The 15 Best Horror Movies of 2016

The 15 Best Horror Movies of 2016


The Witch
2016 has been a great year for horror fans. Sure there were a few sequels nobody asked for, though a few of those were actually rather well done (the following list sidesteps James Wan’s The Conjuring 2 and Adam Wingard’s Blair Witch, but both films reward a late night watch), and there’s a few franchises we weren’t all that keen on revisiting (apologies to The Purge movies and The Underworld films, but we’ve long outgrown you), but everything from the ubiquitous zombie chase film, artsy period pieces, pastiche chillers, and exceedingly excellent foreign imports had us howling with delight and rejoicing the quality fright fare unspooling before us.

15. Demon
demon
The final work from the talented and troubled Polish director Marcin Wrona, who tragically died by suicide while Demon was still doing the festival circuit in late 2015, this is a deeply affective rumination on the past as well as a bone-chilling cautionary tale about Poland’s ghosts.
Based on Piotr Rowicki’s renowned play “Clinging”, Demon details the wedding celebration of doomed bridegroom Peter (talented Israeli actor Itay Tiran), newly arrived to rural Poland from England to tie the knot to his enchanting fiancee Zaneta (Agnieszka Zulewska). The two have been gifted with her family’s rundown bucolic home where Peter unearths some human remains. The ghost story that follows fusses with the Jewish legend of the dybbuk––a malicious and mean possessing spirit.
Wrona unleashes a wealth of strange, sad, and even darkly enjoyable comedic set pieces and as the wedding ceremony proceeds, eccentricity and danger accelerates in troubling and unpredictable ways.
A fascinating fright film with beautiful imagery, strong performances, and some first-rate psychodrama, Demon indicates a burgeoning talent in Wrona, who most assuredly would have brought cinema to some unusual, eerie, and startling places. Demon being his valedictory film, it leaves a lasting and haunting impression.

14. We Are the Flesh

Presenting an Hieronymus Bosch-like vision of hell, Mexican filmmaker Emiliano Rocha Minter’s We Are The Flesh is easily the most transgressive horror film of the year as explicit incest and heroic doses of cannibalism permeate the post-apocalyptic wastes. Desperate and dangerously underfed, two adult siblings (Diego Gamaliel and Maria Evoli) hunker down in a debris-strewn warehouse more or less occupied by a menacing Mephistophelean-like figure (Noé Hernández).
There’s a bit of a riff on Hansel and Gretel for our two young innocents, though they do not remain innocent for long, nor it their nightmare any kind of walk in the woods. We Are The Flesh in is the kind of extreme and provocative filmmaking that will repel the squeamish while attracting the brave and boastful.
So much of what Minter puts on the screen, while impeccably framed and artfully photographed, is just wrong: graphic sex scenes frisk with eruptions of brutal violence as extreme elements dog-pile on top of one another until everything topples down. Fans who find Marquis de Sade tame and need cinema as outré as possible will get plenty of kick from this alarming and impressive beast.

13. Another Evil

Writer-director Carson Mell’s debut feature Another Evil is an eccentric, original, and gut-busting horror-comedy. Shot on a micro-budget this low-key comedy unravels like a mumblecore Ghostbusters.
After encountering a pair of gross ghosts in their cottage, a married couple, Dan (Steve Zissis) and Mary (Jennifer Irwin) along with their teenage son, Jazz (Dax Flame) take action the only way they can. They track down a supposed expert on ghosts named Joye Lee (Dan Bakkendahl), whose methods are loopy and whose knowledge of the supernatural seems sketchy at best.
After Joey informs Dan and Mary that they and the ghosts haunting them can live in relative harmony, Dan takes offence. He wants the ghosts gone even if it means employing another supernatural expert in the form of an odd exorcist named Os Bijourn (Mark Proksch). Soon Dan and Os are doing really wild things to rid the entities and all the while Os seems determined to overshare his inner desires, grooming a reluctant Dan to be his new BFF.
The cast, particularly Bakkendahl and Proksch, are hilarious, and Another Evil presents a steady stream of awkward laughs, more than a few creepy kicks, and surprising heaps of droll subtlety. If you like cringe-y uncomfortable comedy combined with your horror, Another Evil is right for you.

