Charts: Lists

This page shows you the list charts. By default, the movies are ordered by how many times they have been marked as a favorite. However, you can also sort by other information, such as the total number of times it has been marked as a dislike.

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  1. Horror Movies: An Illustrated Survey's icon

    Horror Movies: An Illustrated Survey

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The filmography of the 1968 book by Carlos Clarens. Also known as "An Illustrated History of the Horror Film", this was a seminal academic study of horror films, one of the first critical studies to take the genre seriously.
  2. Horror Movies I'd Watched's icon

    Horror Movies I'd Watched

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. A personal list of horror movies I'd watched.
  3. Horror Movies I've Seen's icon

    Horror Movies I've Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  4. Horror movies that I have to see in 2020's icon

    Horror movies that I have to see in 2020

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  5. Horror sublist from 501 Must See Movies's icon

    Horror sublist from 501 Must See Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. The official 501 Must See Movies is compiled from a list of about 50 movies from 10 genres. These lists use the second edition which contains between 50 and 60 movies in each genre and breaks them out into their own lists for easier completion.
  6. Horror that gives you an story's icon

    Horror that gives you an story

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. In an genre full of splatter, low budget and cheap tricks, its hard to find an watchable story. These are my favorites.
  7. Horror.media's The 50 Best Action Horror Movies, Ranked (2017)'s icon

    Horror.media's The 50 Best Action Horror Movies, Ranked (2017)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Ranked list, compiled by Tyler Callaway. [quote]I want to present everyone with a fun list that is full of great movies that really can be a great change of pace from watching Friday the 13th or Poltergeist. While those are both great films, they can get old after a while. This Halloween could be much more action filled. The action-horror genre is one that has not been getting much attention in recent years, but with the recent success of films like Don't Breathe and The Purge franchise, maybe we will start to see a trend. There are still plenty of action and gore filled horrors to make a huge list for them though, and that's what i'm going to do.[/quote]
  8. Horrorfest Marathon's icon

    Horrorfest Marathon

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. A list of movies watched during the month of October starting back in 2012.
  9. Horrorshow Hot Dog assignments's icon

    Horrorshow Hot Dog assignments

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All films discussed in the Horrorshow Hot Dog podcast.
  10. Horrorshows's icon

    Horrorshows

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. A list compiled from the entries in Gene Wright's 1986 book, Horrorshows: An A-to-Z of Horror in Film, Radio and Theater. The entries below are found in the following chapters: Crazies and Freaks: 1-70 Mad Scientists: 71-155 Monsters: 156-224 Cataclysmic Disasters: 225-271 Ghouls: 272-285 Ghosts, Demons and Witches: 286-363 Vampires: 364-439 Mummies: 440-453 Werewolves and Other Shape-Shifters: 454-494 Zombies: 495-524 Splatter: 525-549 Anthologies: 550-565 Television and radio programs are also showcased, along with theatrical productions. Those warranting their own entries in the volume are given below: Television: The Addams Family (1964-1966) Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1965) [includes The Alfred Hitchcock Hour] Circle of Fear (1973) [renamed from Ghost Story] Dark Shadows (1966-1971) The Evil Touch (1973-1974) Ghost Story (1972) [renamed to Circle of Fear] King Kong (1966-1969) Kolchak: the Night Stalker (1974-1975) Lights Out (1949-1952) The Monster Squad (1976-1977) Mr. and Mrs. Dracula (1980) The Munsters (1964-1966) Night Gallery (1970-1973) One Step Beyond (1959-1961) The Outer Limits (1963-1965) The Sixth Sense (1972) Struck By Lightning (1979) Suspense (1949-1954) Tales of the unexpected (1977) Tales of Tomorrow (1951-1953) Thriller (1960-1962) The Twilight Zone (1959-1964) Radio: Escape (1947-1954) Everyman's Theater (1940-1941) The Hermit's Cave (1930-1944) I Love a Mystery (1939-1944) Inner Sanctum Mystery (1941-1952) Lights Out (1934-1947) The Mercury Theatre on the Air (1938) The Mysterious Traveler (1943-1952) Peter Quill (1940-1941) The Shadow (1931-1954) Stay Tuned for Terror (1944-1945?) The Strange Dr. Weird (1944-1945) Superstition (1943-1946) Suspense (1942-1962) Theatrical Productions: Carmilla (1976) Dracula (1924) Frankenstein (1981) Television Episodes Frankenstein (Wide World of Mystery season 1, episodes 2 & 3, January 16-17, 1973) Night Gallery (Pilot episode, November 8, 1969)
  11. Horrorshows Secondary Films's icon

    Horrorshows Secondary Films

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A list compiled from the entries in Gene Wright's 1986 book, Horrorshows: An A-to-Z of Horror in Film, Radio and Theater. This list covers the horror or horror-related titles that do not merit an entry of their own, but which are mentioned either within the descriptions of other entries or chapter introductions. Movies listed as thrillers, mystery or sci-fi are included, whether or not they're generally classified as horror, as are comedic spoofs of popular horror themes. Television and radio programs are also showcased, along with theatrical productions. Those mentioned but not warranting their own entry are listed below: Television: The Addams Family (1972-1973) Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1985-1986) Amazing Stories (1985-1987) Climax! (1954-1958) The Godzilla Power Hour (1978-1979) The Invaders (1967-1968) The Invisible Man (1958-1959) The Invisible Man (1975-1976) Science Fiction Theater (1955-1957) Suspense (1964) The Twilight Zone (1985-1989) Way Out (1961) Radio: The Avenger (1941-1942) Latitude Zero (1941) Tales of Tomorrow (1953) The Witch's Tale (1931-1938) Theatrical Productions: The Anatomist (1931) Dracula (1940) Dracula (1951) Dracula (1977) The Golem (1984) The Innocents (1950) Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1979) They Came From Denton High (1973)
  12. House of Psychotic Women: Compendium of Female Neurosis's icon

