The 55 Best Horror Films From the '80s

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The '80s were a phenomenal time for aficionados of the gruesome, the gory, and the ghoulish. Both independent and mainstream cinematic offerings delivered chills that stayed with you long after you left the theater and curled up in bed, wondering what might be lurking in your closet—or just outside your window.

In honor of an era that took major risks with the malleable horror genre, we’ve gathered our favorite scary movies from the decade. From director Ulli Lommel’s The Boogeyman to the Stephen King-inspired Christine, these horror flicks are both campy and frightening. Ahead of Halloween, we recommend watching any (or all!) of the following thrillers to get into the spooky spirit. So, without further ado, here are the 55 best horror films from the '80s.


a group of people sitting in a room
Courtesy IMDb

55. Silver Bullet (1985)

Max

In Silver Bullet a quiet town is disrupted by a series of murders that no officer can solve. Naturally, the town's residents try to hunt the assailant on their own but that comes at a deadly price. As the town’s paranoia grows, Marty, a young boy in a wheelchair discovers a werewolf lurking among them. Poised with information that no one else has, Marty decides to catch the killer on his own.


a person with the mouth open
Courtesy IMDb

54. Christine (1983)

Youtube

Christine might be one of Stephen King's strangest novels, but it makes for a campy adventure. The film follows Arnie Cunningham, a high school nerd, who buys a 1958 Plymouth Fury in hopes of becoming popular. For a while, it works. Who can resist a dope ride? Unfortunately, Arnie’s luck changes when he learns the car is possessed by a vicious spirit.


a monkey on top of a car
Courtesy IMDb

53. Cujo (1983)

Max

If you’re scared of dogs, this is not the movie for you. Cujo follows a fluffy St.Bernard who gets bitten by a bat. Thankfully, Cujo survives the attack, but the bat's venom transforms him into a violent beast. When Cujo goes on a deadly rampage through town, his fear-struck owners try their best to stop him.


a couple of men posing for the camera
Courtesy of IMDb

52. The Lost Boys (1987)

Max Amazon

The Lost Boys follows a pair of brothers, Michael and Sam, who move to northern California with their mom. Being the new kid on the block is never easy, but they both meet new friends. Sam opts for a group of comic-book nerds. And, Michael? Well, he befriends David, a tough guy who turns out to be the leader of a vampire gang.


the boogeyman still
Courtesy of IMDb

51. The Boogeyman (1980)

Amazon Prime

In The Boogeyman, a young boy murders his mother's abusive boyfriend while his sister watches through a mirror. Years later, the mirror is broken, which should be fine—except, the man’s evil spirit was trapped inside. To make matters worse, he’s hell-bent on getting revenge.


Doll, Fiction, Human body, Flesh, Musical instrument, Room, Toy, Musician,
United Artists

50. Motel Hell (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

A satiric take on some of its most famous genre predecessors, this wacko horror-comedy involves a motel-operating couple who sell smoked meats that are really their guests/victims, whom they bury up to their necks in a "secret garden" until they're ready to be harvested.


Fiction, Room, Darkness, Photography, Fictional character, Art, Black hair, Games,
Universal Pictures

49. The Funhouse (1981)

Amazon Apple TV

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre director Tobe Hooper goes back to the deformed-masked-psycho well with this entertaining 1981 B-movie, in which four teenagers decide to spend the night at a carnival—which already sounds like a bad idea—only to then have their fun ruined by a giant mutant freak with a penchant for violence.


Fun, Gesture, Long hair, Hand, Smile, Photography, Brown hair,
Paramount Pictures

48. April Fool's Day (1986)

Amazon Apple TV

Buoyed by one of the all-time great horror-movie posters, this 1986 cult classic hybridizes the slasher film and the manor house murder-mystery, detailing a group of college kids' weekend getaway that turns bloody when someone begins picking them off.


