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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20 Recent Horror Movies Based on Actual Medical Conditions
Favs/dislikes: 5:0. From masterpieces to obscure splatter films, the horror genre has always preyed upon the weaknesses of the human mind. Whether it’s the monster under the bed or the monster next door, most horror films share a common currency: fear and its more popular form of exchange, anxiety. However, there are certain titles that manage to refine this formula and, instead of relying only on supernatural antagonists and murderous maniacs, follow the more intricate paths of psychology and psychiatry. The list next contains a series of recent films that manage to trade their characters’ psychological and sometimes physical wellness for a copious amount of fear. While these movies might feature their own dose of supernatural, the classical horror recipe is not their strong point. Also, most of these productions will cast doubt either on their characters’ sanity or the viewer’s. We went for titles that came out during the past three years and intentionally left out the classics, including Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining and highlights from the 2000’s such as Identity or Frailty. Also note that this list does not contain any actual plot spoilers, but it might “spoil” the thrills you’d eventually get from discovering some of these movies’ key characters. -
80s Horror
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. 80s Horror ive seen -
80sHorror.net's 200 Best Horror Movies of the 1980s
Favs/dislikes: 7:0. A ranked list of the 200 best horror movies of the 1980s, according to 80sHorror.net. -
A Guide to Horror
Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A personal list of horror films throughout history -
A History of Horror and Horror Europa by Mark Gatiss
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Lost Films Der Januskopf (1920) and London After Midnight (1927) are not included. -
A Nightmare on Elm Street
Favs/dislikes: 18:0. -
Abduction Horror
Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "The idea of someone being grabbed from their home, workplace, or a public street, and held or tortured without explanation is a concrete and disturbing reality." -- Elements: (1) Shifting Loyalties, (2) Powerless Law Enforcement, (3) A Show of Force -- source: Horror Films by Subgenre: A Viewer's Guide -
Aero Theater Annual Dusk-To-Dawn Horrorthon
Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Aero Theatre’s annual Horrorthon -
All Horror Movies 1920 - 1929
Favs/dislikes: 9:0. All Horror Movies 1920 - 1929 -
All Horror Movies 1960 - 1969
Favs/dislikes: 5:0. 50 most popular horror movies for each year 1960 - 1969 -
All Horror Movies 2000 - 2009
Favs/dislikes: 4:0. 50 most popular horror movies for each year 2000 - 2009 -
An Exploitation Independent Checklist
Favs/dislikes: 16:0. From the book Nightmare USA: The Untold Story of the Exploitation Independents by Stephen Thrower. (Not complete but will be whenever I stop being lazy, there's just a lot of stuff to add to ICM and...I'm lazy.) -
Another World Entertainent
Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The catalogue of the great Scandanavic movie distribution company. In order of the releases / catalogue number. -
Asia Shock: Horror and Dark Cinema from Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, and Thailand
Favs/dislikes: 57:0. A viewer's guide to accompany the book of the same name by Patrick Galloway. The list features every title reviewed in the book, in the order in which they appear. Please note: Because Galloway includes a review of the American remake of Ringu, I have included it on the list, even though it is obviously not an Asian movie. -
AV Club's The 25 Best Horror Movies Since 2000
Favs/dislikes: 7:0. From the intro of the article: "Sixteen contributors submitted ranked ballots of their favorite horror movies released in the United States since the year 2000, including a few that opened internationally before then. These are not the scariest films of our new millennium, but simply the greatest that happen to occupy the horror genre. As such, we tried to be fairly strict with the definition; films that feel like horror but wouldn’t necessarily be classified as such by IMDB or Netflix—like David Lynch’s two post-2000 magnum opuses, or Pan’s Labyrinth, or Requiem For A Dream—were excluded. (The only film that would have made the list had it not been deemed ineligible after ballots came in was Under The Skin—and even then, just barely.) Conversely, we felt little need to inclusively cater to the major horror trends of the period: Just as it’s possible to love ’80s horror without loving a single slasher movie, one can appreciate where the genre has gone these past 15 years without citing the Saw series, defending the endless string of modern Exorcist clones, or apologizing for the ongoing found-footage movement." -
B Horror Movies
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. list of b horror films to watch -
Best of/Fav - Top-ish Horror [Major Genres]
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Subjective lists or interpreted statistics being "official" lists is silly. This is, as is, any list. #wowisoundlikeadouche -
Best Thriller Movies and Best Drama Films Based(Inspired) On a True Story From Each Country
