
As Halloween 2025 creeps closer, horror returns to the big screen in full cinematic form. This year’s releases stretch across every corner of the genre, body horror, religious terror, psychological dread, and bold reinventions of classic monsters.
MOVIES
Whether you’re into operatic gore or slow-burn suspense, these ten films define the spirit of fear in 2025.
1. The Substance
One of the year’s most talked-about films, The Substance (dir. Coralie Fargeat) stars Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley in a visceral, feminist body horror about beauty, decay, and transformation. With graphic visuals and psychological intensity, it’s the kind of film that leaves viewers both horrified and hypnotized, a grotesque modern fable about what it means to possess, and lose, control.
2. Heretic
Directed by Scott Beck and Bryan Woods (A Quiet Place), Heretic pairs Hugh Grant with Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East in a deeply unnerving tale of faith and manipulation. Two young missionaries find themselves trapped in a house that defies reality, and morality. The film mixes existential dread with supernatural tension, offering one of the most unsettling religious thrillers of the year.
3. Companion
A standout in the psychological horror space, Companion follows a widower whose grief spirals after he begins communicating with an AI version of his late partner. Directed by Drew Hancock, the film’s slow descent into obsession and madness blends human emotion with technological horror, echoing the loneliness of Her and the paranoia of Black Mirror.
4. Together
A surreal, arthouse horror from writer-director A.V. Rockwell, Together blurs romance, religion, and delusion in an intimate portrait of a couple convinced they’ve been chosen to save humanity. Anchored by powerhouse performances, it’s a fever dream that thrives on tension rather than jump scares, perfect for those who like their horror cerebral and haunting.
5. Black Phone 2
Ethan Hawke returns as “The Grabber” in the sequel to Scott Derrickson’s breakout hit. Set years after the original, The Black Phone 2 delves deeper into the killer’s mythology and the psychic network connecting his victims. Expect more supernatural chills, eerie phone calls, and a layered expansion of the universe that made the first film a modern classic.
6. Frankenstein (2025)
Guillermo del Toro reimagines Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein in his long-awaited adaptation starring Oscar Isaac, Mia Goth, and Jacob Elordi. Set against gothic landscapes and steeped in tragic romance, this version promises the emotional depth and visual poetry that define del Toro’s storytelling, an elegy for creation and monstrosity alike.
7. Weapons
Zach Cregger, the mind behind Barbarian, returns with Weapons, an anthology-style thriller exploring interconnected stories of violence in a small American town. With a powerhouse cast including Josh Brolin and Julia Garner, the film dissects masculine fear, power, and paranoia with razor-sharp precision.
8. I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025)
The 1990s slasher revival continues with a fresh sequel from Jennifer Love Hewitt and Freddie Prinze Jr., returning to face a new generation’s sins. I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025) reclaims the franchise’s original tone, suspenseful, sexy, and self-aware, while introducing new faces to carry the bloody torch forward.
9. Sinners
Directed by Oz Perkins (The Blackcoat’s Daughter), Sinners is a bleak, gothic meditation on guilt, religion, and damnation. With meticulous pacing and chilling performances, it weaves Southern horror with existential despair, the kind of film that lingers like a fever dream long after the credits roll.
Dracula: A Love Tale (2025)
Directed by Luc Besson and starring Caleb Landry Jones, Dracula: A Love Tale reimagines the classic legend through romance and fatalism. When a 15th-century prince renounces God after losing his wife, he’s cursed with immortality and condemned to roam centuries in search of her reincarnation. Set against 19th-century London, the film transforms the vampire myth into a sweeping tragedy of devotion, sin, and eternal desire.

















