Browse horror films by the feeling you want. Each vibe page shows curated films matched by mood, atmosphere, and theme — with streaming info so you can watch tonight.

Remote settings. Creeping dread. No help coming.

Unknowable forces. Human insignificance. The void stares back.

Yurei ghosts. Cursed technology. Slow, inescapable dread.

Ancient rituals. Pagan landscapes. Nothing is as it seems.

Unreliable narrators. Reality shifts. Trust nothing.
Anthology horror — multiple tales of terror in one film. Short, sharp, and varied — if one story doesn't get you, the next one will.
Apocalyptic horror — the end of the world, societal collapse, and the terrifying question of what comes after.
Horror films that feel like waking nightmares. Eerie, atmospheric, and deeply unsettling — mood over gore.
Body horror films about transformation, mutation, and losing control of your own flesh. Grotesque, visceral, and deeply unsettling.
Horror films built on claustrophobia and paranoia. Confined spaces, locked doors, and the growing certainty that something is very wrong.
Cosmic horror films about existential dread. Lovecraftian entities, unknowable forces, and the terrifying vastness of an indifferent universe.
Monster and creature horror — from practical-effects beasts to alien organisms. Films where the thing hunting you isn't human.
Horror films set in small towns hiding dark secrets. Friendly facades, suspicious locals, and outsiders who learn the truth too late.
Horror films about cults, rituals, and secret societies. The terror of groupthink, charismatic leaders, and ceremonies you weren't meant to see.
Surreal folk horror films where ancient traditions, pagan rituals, and hallucinatory imagery blur the line between dream and nightmare.
Extreme and transgressive horror — films that push beyond conventional limits. Not for the faint-hearted. Unflinching, graphic, and deliberately confrontational.
Found footage horror films — raw, unpolished, and terrifyingly real. The camera sees what the characters see, and nothing more.
Giallo films — Italy's stylish blend of horror, mystery, and baroque violence. Black-gloved killers, vivid colours, and operatic death.
Horror films that explore grief, trauma, and loss. From Hereditary to The Babadook — films where the real monster is what you carry inside.
Haunted house horror — families in cursed homes, creaking doors, things in the attic, and houses that don't want you to leave.
Holiday and seasonal horror — Christmas terror, Halloween slashers, summer camp nightmares, and films that turn celebrations into carnage.
Home invasion horror — strangers at the door, masked intruders, and the realisation that your safe space is anything but.
Horror comedy — films that make you scream and laugh. Dark humour, self-aware slashers, splattery fun, and the joy of not taking horror too seriously.
Japanese horror films — yurei ghosts, cursed technology, and the distinctive slow-building dread of J-horror.
Korean horror films — emotional extremes, revenge thrillers, dark family drama, and a uniquely intense approach to psychological terror.
Horror films about demonic possession and exorcism. From The Exorcist to The Conjuring — films where evil takes hold and faith fights back.
Horror films that mess with your head. Unreliable narrators, reality shifts, and twists that reframe everything you thought you knew.
1980s horror films — practical effects, synth scores, VHS nostalgia, and the golden age of slashers and creature features.
Revenge horror — the wronged turn dangerous. Brutal payback, moral ambiguity, and the satisfaction of watching the tables turn.
Slasher and stalker horror — masked killers, relentless pursuit, and the primal terror of being hunted.
Horror films that build dread slowly in isolated settings. Remote cabins, arctic stations, and lonely houses where paranoia takes hold.
Art-house and slow cinema horror — meditative, atmospheric, and deliberately paced. Horror for viewers who want to feel, not jump.
Southern Gothic horror — decaying mansions, swampland secrets, and the humid dread of the American South.
Horror films about survival in the wild. Stranded hikers, hostile terrain, and predators — human and otherwise.
Technology and internet horror — social media nightmares, AI gone wrong, digital hauntings, and the terror of being watched through your own screen.
Underwater and deep-sea horror — the crushing dark of the ocean floor, aquatic creatures, and submarines where nobody can hear you scream.
Vampire horror — immortal predators, seduction, and the darkness of eternal hunger. From gothic classics to modern reinventions.
Werewolf and lycanthropy horror — the beast within, full-moon transformations, and the terror of losing yourself to something primal.
Witch and occult horror — covens, black magic, dark rituals, and the terrifying power of the supernatural feminine.
Zombie horror — undead hordes, infection outbreaks, and the collapse of everything. Survival at its most desperate.
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