Plaid, Snapshot, Facial hair, Fun, Standing, Human, Shoulder, Design, Mouth, Beard,
New Century Entertainment

47. The Gate (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

The big-screen debut of Stephen Dorff (at the age of 14), Tibor Takács film is a superior midnight movie about some kids who, left home alone for the weekend by their parents, discover that the construction worker-created hole in their backyard is actually a portal to Hell—and furthermore, that clues to how it works can be found in a heavy metal album's lyrics.


Personal protective equipment, Gas mask, Mask, Costume, Helmet, Headgear, Fictional character,
Paramount Pictures

46. My Bloody Valentine (1981)

Amazon Apple TV

George Mihalka's 1981 slasher film isn't particularly inventive, but it makes up for its rote premise (about kids being stalked by a vengeful fiend on Valentine's Day) with decent plotting, a memorable villain in a mining mask, and a level of violence that was deemed so extreme by the MPAA, the uncut version has still never been released.


Face, Head, Hat, Headgear, Fashion accessory, Photography, Smile,
New World Pictures

45. Children of the Corn (1984)

Amazon Apple TV

Based on Stephen King's short story of the same name, this adolescent nightmare charts the ordeal of a couple that winds up in a Nebraska town where the kids—highlighted by the unforgettably sinister Malachai (Courtney Gains)—have decided that ritualistically killing adults is the best way to guarantee a good corn harvest.


Barechested, Chest, Flesh, Chest hair,
Universal Pictures

44. An American Werewolf in London (1981)

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John Landis' seminal 1981 horror-comedy strikes just the right balance between the terrifying and the absurd through its story of two American backpackers in England who are attacked by a werewolf, leaving one dead and the other to await his lycanthropic fate. Frequently amusing, it also boasts groundbreaking monster-transformation effects by Rick Baker.


Head, Sculpture, Forehead, Human, Art, Statue, Wrinkle, Smile,
Image Entertainment

43. Bad Taste (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

Peter Jackson's splatter-ific calling card, this gonzo 1987 effort is nominally concerned with a small New Zealand town under siege from aliens, but it's really about the insanely gory, over-the-top B-movie special effects that Jackson created on his own.


Hair, Face, Nose, Cheek, Chin, Child, Blue, Hairstyle, Head, Lip,
United Artists

42. Child's Play (1988)

Amazon Apple TV

Tom Holland's franchise-starting 1988 hit tapped into the underlying creepiness of kids' playthings with its story of a serial killer who transfers his soul into a popular doll, and then attempts to leapfrog back into a young boy's body—a loopy idea that's largely sold by the design of Chucky, and by Brad Dourif's voicework for the villain.


Portrait, Art, Games, Illustration,
United Artists

41. Pumpkinhead (1988)

Amazon Apple TV

Special effects maestro Stan Winston's directorial debut is a sturdy supernatural revenge saga about an Appalachian mountain man (Lance Henriksen) who, with the aid of a backwoods witch, conjures the legendary (and magnificent-looking) Pumpkinhead demon to kill those who murdered his son—a decision that ultimately comes back to haunt him.


Santa claus, Christmas, Facial hair, Fictional character, Beard, Holiday,
TriStar Pictures

40. Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)

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One of the most traumatizing horror movies of the era (especially if you were (un)lucky enough to see it at an early age), this scuzzy slasher film concerns a young boy who witnesses his parents' brutal murder at the hands of a lunatic in a Santa Claus costume, and then years later turns into a likeminded killer.


trick-or-treat, Pumpkin, Jack-o'-lantern, Vegetarian food, Art,
Universal Pictures

39. Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)

Amazon Apple TV

The only Halloween film to not feature Michael Myers—it was intended to turn the franchise into more of an anthology-style series—Season of the Witch (about a conspiracy involving Halloween masks) remains a uniquely unsettling stand-alone film in an E.C. Comics-by-way-of-John-Carpenter tradition.


