20 must-see horror movies for 2024

Top to bottom: Kerry Condon in Night Swim (courtesy Universal Pictures), Kathryn Newton and Cole Sprouse in Lisa Frankenstein (courtesy Focus Features), Imaginary (courtesy Lionsgate)
Top to bottom: Kerry Condon in Night Swim (courtesy Universal Pictures), Kathryn Newton and Cole Sprouse in Lisa Frankenstein (courtesy Focus Features), Imaginary (courtesy Lionsgate)
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After wrapping up a great year of horror cinema in 2023, the genre shows no signs of resting on its laurels in 2024. A promising new crop of scary movies is preparing to unleash fresh visions of terror this year, ranging from high-concept slashers to classic titles with new twists to, of course, sequels for some of the most beloved franchises in the game.

There will be new entries in the Smile, Saw, and A Quiet Place franchises, original projects from the likes of Robert Eggers and M. Night Shyamalan, and buzzy titles from several up-and-coming filmmakers. While 2024 will see plenty of horror titles, to get the year started we’ve focused on the 20 most anticipated movies, and listed them here by release date.

Night Swim (January 5)

Starring: Wyatt Russell, Kerry Condon, Amélie Hoeferle

Director: Bryce McGuire

The backstory: The horror year kicks off with a high-concept chiller from first-time feature director Bryce McGuire. Night Swim is based on a short film of the same name, and it tells the story of a family who move into a new house that just happens to have a pool with a very dark history. The new owners are about to face everything from dark shapes moving beneath the water to a terrifying game of Marco Polo.

Founders Day (January 19)

Starring: Devin Druid, Emilia McCarthy, Amy Hargreaves

Director: Erik Bloomquist

Backstory: Horror viewers love a good holiday-themed slasher, which makes Founders Day an automatic watch for genre fans. Already earning early critical acclaim at advance screenings, the film follows the chaos in a small town on the verge of its tricentennial. As an impending election throws the populace into an uproar, a masked killer in a powdered wig starts stalking young people.

Baghead (February 8)

Starring: Freya Allan, Saffron Burrows, Peter Mullan

Director: Alberto Corredor

Backstory: Night Swim director Bryce McGuire also has a hand in Baghead, co-writing the screenplay and lending his name to a film with the potential to provide real nightmares. Starring The Witcher’s Freya Allan, the film follows a young woman as she learns a dark family secret hidden in a crumbling pub she inherits from her father. The title creature, a shapeshifter who can contact the dead, lurks within the pub’s walls. It’s a nice asset if you can keep her in check, but Baghead’s not about to do what she’s told forever.

Lisa Frankenstein (February 9)

Starring: Kathryn Newton, Cole Sprouse, Liza Soberano

Director: Zelda Williams

Backstory: A horror-comedy from Diablo Cody, the writer of Juno and Jennifer’s Body, Lisa Frankenstein has all the makings of a movie that will get people talking. As the title suggests, the film riffs on Frankenstein, following a weird girl in the 1980s (Kathryn Newton) who sets out to reanimate a corpse and turn him into her ultimate dream boyfriend. What could possibly go wrong? The trailers have, of course, played up the throwback fun, but what’s going to be especially interesting is how first-time director Zelda Williams (daughter of Robin Williams) handles the delicate tonal balance of Cody’s screenplay. If it all works, this could be the perfect Valentine’s Day present for horror fans.


Out Of Darkness (February 9)

Starring: Safia Oakley-Green, Chuku Modu, Kit Young

Director: Andrew Cumming

Backstory: Out Of Darkness has been making the rounds at festivals since the fall of 2022, consistently earning acclaim at each stop. Now the film finally has a wide release date. The story of a community of prehistoric humans who must do battle with a mysterious force, the film offers a refreshing change of pace and setting from modern horror movie rhythms.

Imaginary (March 8)

Starring: DeWanda Wise, Pyper Braun, Tom Payne

Director: Jeff Wadlow

Backstory: The filmmaker behind Blumhouse’s Truth Or Dare and Fantasy Island returns with another high-concept chiller, this one based on a classic childhood conceit. As the title suggests, Imaginary follows a woman (DeWanda Wise) who returns to the home where she grew up and finds her old favorite toy, a stuffed bear that had very special meaning for her as a kid. Now, though, as her own stepdaughter starts to develop a relationship with the bear, she realizes that all those things she imagined when she was young were perhaps all too dangerously real. Jeff Wadlow’s previous Blumhouse efforts were lots of fun, so fans are excited to see what kind of thrill ride he delivers this time.