    House of Psychotic Women: Compendium of Female Neurosis

    Favs/dislikes: 19:0. Every film listed in the appendix of Kier-La Janisse's 2012 memoir "House of Psychotic Women." From the book: "[…]while by no means comprehensive, this appendix is a cross-section of horror and violent exploitation films that feature disturbed or neurotic women as primary or pivotal characters […] Admittedly some films stretch genre definitions, and others fall completely outside of the centre but are nonetheless important progenitors for genre characterizations."
  13. How To Survive a Horror Movie's icon

    How To Survive a Horror Movie

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Appendix of "Additional Study Materials" from Seth Grahame-Smith's How to Survive a Horror Movie (2019 edition): "If you want to become a writer, you start by reading the classics. If you want to survive a horror movie, you learn from the characters who've survived the classics (or at least made it to the third act). Your movie collection is a weapon. Load it with the best ammo available."
  14. iCheckMovies' Most Favorite Horror Films's icon

    iCheckMovies' Most Favorite Horror Films

    Favs/dislikes: 30:0. These are iCheckMovies' favorite horror films, calculated using this formula: favorites / (checks+75) This list includes horror shorts. I used IMDb to determine which films are horror, so there might be some strange inclusions and omissions. Last updated: October 5, 2012
  15. iCM Forum's Highest Rated Horror Movies's icon

    iCM Forum's Highest Rated Horror Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 32:0. This is all the films with 2 or more votes, ranked in order of average rating (ties sorted chronologically and there are lots of 'em).
  16. Indiewire's 15 Terrifying Foreign Horror Films on Netflix to Keep You Up at Night's icon

    Indiewire's 15 Terrifying Foreign Horror Films on Netflix to Keep You Up at Night

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  17. IndieWire’s 35 Disturbing Foreign Films to Watch's icon

    IndieWire’s 35 Disturbing Foreign Films to Watch

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. World cinema has given us plenty of auteurs hell-bent on creating the most disturbing experience possible, from Pier Paolo Pasolini to Catherine Breillat, Gaspar Noe, and Takashi Miike. Below, IndieWire highlights a selection of foreign-language films likely to keep you up at night terrified, or thinking, or both. Leave it to any country except the U.S. to render the worst possible horrors, psychological, physical, and otherwise, onscreen in unflinching detail. While some of these films listed below are, in fact, outright horror films, others take a more psychic or spiritual approach to peeling back on society’s, and humankind’s, worst tendencies — or while querying war, faith, or sexuality. While many of the directors highlighted here made a personal brand out of pushing the limits of extreme storytelling, consider the below just a selection (or starter kit, if you will) to prime you for further viewing.
  18. Influential horror's icon

    Influential horror

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Horror movies that have transcedental-like influence on the viewer.
  19. J-Horror: An Alternative Guide's icon

    J-Horror: An Alternative Guide

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. There's a lot more to Japanese horror than the vengeful, lank-haired spook-girls of Ring, Ju-on and their legion of imitators. Sure, the West may have only recently woken up to its charms, but J-horror has been around for a mighty long time. The first Japanese novel, The Tale of Genji – now nearly a millennium old – is positively packed with ghosts and gruesome revenge. Noh and Kabuki are some of the most haunted theatrical traditions on Earth, and Edo period playwrights were constantly fighting to outdo one another in the gore, murder and supernatural vengeance stakes. Pretty much as soon as the first motion picture camera came off the boat here, someone picked it up and started making horror movies. Jizo the Spook [Bake Jizo] and Resurrection of a Corpse [Shinin no Sosei], both filmed in 1898, predate Nosferatu (1922) by decades. Since then, Japanese horror has come to us in a number of guises: sometimes grotesque, sometimes scary, sometimes erotic, funny or even beautiful. Let's take a look at a few examples...
  20. James Wan Filmography's icon

    James Wan Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. A list of all feature films directed, produced and/or written by James Wan.
  21. Japanese Horror's icon

    Japanese Horror

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Japanese horror (sometimes abbreviated to J-horror) is Japanese horror fiction in popular culture, noted for its unique thematic and conventional treatment of the horror genre in light of western treatments. Japanese horror tends to focus on psychological horror and tension building (suspense), and supernatural horror, particularly involving ghosts (yūrei) and poltergeists, while many contain themes of folk religion such as: possession, exorcism, shamanism, precognition, and yōkai. Wikipedia
  22. Jean Rollin Filmography's icon

    Jean Rollin Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 8:0. The filmography of French film-maker Jean Rollin. Includes only complete films released under his own name
  23. Joe Dante Filmography's icon

    Joe Dante Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. All feature films directed by Joe Dante. Shorts, TV-episodes and documentaries are not included.
  24. KinoKontrovers's icon

    KinoKontrovers

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  25. LatestMovieLists' Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time's icon

    LatestMovieLists' Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "A year and a half ago I put a Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time list right before I embarked on a mission to watch a horror and review a horror film every day for a year. I met that insane goal and have eyed a revamp of my original list for quite sometime now. In doing that, I decided to up it to a top 100 horror movies."
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