Forehead, Head, Chin, Nose, Barechested, Human, Chest, Fun, Cool, Neck,
Greycat Films

38. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986)

Amazon Apple TV

The film that launched the career of Michael Rooker, John McNaughton's seminal 1986 serial-killer film takes a gritty, no-frills docudrama approach to its story (based on real-life convict Henry Lee Lucas) about a psycho and his partner-in-crime acting on their murderous impulses.


Tree, Glasses, Cool, Beard, Facial hair, Headgear, Adaptation, Temple, Plant, Photography,
Paramount Pictures

37. Pet Sematary (1989)

Amazon Apple TV

It may not quite live up to its Stephen King source material, but Mary Lambert's 1989 adaptation nonetheless captures the overarching don't-make-deals-with-the-devil mood of its story—about a man who uses a mystical pet cemetery to bring his toddler son back from the grave—while also climaxing with a depiction of childlike evil that three decades later remains downright disturbing.


Fictional character, Movie, Fiction, Shout, Screenshot,
Columbia Pictures

36. Fright Night (1985)

Amazon Apple TV

Tom Holland's stellar horror-comedy pits a young suburban teenager (William Ragsdale) and his midnight-movie TV host idol (Roddy McDowall) against a new next-door neighbor (Chris Sarandon) who, it turns out, is actually a bloodsucking creature of the night.


Human, Movie,
United Film Distribution Company

35. Day of the Dead (1985)

Amazon Apple TV

The third installment in George A. Romero's pioneering zombie series is a scary and smart story about a group of post-apocalyptic survivors in an underground bunker who find themselves increasingly at each other's throats, all while a team of scientists attempt to find a cure for the plague through research that includes domesticating a brain-muncher known as Bub.


Cheek, Finger, Fun, People, Hairstyle, Skin, Photograph, White, Happy, Facial expression,
Cecchi Gori/CDI

34. Opera (1987)

Apple TV

No one stages murder quite like Dario Argento, who continued to cement his reputation as the master of the giallo (a particular strain of lurid Italian thriller) with this saga of an opera understudy who becomes the lead in a new production of Macbeth, only to then be terrorized by one of Argento's trademark, never-seen-except-his-gloved-hands fiends.


Face, Facial expression, Head, Nose, Eye, Human, Mouth, Organ, Lip, Snout,
Embassy Pictures

33. The Howling (1981)

Amazon Apple TV

Joe Dante's contribution to the werewolf genre was this 1981 gem (co-written by John Sayles), which tracks Dee Wallace's TV news reporter—still traumatized by her run-in with a serial killer—to a remote resort where she finds herself in all sorts of full moon-triggered trouble.


Flesh, Fictional character, Screenshot,
New World Pictures

32. The Stuff (1985)

Amazon Apple TV

Fringe auteur Larry Cohen delivers an amusingly horrific satire of American appetites with this underappreciated B-movie about a mysterious yogurt-like diet snack that becomes a national sensation. There's just one side-effect: The Stuff turns consumers into zombie-like monsters.


Nose, Mouth, Cheek, Flesh, Jaw, Eating, Human, Lip, Close-up, Neck,
United Artists

31. Cannibal Holocaust (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

With all due respect to its equally revolting kindred spirits (Cannibal Ferox in particular), Ruggero Deodato's infamous Cannibal Holocaust still stands as one of the most morally repulsive—and, admittedly, effective—horror movies of the decade, courtesy of extreme violence that was either thought to be real (involving humans) or was real (involving animals).


Photography,
TriStar Pictures

30. The Hitcher (1986)

Amazon Apple TV

Further emphasizing The Texas Chainsaw Massacre's point that picking up strangers on the side of the road is a very bad idea, Robert Harmon's 1986 thriller offers up Rutger Hauer as a psycho hitchhiker who makes life a living hell for nice-guy driver C. Thomas Howell.


Lighting, Temple, Night, Darkness,
Associated Film Distribution

29. The Changeling (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

George C. Scott brings a measure or gravitas to this haunted-house tale, about a composer who, still mourning the death of his wife and child, moves across the country to an eerie estate that boasts a ghost who likes to play ball.