The First Omen (April 5)

Photo: Moris Puccio/20th Century Studios
Photo: Moris Puccio/20th Century Studios

Starring: Nell Tiger Free, Tawfeek Barhom, Sonia Braga

Director: Arkasha Stevenson

Backstory: It’s been almost 20 years since The Omen franchise graced the big screen, and it returns with a first for the long-running horror series: A prequel. As the title suggests, The First Omen will follow the events leading up to the birth of Damien, the Antichrist of Biblical prophecy, which places the film before the events of the 1976 original. Nell Tiger Free stars as a young woman who unearths the dark conspiracy that will bring about Damien’s birth. Given how great Free was in the Apple TV+ horror hit Servant, expectations are high for her performance in this project.

Untitled Universal Monsters Film (April 19)

From left: Melissa Barrera, Alisha Weir, Dan Stevens
From left: Melissa Barrera, Alisha Weir, Dan Stevens

Starring: Melissa Barrera, Alisha Weir, Dan Stevens

Director: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett

Backstory: Radio Silence, the filmmakers who gave us Scream (2022) and Scream VI, are turning their attention to another beloved horror franchise in 2024 with their take on the classic Universal Monsters. As the lack of an official title suggests, there’s not much information to be had yet about the upcoming film, but it will apparently follow a group of kidnappers who unwittingly get involved with Dracula’s daughter. Sounds like a great high-concept horror launcher, backed by solid talent on the screen and behind the scenes.

Horrorscope (May 10)

Cover for the 1992 book Horrorscope published by HarperCollins
Cover for the 1992 book Horrorscope published by HarperCollins

Starring: Harriet Slater, Jacob Batalon, Humberly Gonzalez

Director: Spenser Cohen and Anna Halberg

Backstory: Sometimes the concept alone is enough to get fans hooked on a horror movie, and Horrorscope seems to have that kind of buzz. The plot is pretty much exactly what you’d imagine: A group of friends find begin dying in ways that match their horoscopes, and the remaining friends have to find a way to stop the carnage. Basically it’s Final Destination by way of fortune-telling, and with a young cast led by Harriet Slater (Pennyworth) and Jacob Batalon (Spider-Man: Homecoming), there’s reason to believe this will be a good time at the movies.

The Strangers: Chapter 1 (May 17)

Starring: Madelaine Petsch, Froy Gutierrez, Rachel Shenton

Director: Renny Harlin

Backstory: The Strangers are returning to terrorize us all, starting with a trilogy of new films helmed by Renny Harlin (Cliffhanger, A Nightmare On Elm Street 4) that will tell an all-new story set in the world of Bryan Bertino’s original home-invasion frightfest. This time around, the action will follow a couple (Madelaine Petsch and Froy Gutierrez) who end up in a secluded rental home for the night, only to find that they’re very much not alone. You know the drill with The Strangers films by this point, but what’s interesting about The Strangers: Chapter 1 is its intention to set off a three-part story following the masked killers and their prey, which means there could be a a very different arc and a different ending this time around.

The Watchers (June 7)

Book cover for The Watchers; Ishana Night Shyamalan
Book cover for The Watchers; Ishana Night Shyamalan

Starring: Dakota Fanning, Georgina Campbell, Olwen Fouéré

Director: Ishana Night Shyamalan

Backstory: After launching her directorial career with episodes of her father’s creepy TV series Servant, Ishana Night Shyamalan will make her feature directorial debut with The Watchers, an adaptation of A.M. Shine’s horror novel of the same name. The premise is both satisfyingly simple and quite chilling: A woman finds herself in the middle of an Irish forest, where she meets strangers who must spend each night avoiding creatures who watch them from the trees.

A Quiet Place: Day One (June 28)

Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, and Emily Blunt in A Quiet Place Part II
Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, and Emily Blunt in A Quiet Place Part II

Starring: Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Alex Wolff

Director: Michael Sarnoski

Backstory: After two films following the same family as they fight to survive in a world overrun by sound-sensitive monsters, the Quiet Place franchise heads back to the beginning in 2024 for the aptly subtitled A Quiet Place: Day One. Not much is known yet about the characters, but the film figures to give more details on exactly how the creatures overran the world, what it looks like to survive from the beginning, and how certain humans manage to find some kind of stability in the wake of such an event. The cast, led by Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o, is enticing, as is the promise of watching Pig director Michael Sarnoski try his hand in this world.

Trap (August 2)

M. Night Shyalaman
M. Night Shyalaman

Starring: Josh Hartnett, Hayley Mills, Vanessa Smyth

Director: M. Night Shyamalan

Backstory: As is usually the case with a new M. Night Shyamalan flick, we don’t know much about Trap yet, but what we do know is enticing. A new thriller written and directed by the genre master, Trap will take place at a musical festival. The cast, led by Josh Hartnett and Hayley Mills. is intriguing, as is the promise of a film set in such a volatile, seemingly unpredictable location. It’ll be exciting to see what Shyamalan does here, particularly after his recent success with high-concept thrillers like Old and Knock At The Cabin.

