The 9 best Netflix Horror Movies to watch this month

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These are the best Netflix horror movies to make every night a fright night

The best Netflix horror movies are a great alternative to therapy. Just grab some popcorn, turn off the lights, and scream out all your frustrations while zombies go to town. Thanks to the deep pockets of Netflix and the popularity of scary movies, there are plenty of terrifyingly terrific films on the streaming service, from blockbusters that bleed to indies that take the arthouse style turn it into a haunted mansion.

Of course, there are plenty of terrible horrors out there too, ones where the special effects team appears to be relying on ketchup and someone forgot to hire a writer. These can be entertaining in all the wrong ways, but we want to make sure you know where to find the best horror movies on Netflix when you need them. 

Every movie on the below list is available in either the UK or the US so you won't need a VPN – though, if you don't live in either, we can recommend the best Netflix VPNs available right now. So, without further ado, let's get spooky with the best Netflix horror movies.

These are the best Netflix horror movies out now

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Fear Street Trilogy

Year released: 2021
Director: Leigh Janiak

We're cheating a bit here. The Fear Street trilogy is, well, a trilogy of horror movies, so we're cramming three into this one entry, but they work as a singular whole piece incredibly well. There's almost no chance of you finishing the first entry and stopping there, such is this gripping neon-colored slasher. 

Taking more than a pinch of inspiration from Scream, Fear Street: Part One introduces us to Kiana Madeira's Deena, a teenager from Shadyside whose lover, Olivia Scott Welch's Samantha Fraser, has moved to the neighboring Sunnyside. However, the pair get mixed up in a curse that's haunted Shadyside for hundreds of years, and now they must work with friends and family to rid the town of the horror once and for all. The first movie takes place in the '90s, while the sequels go back to the '70s and 1660s, revealing more and more about the curse of Shadyside. This is one trilogy not to be missed, and is absolutely one of the best horrors on Netflix.

Army of the Dead

Year released: 2021
Director: Zack Snyder

Zack Snyder returns to the zombie genre with Army of the Dead. While Dawn of the Dead gave us ultra-fast undead sprinters, Army of the Dead introduces super smart and strong Alpha zombies, who rule over a decimated Las Vegas. A group of mercenaries heads into the city to try and crack a near-impenetrable safe before a nuke wipes Vegas off the map, but, as you might expect from a zombie movie, things go south pretty fast. 

Prepare for all the classic hallmarks of the genre, like shambling hordes that just want to eat, as well as some intriguing twists – like a potential extra-terrestrial connection, and a zombie tiger. The undead tiger alone has to qualify it for the best horror movies on Netflix list.

The cast includes Dave Bautista, Ella Purnell, Ana de la Reguera, Omari Hardwick, Tig Notaro, and Hiroyuki Sanada.

The Babysitter

Year released: 2017
Director: McG

Babysitters in horror tend to get the short shrift. Whether they’re being stalked, stabbed, or taunted over the phone, it’s seldom what you’d dub a “fun gig” for them. McG’s The Babysitter twists this expectation, in perhaps its sole subversion that we shan’t spoil here, to elevate this Netflix Original from what could easily have been a so-so slasher. From the neon-drenched palette of its marketing, it’s clear that this isn’t your typical blood-soaked trip to suburbia.

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Nope, this horror works at being hip. That’s in part to the breezy cool exuded by Ready or Not’s Samara Weaving. In the lead as the world’s best babysitter, it’s her turn that cements the pic as a playful riff on horrors past; whether she’s debating the merits of horror icons with tween scamp Cole or figuring out how to achieve the life she truly desires. While its overly-stylized screen pop-ups might appear needy, they’re not enough to detract from the popcorn frivolousness. 

Gerald's Game

Year released: 2017
Director: Mike Flanagan

Stephen King's hot streak brings with it an adaptation many said was unfilmable. This recent stab, another Mike Flanagan film, proves those naysayers wrong. This is perhaps the most loyal King adaptation, bringing a tome shuddering to life that consists mostly of a woman chained to a bed, alone, in the middle of nowhere. That woman is Jesse (Carla Gugino), whose husband, Gerald (Bruce Greenwood), drives her to a peaceful retreat for a weekend of nookie and $200 steak. 

His ticker gives up and she's left handcuffed to the bedposts with a strange dog for company... oh, and a creeping demon with red eyes that lurks in the shadows when night falls. Carla Gugino's stunning performance piles on the layers of horror from throughout Jesse's past, until the sting in the tail you won't see coming.

Source Link: Mugen Daily

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