Art,
Warner Bros.

28. Creepshow (1982)

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Inspired by the macabre tales of E.C. Comics, this Stephen King-George A. Romero collaboration is a phenomenal anthology, highlighted by a short in which Leslie Nielsen gets revenge on Ted Danson by burying him up to his neck in sand right in front of the ocean's tide line.


Face, Forehead, Chin, Jaw, Neck, Dress shirt, Pleased,
New Century Vista Film Company

27. The Stepfather (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

Long before he was stranded on Lost, Terry O'Quinn was a nutcase weaseling his way into new families as a stepfather—and then going off the bloody deep end like a cross between Jack Torrance and Norman Bates when things don't conform to his Reagan-era values.


Canidae, Dog, Dog breed, Carnivore, Dog walking, Photography, Companion dog, Leash, German shepherd dog, Kunming wolfdog,
Fulvia Film

26. The Beyond (1981)

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Famed Italian horror director Lucio Fulci's The Beyond is a gruesome head-trip about a Louisiana hotel that contains the doorway to Hell, and the new owner who unwittingly opens it, thus instigating all sorts of nasty, hallucinatory Satanic madness that concludes with one of the great shots in all of '80s horror cinema.


Musical instrument, Musician, Music,
Warner Bros.

25. Creepshow 2 (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

George A. Romero may not have directed this sequel to his anthology hit, but he and Stephen King nonetheless had a guiding hand in its production—and in making it better than its predecessor, thanks to the strikingly sinister tale, "The Raft."


Zombie, Face, Head, Flesh, Fictional character, Mouth, Forehead, Human, Fiction, Jaw,
Universal Pictures

24. Prince of Darkness (1987)

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More than a little bit bonkers—and better off for it—John Carpenter's severely undervalued Prince of Darkness stars the director's Halloween lead Donald Pleasance as a priest who believes that a cylinder of green goo is actually Satan.


Darkness, Performance, Games, Photography, Performing arts, Scene, Flash photography, Night,
New World Pictures

23. Hellraiser (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

Clive Barker paved the way for S&M-style horror with this adaptation of his novella The Hellbound Heart, about a mysterious puzzle box that functions as the portal to a sadomasochistic dimension ruled by a race of nasty "Cenobite" creatures led by the porcupine-y Pinhead.


Water transportation, Vehicle, Canoe, Boat, Boats and boating--Equipment and supplies, Reflection, Watercraft, Water, Boating, Recreation,
Paramount Pictures

22. Friday the 13th (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

The one that truly started it all, Sean S. Cunningham's Friday the 13th may not feature Jason Voorhees as its actual villain (he wouldn't even don his trademark hockey mask until 1982's Friday the 13th Part 3), but it remains the template upon which a legion of subsequent slasher films were based.


Movie, Photography, Fictional character, Art,
Analysis Film Releasing Corporation

21. Maniac (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

The first of two William Lustig features to make this list, 1980's Maniac is a deranged and decidedly unsettling exploitation saga about a crazed loner with a fondness for decorating department store mannequins with the scalps of his many innocent victims.


Butcher, Flesh, Human, Cuisine, Food, Meat, Dish,
Empire International Pictures

20. Re-Animator (1985)

Amazon Apple TV

Stuart Gordon's loose H.P. Lovecraft adaptation is a delirious Frankensteinian riff about a demented medical student (Jeffrey Combs, in a role that rightly turned him into a B-movie icon) who discovers the means of bringing things back from the dead—albeit with a few unexpected, unpleasant side effects.


Light, Darkness, Lighting, Night, Fun, Room, Reflection, Photography, Midnight, Candle,
Columbia Pictures

19. Happy Birthday to Me (1981)

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A wackadoo genre work marked by its bizarre methods of murder and its even more bizarre narrative twists and turns, Happy Birthday to Me is the rare slasher film that constantly keeps one on its toes—up to its surprising final revelations.