12. The Invitation
The Invitation
An astonishingly effective dinner-party-from-hell maze of mental anguish, Karyn Kusama’s The Invitation is a superb slow-burn thriller. Will (Logan Marshall-Green) is attending a dinner party at his former abode in the Hollywood Hills, and begins to suspect that the hosts, Eden (Tammy Blanchard), who’s also his ex-wife, and her new man David (Michiel Huisman), may have some nastiness in store for the assorted guests.
Kusama expertly ratchets up the tension in a steady bow from bonhomie to balls-out viciousness while also dropping some smart truth bombs about depression, grief, and surviving the peaks and valleys of the modern age.
Elegant nuance and tangible dismay smartly seesaws with our hero’s troubled psyche and all the slow-building pressure arrives at an awesomely unforgettable finish that’s eerie and alarming enough to have you cancelling dinner plans for the foreseeable future. Essentially something of a small-scale chamber piece, The Invitation makes for a suitably delightfully macabre gem that you’d better RSVP.

11. The Similars
The Similars
Mexican filmmaker Isaac Ezban’s made considerable waves in the festival circuit in 2014 with his time warping sci-fi success The Incident, and now his stylish, strange, and artfully atmospheric follow-up, The Similars, is building a strong case that Ezban is an up-and-comer worth keeping a close eye on.
The Similars is set in an eerie, out-of-the-way bus station in 1968, and plays like something of a Twilight Zone tribute – complete with a Rod Serling-style narration – and is furiously fuelled and fed by an edgy and economical understanding of shots, cuts, and reveals that are rich in ambience and inducing enjoyable anxiety in the viewer.
This film intentionally presses plausibility with gory genuflections and paranoid-addled pastiches as wildly varied as Orson Welles, the Evil Dead, Alfred Hitchcock, and Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Fans of self-reflexive cinema with a taste for the strange, the unsettling, and a playful aptitude for puzzling together clues and complications had best keep close tabs on Ezban, a new cinematic voice who’s called and commanded our attention.
His next film, Parallel, promises amazing and precarious obstacles for a group of friends (including Mr. Robot’s Martin Wallstrom) who discover a portal to parallel worlds. If Ezban is at the helm you better bet we’ll be first in line!

10. Under the Shadow
under-the-shadow
Babak Anvari’s assertive ghost story is made all the more modernistic thanks to a stirring feminist slant that is set amidst the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s. Shideh (Narges Rashidi, brilliant) lives under constant threat of aerial bombardment with her husband Iraj (Bobby Naderi) and troubled young daughter Dorsa (Avin Manshadi) in an outmoded apartment building in Tehran. The sinking feeling of dread the family endures is palpable from the start and this feeling builds as does the story.
Iraj is drafted to the frontlines leaving Shideh and Dorsa alone. Their building is bombed and an undetonated missile brings along with it an ancient evil in the form of a Djinn.
An unnerving fright fest, Under the Shadow supplies a strong sense of danger, an enraging subtext, and an uncompromising finish that’s both chilling and resolute. Miss this film at your peril.

