norman Bates, and Leatherface endure because their menace is iconic and specific.
- Craft you can feel — Sound design, practical effects, and cinematography do the work in *The Exorcist* and *The Thing* far more than digital tricks.
- Real human stakes — *Hereditary* and *Get Out* terrify because we care about the people and the ideas underneath the horror.
- Rewatch value — Great horror reveals new details on a second viewing, from the clues in *Get Out* to the symbolism in *The Shining*.
What matters less than the hype: buckets of gore and a high body count. *Rosemary's Baby* and *Halloween* barely show blood yet terrify, while many gore-soaked films are forgotten in a year. Atmosphere, character, and craft outlast shock value every time.
FAQ
What is the scariest horror movie of all time? The Exorcist (1973) consistently tops scariest-movie polls for its relentless dread, practical effects, and committed performances, and it was the first horror film nominated for Best Picture.
What is the best value or most rewatchable horror film? The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), made for about $140,000, delivers more terror per dollar than nearly any film and remains hugely rewatched and influential.
Which horror movie is best for beginners? Halloween (1978) and Get Out (2017) are accessible entry points — *Halloween* for classic suspense and *Get Out* for smart, modern scares that aren't overly gory.
Which horror films have won Academy Awards? The Exorcist won two Oscars, Get Out won Best Original Screenplay, Rosemary's Baby won Best Supporting Actress, and Alien won Best Visual Effects.
What is the best modern horror movie? Hereditary (2018) and Get Out (2017) lead the modern era, pairing critical acclaim with genuine scares and Toni Collette's and Daniel Kaluuya's standout performances.
What horror movie has the best practical effects? The Thing (1982) features Rob Bottin's groundbreaking practical creature effects, still considered among the most impressive and disturbing ever filmed.
Bottom Line
The Best Overall horror film is The Exorcist — William Friedkin's 1973 landmark that still terrifies and broke horror into the awards conversation. Our Best Value pick is The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, a cheap independent film that out-scares productions many times its cost.
For atmospheric dread, choose *The Shining* or *Rosemary's Baby*; for slasher thrills, *Halloween* or *Psycho*; for smart modern fear, *Get Out* or *Hereditary*; for body horror, *The Thing* or *Alien*. Use the decision tree above to match tonight's mood, and you will land on a film that has earned its place among the scariest ever made.
Sources
- IMDb — top horror films
- Rotten Tomatoes — best horror movies
- Metacritic — horror reviews
- Letterboxd — highest-rated horror
- Roger Ebert — Great Movies archive
- Variety — film reviews and history
- The Criterion Collection — horror titles
- Shudder — horror streaming
- Academy Awards — official winners database
- AFI — film history and rankings
*Horror movies review — best horror films, rankings, ratings, where to stream, and a review of the scariest movie picks of all time.*