Blond, Fun, Sitting, Long hair, Conversation, Brown hair, Event, Scene,
New World Pictures

18. The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)

Amazon Apple TV

Rife with all sorts of psychosexual imagery—none better than the poster-ready sight of cowering women spied through the legs of a man wielding a phallic power drill—this slasher-film anomaly ultimately proves a distinctly feminist (and fight-the-male-power) take on the genre.


Youth, Fun, Leisure, Vacation, Event, Recreation, T-shirt, Child, Style, Smile,
United Film Distribution Company

17. Sleepaway Camp (1983)

Amazon Apple TV

An obvious descendant of Friday the 13th, Robert Hiltzik's Sleepaway Camp is an above-average suspense story about kids being slaughtered at an overnight camp by a mysterious assailant—until, that is, its superbly shocking finale, which stands as the decade's biggest (and best) horror blindside.


Movie, Human, Screenshot, Darkness, Fictional character, Scene, Action film, Digital compositing, Fiction,
New Line Cinema

16. The Evil Dead (1981)

Amazon Apple TV

Sam Raimi's breakthrough indie set the stage for the director's particularly rambunctious style, as well as established the peerless comedic-hero persona of star Bruce Campbell.


Face, Zombie, Human, Eye, Flesh, Fictional character, Fiction,
Shapiro-Glickenhaus Entertainment

15. Maniac Cop (1988)

Apple TV

Featuring one of the all-time great taglines ("You Have the Right to Remain Silent…Forever"), William Lustig and Larry Cohen's Maniac Cop follows a traditional return-of-the-repressed formula via its portrait of a vengeful resurrected cop who comes back from the great beyond in order to punish the corrupt officials who locked him up with those he'd previously put away.


Hair, Face, Blond, Child, Nose, Eye, Hairstyle, Lip, Cheek, Organ,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

14. Poltergeist

Amazon Apple TV

Regardless of whether you believe Poltergeist was helmed by credited director Tobe Hooper or (as rumors have long suggested) producer Steven Spielberg, this TV-phobic haunted-house thriller delivers unforgettable scares and a classic horror-cinema line ("They're heeeere"), as well as a rather touching portrait of the strength of the American nuclear family.


Yellow, Event, Performance, Photography, Musician, Costume, Musical ensemble,
Warner Bros.

13. Gremlins (1984)

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One of Amblin Entertainment's finest productions, this darkly humorous holiday horrorshow (directed by Joe Dante, executive produced by Steven Spielberg, and written by Chris Columbus) revolves around a strange furry pet named Gizmo who, if touched by water or fed after midnight, sprouts hordes of maniacally evil Gremlins.


Snapshot, Muscle, Fun, Sitting, Photography, Smile, Child, Black hair,
20th Century Fox

12. The Fly (1986)

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David Cronenberg's big-budget body-horror saga (a loose adaptation of George Langelaan's story and the ensuing Vincent Price film) details the efforts of a scientist (Jeff Goldblum) to create a teleportation device, and the hideous consequences of his experiment when a fly accidentally gets into his machine.


Leather jacket, Movie, Jacket, Fictional character,
DeLaurentiis Entertainment Group

11. Near Dark (1987)

Amazon Apple TV

Kathryn Bigelow's 1987 film is an unbelievably moody, stylish vampire-Western hybrid that's as romantic as it is tense, and features a number of cast members (Lance Henriksen, Jenette Goldstein, and Bill Paxton) from her future husband (er, ex-husband) James Cameron's Aliens.


Room, Darkness, Photography, Media, Fictional character, Television, Television set,
Universal Pictures

10. Videodrome (1983)

Amazon Apple TV

A year after Poltergeist suggested that television was a disruptive force in the American family, David Cronenberg suggested that it was a conduit toward a "new flesh" in Videodrome, a madness-infected film about a Canadian TV station owner (James Woods) who stumbles upon—to his eternal, hellish-hallucinatory dismay—a broadcast of red-room torture.


