The horror genre has always thrived on familiar stories. Some of the genre’s greatest titles are adaptations, like The Shining, Psycho, and The Exorcist, while others reinvent existing franchises through reboots, remakes, sequels, or spinoffs. Modern horror has been especially dominated by recognizable IP, from legacy sequels like Scream to Stephen King adaptations and reimaginings of classic monster stories. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it does mean that, these days, original horror stories feel rarer than ever.
Original horror movies are built from entirely new ideas, rather than existing books, TV shows, comics, or franchises. They introduce audiences to fresh concepts, unforgettable imagery, and stories that audiences genuinely don’t know the ending to. Whether it’s the psychological terror in It Follows or recent hits like Sinners, there have been plenty of great original horror movies over the years. Though plenty of horror films in the ’70s and ’80s set the stage for modern entries in the genre, it often feels best to look at more recent outings.

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Ryan Coogler’s Sinners Rightfully Received Critical Acclaim
Release Date: April 18, 2025
Ryan Coogler impressed audiences and critics again with his 2025 supernatural horror movie, Sinners. Set in the American South in the 1930s, the story follows Michael B. Jordan’s twin brothers, Smoke and Stack, as they return to their hometown of Mississipi and open a juke joint for the Black community. Seeking a fresh start, they employ their talented cousin Sammie, whose extraordinary blues music unintentionally connects with the spirit world. The patrons of the juke joint and the twins then encounter something much more horrifying waiting for them on opening night.
Coogler wrote a deeply exhilarating horror flick that uses vampirism to explore race, violence, and generational trauma. Much of Sinners’ acclaim comes from its ability to confidently combine prestige filmmaking with crowd-pleasing horror. Rather than relying on jumpscares alone, Coogler built atmosphere through music, character tension, and haunting imagery. Miles Canton and Ludwig Goransson’s score, Michael B. Jordan’s career-defining performance, and Coogler’s fresh vision led to a deeply personal and terrifying film.
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It Follows is a Cult Classic
Release Date: March 13, 2015
Written and directed by David Robert Mitchell, It Follows centers on a young woman named Jay who becomes the target of a supernatural entity after a sexual encounter. The creature can take the form of anyone, and it relentlessly walks toward its victim at all times. The only way for anyone to survive is to pass the curse onto someone else, which became one of modern horror’s most unsettling concepts. What makes It Follows so effective is its simplicity. Mitchell takes a nightmare-like premise and stretches it into a constant feeling of dread, where every background character seems like a threat.
It Follows’ synth-heavy score, dreamlike suburban setting, and ambiguous rules make the concept feel timeless, so it’s no surprise that the movie became one of the 2010s’ most defining entries in the horror genre. There’s a suffering sense of inevitability throughout It Follows, as both Jay and the audience wait for the entity to finally catch up. It’s rare to have such an original, unique horror movie as It Follows.

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The Blair Witch Project Was a Milestone in Film History
Release Date: July 14, 1999
Written by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez, The Blair Witch Project follows three student filmmakers who venture into the woods to investigate the titular urban legend. Heather, Mike, and Josh hear plenty of stories about the local Blair Witch legend, but they still venture into the Black Hills Forest to see it for themselves. Presented entirely through found footage, The Blair Witch Project blurred the line between fiction and reality so well that many audiences initially believed it was real.
The Blair Witch Project changed horror forever by popularizing the found-footage format and proving that low-budget horror can still become a cultural phenomenon. Rather than showing explicit monsters or violence, the movie instead relies on atmosphere, paranoia, panic, and the fear of the unknown. The Blair Witch Project perfectly understood that, sometimes, the audience’s imagination is often more terrifying than anything shown on-screen, and its stripped-back realism still feels disturbingly convincing today.
3
Get Out Was Jordan Peele’s Impressive Directorial Debut
Release Date: February 24, 2017
Jordan Peele’s incredibly impressive directorial debut came in 2017 with Get Out. The movie centers on Daniel Kaluuya’s Chris Washington, a Black photographer who travels with his girlfriend Rose to meet her wealthy white family for the first time. What initially feels like an awkward weekend filled with uncomfortable microaggressions transforms into something far more sinister. Chris eventually begins to unravel the horrifying truth behind the family’s behavior and the strange atmosphere that surrounds their isolated, lavish estate.
Get Out is a widely-acclaimed horror movie because it seamlessly blends social commentary with genuine suspense. Peele uses horror to explore racism, exploitation, and performative liberalism without ever sacrificing tension or dread. Beyond becoming a cultural phenomenon, Get Out proved that original horror could still dominate the mainstream while having something meaningful to say.

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2
Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Cure is Incredibly Unnerving
Release Date: July 7, 2001 (US)
Japan is home to some of the most innovative horror movies, and Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s entries stand at the top. His opus, Cure, follows Kenichi Takabe, a detective investigating a series of bizarre murders in which ordinary people suddenly commit brutal acts of violence without knowing why. The investigation soon leads to a mysterious drifter whose presence seems to psychologically unravel everyone around him.
The industrial hum of everyday life, grainy and moody visuals, and the characters’ slow, methodical movements all help Cure stand out as a particularly restrained and eerie horror story. Kurosawa creates dread through long silences and empty spaces, slowly eroding the viewer’s sense of reality. Cure’s exploration of the nature of evil, subconscious violence, and repression helped the movie become one of the most influential psychological horror movies and the greatest Japanese horror film ever made.
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Barbarian Has a Deceptively Simple Set Up
Release Date: September 9, 2022
In Barbarian, a young woman named Tess arrives at her Airbnb rental in Detroit to prepare for a job interview she has the following day. Upon her arrival, she discovers that the rental has been double-booked by a stranger named Keith, and what begins as an uncomfortable social thriller soon unravels into something far darker, especially when Tess discovers the secrets hidden beneath the house. Barbarian constantly shifts tone, perspective, and genre expectations, leaving the audience with no clue as to what will come next.
That unpredictability is exactly why Barbarian became such a breakout horror hit. Zach Cregger, who wrote and directed Barbarian, weaponizes audience expectations, repeatedly setting up familiar horror scenarios before twisting them into something stranger, funnier, and more horrifying. Barbarian balances tension, dark comedy, and brutal violence remarkably well, while its underground setting creates an unwavering sense of claustrophobia. In an era dominated by sequels and reboots, the 2022 movie stood out because audiences were watching something new unfold in real time.