Speak No Evil (August 9)

Speak No Evil 2022
Speak No Evil 2022

Starring: James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Scoot McNairy

Director: James Watkins

Backstory: Danish film Speak No Evil was one of the most shocking, unsettling, and brilliant pieces of horror cinema to arrive in 2022. Here’s hoping the English-language remake has the same impact in 2024. Written and directed by James Watkins (The Woman In Black), the new version of Speak No Evil will star James McAvoy in an eerie, psychological thriller.

Alien: Romulus (August 16)

Photo: Frazer Harrison (Getty Images)
Photo: Frazer Harrison (Getty Images)

Starring: Cailee Spaney, Isabela Merced, David Jonsson

Director: Fede Alvarez

Backstory: For the first time in seven years, there’s a new Alien film, and this time around it’ll be helmed by modern horror star Fede Alvarez, who directed both the Evil Dead remake and the frightening Don’t Breathe. Set between Alien and Aliens, the story for Alien: Romulus is still somewhat mysterious, but the film has a cast of promising young stars and one of horror’s most visceral filmmakers in its corner.

Saw XI (September 27)

Saw X
Saw X

Starring: TBA

Director: TBA

Backstory: After Saw X breathed new life into the franchise with one of its best installments in years, another sequel seemed inevitable. And in late 2023 confirmation arrived that Saw XI would hit theaters in 2024. Beyond that, we know almost nothing about the upcoming film. Saw X left plenty of potential plot on the table for another story set between Saw and Saw 2, and star Tobin Bell still clearly has a lot of Jigsaw menace left in him. Beyond that, there’s just a title and a release date at this point, but if you love Saw films, that’s enough.

Smile 2 (October 18)

Caitlin Stasey in Smile
Caitlin Stasey in Smile

Starring: Naomi Scott, TBA

Director: Parker Finn

Backstory: Parker Finn’s creepy Smile was one of the biggest horror success stories of 2022, a feature that won over festival crowds and regular ticket buyers alike with its tale of a mysterious curse that spreads through trauma, and manifests itself in wide, unsettling grins. A sequel was almost guaranteed after the first film’s box office success, and Smile 2 will arrive just in time for Halloween 2024. We still don’t know what to expect from the next chapter in this saga, but if you like unnerving grins, you’ll definitely want to take this ride.

The Wolf Man (October 25)

Lon Chaney Jr. and Evelyn Ankers in Universal’s originalThe Wolfman (1941)
Lon Chaney Jr. and Evelyn Ankers in Universal’s originalThe Wolfman (1941)

Starring: Christopher Abbott, TBA

Director: Leigh Whannell

Backstory: In 2020, Leigh Whannell revitalized one of Universal Pictures’ longest-serving movie monsters with The Invisible Man, a truly terrifying journey into one woman’s battle against a malevolent ex. In 2024, he’ll try to reinvigorate yet another Universal monster with The Wolf Man, a new take on the classic creature of the same name. There aren’t many details about the story just yet, but the film will star Christopher Abbott (Possessor, Sanctuary) as a man who must get to the bottom of a savage mystery plaguing his family. With Whannell in the director’s chair, this is a film horror fans can’t miss.

Terrifier 3 (October 25)

Starring: Lauren LaVera, Elliot Fullam, David Howard Thornton

Director: Damien Leone

Backstory: For years, Terrifier was a cult classic propelled by practical gore effects and a distinctive villain design. Then came Terrifier 2, and the phenomenon of Art the Clown (David Howard Thornton) exploded onto the wider genre cinema landscape. Thanks to a notorious box office run that featured audience members reportedly vomiting in the aisles, Terrifier 2 proved to be one of the biggest genre hits of 2022, paving the way for a highly anticipated sequel. Featuring the return of stars Lauren LaVera and Elliot Fullman as the Shaw siblings, who seemingly triumphed over Art in the last film, Terrifier 3 promises to be the most ambitious entry in the series yet, and it’ll show up just in time for Halloween 2024. Plus, it’s a Christmas movie, so fans will be rewatching this one all the way through December.

Nosferatu (December 25)

Willem Dafoe in Nosferatu
Willem Dafoe in Nosferatu

Starring: Bill Skarsgard, Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp, Willem Dafoe

Director: Robert Eggers

Backstory: Robert Eggers has been working to get his remake of F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu off the ground for nearly a decade, and it’s finally scheduled to arrive at the end of 2024. There are lots of reasons to get excited about the new Nosferatu, starting with Bill Skarsgard taking on the role of the legendary vampire Count Orlok, alongside Nicholas Hoult and Lily Rose-Depp as the Hutter family, who are plagued by the vampire’s desires. Mostly, though, fans are excited to see how Eggers, one of the most visually precise and dynamic filmmakers working right now, interprets this classic story of terror.