Face, Nose, Eyebrow, Facial expression, Skin, Lip, Cheek, Head, Close-up, Chin,
Titanus

9. Tenebre (1982)

Apple TV

Dario Argento's best film is this superlative giallo from 1982, in which an American writer, while in Rome to promote his new book, becomes embroiled in a police case about a serial killer whose methods may be modeled after those found in his novel. Few horror films have ever been this vividly awash in issues of twisted sexuality, voyeurism, gender power dynamics, mirror-image doubling, and the role between artist and spectator.


Atmospheric phenomenon, Sky, Atmosphere, Screenshot, Mist, Illustration, Darkness, Photography, Cloud, Fictional character,
AVCO Embassy Pictures

8. The Fog (1980)

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John Carpenter's follow-up to 1978's Halloween is an old-fashioned ghost story about drowned mariners who return to exact revenge on the descendants of those who lured them to their death—a tale that's elevated by Carpenter's unparalleled mastery of widescreen visuals.


Fiction, Fun, Movie, Human, Darkness, Fictional character, Flesh, Scene, Smile, Screenshot,
Cannon Releasing

7. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2 (1986)

Apple TV

How do you follow up one of cinema's all-time scariest films? If you're Tobe Hooper, you take things in a decidedly more comedic direction, and in the process, deliver a second helping of Texas Chainsaw Massacre mayhem that's as goofy as it is grisly. "Dog will hunt!"


Fictional character, Demon, Darkness, Movie, Fiction, Screenshot,
New Line Cinema

6. Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn (1987)

Apple TV

Sam Raimi's Evil Dead sequel is, in large part, a big-budget remake-cum-overhaul of his 1981 original, marked by better special effects, more outrageous camerawork, and a truly larger-than-life performance by ably chinned leading man, Bruce Campbell.


Blue, Sky, Darkness, Tree, Forest, Performance, Stage, Photography,
New Line Cinema

5. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

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Wes Craven turned Freddy Krueger into one of modern movies' great bogeymen with his dreamlike 1984 hit, in which a child-abusing evildoer returns from the grave to punish his killers by attacking their children through their dreams.


Lip, Mouth, Zombie, Fun, Jaw, Fictional character, Smile,
Limelight International

4. Possession (1981)

Apple TV

The craziest possession film ever—and potentially the craziest film ever—Andrzej Zulawski's relationship drama charts the disintegration of a marriage between a spy (Sam Neill) and his wife (Isabelle Adjani), who's soon sleeping with a tentacled monster. In the signature scene, Adjani writhes around a subway station floor while miscarrying. As I've said before, it has to be seen to be believed.


Cg artwork, Digital compositing, Movie, Fictional character, Action film,
20th Century Fox

3. Aliens (1986)

Amazon Apple TV

For this sequel to Ridley Scott's 1979 original, James Cameron shifts the focus away from horror and toward action, though that doesn't change the fact that his continuation of Ripley's (Sigourney Weaver) battle against the alien xenomorphs is an unforgettable monster-movie ride.


Adventure game, Darkness, Photography, Performance, Fictional character, Games, Screenshot,
Universal Pictures

2. The Thing (1982)

Amazon Apple TV

Far surpassing its 1951 Howard Hawks source material, John Carpenter generates nerve-rattling anxiety through his science-fiction-y horror story about a group of Antarctic researchers whose snowbound situation turns lethal when they're visited by an alien who can take human shape—and thus co-exist with them in hiding. Come for the creepy creature effects and non-stop unease, stay for Kurt Russell's first-class performance.


Face, Hair, Facial hair, Facial expression, Skin, Chin, Forehead, Nose, Beard, Head,
Warner Bros.

1. The Shining (1980)

Amazon Apple TV

Never mind that Stephen King doesn't love it. Bolstered by Jack Nicholson's unhinged performance as a father increasingly determined to off his family, and by direction that creates an overpowering sense of dread in every methodical pan and tracking shot, Stanley Kubrick's haunted-hotel classic is the pinnacle of 1980s horror.

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