Favs/dislikes: 4:0. It's my pleasure to present thriller movies with other genres -like Mystery- Thrillers and with sub-genres like -Psychological-Thrillers. Closely related Horror film genre is also on the list which you might find interest. Although drama is drama, i wanted to form an extra list (beginning with the documentary called Ashes and Snow (2005) ) of best films based on drama genre mostly ,expect other genres -in that film- such as romance, from each country. I also wanted to choose -the hope itself consisting one- where i doubted which film to add of that country. When a film belonged to many countries- such as "Babel (2006)"- i have chosen the less knowing one between them- For instance that movie has been considered from Morocco, despite it belonged to Japan and USA as well-. With that taste of choice, i considered movies the less knowing one in cinema where it filmed in another country-such as " The Stoning of Soraya M." is considered as a movie from Persia despite it is filmed in the USA". I have also added some movies which give us a great oppurtunity to see the beauty of related country. Some related movies are Island Etude (2006) from Taiwan, Kauwboy (2012) from the Netherlands. With the hope of this extra list starting with the documentary "Ashes and Snow" will be a guide for you on the drama films which are mainly based or inspired on a true story. I gave the priority of dramas of children or children related ones firstly, and then adults and older people lastly. -
Best Worst Italian Trash Movies
Favs/dislikes: 4:0. -
BFI: A great horror film from every year, from 1922 to now - Runner Ups (2022)
Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The main BFI great horror films list is at [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/bfi+a+great+horror+film+from+every+year+from+1922+to+now+2022/knaldskalle/]https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/bfi+a+great+horror+film+from+every+year+from+1922+to+now+2022/knaldskalle/[/url]. This list compiles the runner ups for every year from the original list (one per year). -
BFI: A great horror film from every year, from 1922 to now (2022)
Favs/dislikes: 6:0. A century of malevolent masterpieces. One film per year. 28 October 2022 By Anton Bitel, Michael Blyth, Anna Bogutskaya, Katherine McLaughlin, Kelly Robinson, Matthew Thrift, Kelli Weston, Samuel Wigley Horror cinema didn’t begin in 1922. There were ghosts in the machine as early as 1896, when the medium’s early magus, Georges Méliès, packed a giant bat, the Devil, various phantoms and a final vanquishing by crucifix into a spooky three minutes. Adaptations of gothic classics, such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and the short stories of Edgar Allan Poe, were already fixtures on the screen by the 1910s – and by 1920 the feature-length horror film wasn’t a scary kid anymore. Alongside a polished Hollywood version of Jekyll and Hyde, those German expressionist lodestones The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and The Golem marked the macabre coming of age of a genre that wanted to frighten, disgust and haunt us. But as In Dreams Are Monsters, our autumn celebration of horror, takes place in the centenary year of both F.W. Murnau’s unofficial Dracula adaptation Nosferatu and Benjamin Christensen’s witchy pseudo-documentary Häxan, 1922 seemed the ideal place to begin our year-by-year rundown of frighteners. Why year by year? Because it’s a better way to plumb the dark corners of horror’s cinematic history than a straightforward top 100. Selecting just one film per year leaves you with some nightmarish decisions for vintage years like 1960 – Psycho, Peeping Tom, Eyes Without a Face or Black Sunday? – and 1973, when December alone saw the release of The Exorcist and a double bill (!) of Don’t Look Now and The Wicker Man. And who really, for 1954, wants to pit Godzilla against the Creature from the Black Lagoon? Yet by travelling through the history of horror a year at a time, we can get a sense of the evolution of the genre – the strange, contorting, lycanthropic process by which we arrive at the fertile market we’re living in today. Bad moons rise, and purple patches come and go: the arrival of Universal’s gothic monster cycle and Hammer; the birth of the modern zombie movie and the slasher; the shots in the arm of J-horror and – though let’s not call them that – the ‘elevated horrors’ of the 2010s. But the journey also takes us through some barren terrain when either censorship took the fun out of the genre (the late 1930s) or audiences simply seemed to lose their thirst for it (the late 1940s and early 1950s). Even on these wind-blasted heaths, however, gems are to be found. Before we get started, an arbitrary ground rule: we’ve omitted any horror films appearing on the IMDb top 250 list on the grounds of over-familiarity. So no Psycho, The Exorcist, Jaws (1975), Alien (1979), The Shining (1980), The Thing (1982) or The Silence of the Lambs (1991). The internet already knows and loves these films. We do too. But in picking over the carcass of a century of terror, we just wanted to keep things fresh. – Samuel Wigley -
Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 1970s
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 1970s -
Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 1980s
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time (1980s) -
Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 1990s
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 1990s -
Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 2000s
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Bloody Disgusting's Best Horror Films of All Time - 2000s
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