9. Don’t Breathe
dont-breathe
There’s been a buzz around director Fede Alvarez for a while now and ever since his 2013 re-imagining of Evil Dead he’s been cahooting with genre legend Sam Raimi, who acts as producer on Alvarez’s latest terrifying spectacle, perhaps the best home invasion film this side of Kevin McCallister, Don’t Breathe.
Written by Alvarez and Rodo Sayagues, Don’t Breathe settles in on three teenage friends; Rocky (Jane Levy), Alex (Dylan Minnette) and Money (Daniel Zovatto). The trio foolishly believe they can pull off the perfect crime by breaking into a blind man’s (Stephen Lang) house, whom they have reason to believe has scads of dough.
Suffice it to say, Don’t Breathe wastes little time as it smartly twists and tangles its vigorous premise in a supremely well-crafted film that prides itself on nerve-racking sequences, first-rate action, and umpteen unexpected thrills.
Alvarez takes trouble as he piles on the suspense, carefully constructing the narrative with the precision and tension of vintage John Carpenter while also using the derelict neighbourhoods of Detroit like an execrable ghost town, as glimpsed in recent atmospheric horror films like It Follows and Only Lovers Left Alive.
With help from cinematographer Pedro Luque, Alvarez explores the dark corners, obscure passageways, and clandestined areas of the house with damnable delight, unrelentlessly exciting the viewer until the hard-fought finale. Don’t Breathe is a superior chiller and may well be the progenitor of a new horror franchise that’s off to a ghoulishly great start.

The 15 Best Horror Movies of 2016

14 DECEMBER 2016 FEATURESFILM LISTS BY SHANE SCOTT-TRAVIS
8. Train to Busan
train_to_busan_h_2016
This South Korean apocalypse-shaded horror thriller from Yeon Sang-ho––previously known as a director of the acclaimed animated films The King of Pigs (2011) and The Rake (2013)–– is one of the most entertaining and enjoyable zombie genre mashups in a very long time.
For all of its fast-moving, fun to follow, and tightly edited detours, Train to Busan also wisely adds a wealth of social commentary amongst its excellently choreographed action scenes and the expected OTT splatter this type of film requires.
A Seok-woo (Gong Yoo) is a divorced fund manager who hopes to gain some footing with his estranged daughter Su-an (Kim Su-an) by agreeing to take her via train to visit her mother in Busan for her birthday. Quicker than you can say “Snowpiercer meets Night of the Living Dead” the father-daughter pair along with a ragtag rabble of mostly likeable passengers are trapped on a speeding train during an undead outbreak.
Sure, there’s nothing too original or groundbreaking here story wise as the survivors and the zombies who are hunting them revisit every archetypical cliché in the zombie survival playbook, yet Yeon Sang-ho uses such skill and cunning that it never really matters.
Train to Busan is a dizzying, fist-pumping, gobsmacking double dose of genre delectation with enough sociopolitical commentary, drooling dark humor, likeable leads, and ruthless propulsion to please even the most scoffing fright fans. This stylish exercise in End of Days entertainment is emotionally on the ball, and serves up some of the best onscreen mayhem of the year. To miss this train would not be at all advisable.

7. 10 Cloverfield Lane
10 Cloverfield Lane (2016)
There’s something very Orson Welles’s Mercury Theater broadcast to Dan Trachtenberg’s feature-length directorial debut, 10 Cloverfield Lane. After she survives a sketchy car crash, Michelle (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) awakens to find herself in an underground bunker with two shady dudes she’s never seen before.
One of them, Howard (John Goodman), is convinced they cannot leave the bunker due to mysterious circumstances that may or may not involve a large-scale chemical attack of possible extraterrestrial origins. And that’s the Wellesian bit. Is it all a hoax? Are there aliens up above looking to pick a fight?
Howard’s menacing, not-quite-right behaviour has Michelle hatching escape plans and questioning everything in her midst, and Trachtenberg, along with screenwriters Josh Campbell, Matthew Stucken, and Damien Chazelle (yes, THAT Damien Chazelle) keep their hand held close as the film grows all the more engrossing and continually, maddeningly, gripping.
10 Cloverfield Lane is a part of J.J. Abrams’s Bad Robot productions and has been described as a “spiritual successor” to Cloverfield (2008), but whereas that film largely went for large scale disaster-movie conventions with respect and awe for the Kaiju subgenre, this film is a largely psychological chamber piece.
Buoyed by Winstead’s wonderful performance, and a thrilling third act that’s all edge-of-your-seat suspense, 10 Cloverfield Lane is an intelligent, tension-addled freakout that’s also funnier and more satisfying than something this bleak and ominous ought to be.

6. The Witch
the Witch
With perfect period detail and unsettling aplomb, writer/director Robert Eggers’ directorial debut The Witch is in the chilling tradition of William Friedkin’s The Exorcist as fearsome religiosity mingles with stiff-necked puritanical fear.
Eggers, who recently announced that he’ll be following up The Witch with a reworking of F.W. Murnau’s horror classic Nosferatu, carefully constructs this tale of supernatural horror in 17th Century New England. Here we are introduced to young Thomasin (Anya Taylor-Joy), who lives with her parents and siblings in a remote farm, where their closest neighbors are Puritans who view the New Testament differently than they, and so they are essentially ostracized from their community.
When Thomasin’s baby brother goes missing the family fears he may have been abducted by a witch and then before you know it the family goat, Black Philip, is apparently speaking some fucked up shit to Thomasin’s creepy younger twin siblings. As the slow-burning yarn skillfully unspools, the viewer is utterly immersed in a repressive, claustrophobic, and deeply chilling tale.
The production design adds great depth to the story, as do the strong performances, effective and authentic Jacobean dialect, the supremely unsettling sequences with witchcraft––and the monotheistic Christian beliefs of Thomasin’s clan aren’t any cheerier––making for a genre experience that really is quite unique.
The Witch is an original and upsetting historical horror film that would problem pair nicely with a screening of Michael Reeves’ classic Witchfinder General, as both films contain ample frights instigated by a repressive society, a fear of feminine principles, misused power, and a climax that’s both devastating and shocking.

5. The Girl with All the Gifts
the-girl-with-all-the-gifts-film
Director Colm McCarthy (Peaky Blinders) and screenwriter Mike Carey (who also wrote the 2014 best-selling novel of the same name) offer up a tense, intelligent, chillingly provocative, and endlessly exciting British horror film in The Girl With All The Gifts.
The zombie film that World War Z should have been, this film takes the overdone undead genre and resuscitates it ferociously while also revamping a wealth of well-established genre tropes––apocalypse premise, creepy kids, mad scientists––tweaking them in eccentric, imaginative, and awesome new ways.
Newcomer Sennia Nanua is wonderful as the titular gifted heroine of the movie, Melanie, a second generation “hungry” who holds the key to humanity’s bleak future. The cast also includes strong turns from Gemma Arterton, Glenn Close, and the always impressive Paddy Considine.
The Girl With All The Gifts is a sharp synthesis of George Romero, Children of Men and 28 Days Later with it’s own biting revelations. Genre fans rejoice, this is the best zombie film of the year.

4. The Neon Demon

Probably the most polarizing film since Jonathan Glazer’s Under The Skin, The Neon Demon comes to us courtesy of partition-adoring Danish auteur du jour Nicolas Winding Refn (Bronson, Drive).
A kinda sorta obeisance of giallo cinema, The Neon Demon mixes elements of arthouse horror, sticky satire, and Marquis de Sade-level savagery in the seductively sordid tale of of sixteen-year-old wannabe model Jesse (Elle Fanning) and her terrifying odyssey into the Los Angeles fashion industry, where bloodlust, libido, carnal cravings and cannibalism all combat for the whip hand with a velvet glove.
A suitably amorous and atmospheric score from Cliff Martinez helps the unabashedly sensual and endlessly eerie film unfold with just the right amount of hallucinatory expression to this beauty-obsessed tale of exploitation.
Call it pretentious and call it indulgent if you wish, and certainly there will be those who will want to debate whether or not The Neon Demon even qualifies as horror, but any film that is this glossy, this pretty, and also this unflinchingly gruesome demands the attention and adoration of horror hounds. This is a brilliant concept that artfully conjures the dreamlike juxtaposing of bloody disturbance and decadent experience.

3. The Eyes of My Mother
The Eyes of My Mother
Startling and discomfiting from the start, Nicolas Pesce’s directorial debut The Eyes of My Mother is perhaps the most disturbingly formidable horror film of the year. Pesce, who also wrote and edited the film, sustains a precise and extremely well-defined narrative clarity throughout even though he regularly strives for and achieves a nightmare logic that would make David Lynch drool (and the gorgeous black-and-white cinematography from DP Zach Kuperstein adds to this otherworldly effect).
Francisca (Kika Magalhaes) has a thorough understanding of human anatomy thanks to her mother, formerly a surgeon in Portugal, and she also has a rather laissez-faire attitude towards death due to this upbringing, too.
After a particularly tragic event shatters her bucolic family life––no spoilers here, but oh man, it ain’t pretty––Francisca grows up a little fucked up, disconnecting from the world in astonishing ways.
The disquieting journey that Francisca takes the audience on attains a strange plateau between American Gothic and German Expressionism with shards of Park Chan-wook’s Oldboy in there for added oomph. This is a shocking and unforgettable film that should not only signal the start of an impressive career from Pesce, but also from Magalhaes as well.

2. The Love Witch
the-love-witch
“I’m the Love Witch, I’m your ultimate fantasy!” coos Elaine (Samantha Robinson, excellent), in the throes of passion to one of her doomed suitors in Anna Biller’s amazingly audacious film. Elaine is the come-hither antihero of The Love Witch, she has an eye for style and a desire for danger and her quest to find the man of her dreams might backfire if she doesn’t ease up on all the misplaced magick.
Biller’s film is a Technicolor melodrama that’s deliciously transgressive and decidedly dangerous as it explores the antiquated avenues of 60s and 70s sexploitation with glossy contemporary embellishments such as stylized feminist subversion, whip-smart visual savvy––Biller production designed the film with Goddess-level detail––a fitfully nostalgic soundtrack (Biller pops up there, too), stunning costumes (Biller’s work, again), and a variegated yet delightful script (yup, you guessed, Biller wrote it). If The Love Witch doesn’t build a strong case for auteur theory perhaps nothing will.
Ravishing, stylish, playful, and perverse, The Love Witch feels like an enchanted artifact from some distant, far more sophisticated and all round cooler place, and while it may not be a full-on horror film like other films on this list, it has enough incendiary ideas, stylish distractions, quotable lines, and savage stabbings to top any list of fright films. Also, of any film listed here The Love Witch has the best chance for acquiring cult membership with requisite midnight viewings.

1. Green Room
green room
Offering an extremely vicious and unbearably intense punk rock variant on Rio Bravo by way of Assault on Precinct 13, Jeremy Saulnier‘s intense shocker, Green Room, is catnip for extreme action thriller fans and horror hounds alike.
At the ass end of an awful tour, Pat (Anton Yelchin) and his noisy punk band, The Ain’t Rights, are desperate for dough and so find themselves headlining a gig at a backwoods skinhead bar, way off the map, somewhere in the Pacific Northwest.
Soon the band bares terrible witness to something oh so grisly in the titular green room and soon the same room is all that stands between them and a blood-simple, machete-wielding, Neo-Nazi mob, led by a pants-shittingly-terrifying Patrick Stewart.
In Green Room, survival is a fool’s paradise, and hope but a mere blink in a broken beer bottle. As one brazenly executed action sequence follows another in bloody and rapid succession, duress and bloodshed reach a fever pitch.
The sustained intense onslaughts on our tapering heroes effectively obliterates any notions of assurance for the audience. No one and nothing is safe and salvation seems impossibly distant, if at all. A more thought-provoking and brilliantly paced horror film with so palpable a physicality you will not find, not in 2016 or any other year.
Author Bio: Shane Scott-Travis is a film critic, screenwriter, comic book author/illustrator and cineaste. Currently residing in Vancouver, Canada, Shane can often be found at the cinema, the dog park, or off in a corner someplace, paraphrasing Groucho Marx.


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