Like with just about any movie genre, you’re probably going to find more original horror movies released in the 20th century than the 21st, since those are the ones that are inevitably going to have influenced numerous films that came out post-2000. It’s harder to be original or surprising the more time goes on, but as long as people find new ways to spin familiar stories and conventions, it’s all good.
And even if they don’t, certain kinds of horror movies do remain timelessly engaging, so with some originality and some films that more or less “play the hits,” it’s likely that horror ain’t going anywhere any time soon. But to focus on those that are more recent and stand out for being original, here are some of the best horror movies released in the 21st century (so far) that aren’t sequels or adaptations, and feel novel in one way or another. So, apologies to the likes of Godzilla Minus One (part of a franchise) and Let the Right One In (a book adaptation), plus the hundreds of other great horror movies that don’t fit according to the criteria at hand.
10
‘Weapons’ (2025)
A young child, running down an empty street at night, in Weapons.Image via Warner Bros.
Zach Cregger was already an exciting horror director thanks to 2022’s Barbarian, but his follow-up, Weapons, was perhaps even more intriguing, confidently directed, and original. It’s about a large group of children all going missing on the same night in a small town that’s then torn apart by the strange occurrence, with various people in said town harboring suspicions about others while trying to get to the bottom of things.
You could say a lot of horror movies are better off if you go in blind, but it really applies to Weapons.
It’s a horror film, a mystery movie, and a dark comedy all at once, plus maybe some other things, but you’re better off just taking the ride this movie provides than reading too much about it beforehand. You could say a lot of horror movies are better off if you go in blind, but it really applies to Weapons (hell, and Barbarian, for the record; consider that one worthy of an honorable mention as both a surprising horror movie and one of the most original from the past 25-ish years).
9
‘The Wolf House’ (2018)
A creepy figure pressed against the wall in The Wolf HouseImage via Globo Rojo Films
Calling The Wolf House eerie would be underselling it entirely, since there aren’t too many horror movies released in recent memory quite as capable of getting under one’s skin as this one. The visual style here is a big reason for that, since The Wolf House uses stop-motion animation in ways that are varied and unique, with lots of that animation happening in a truly 3D space.
And that’s not to say most stop-motion animation movies are 2D or anything, but there is a physical space this movie takes place in, and the animated elements all interact with it in ways that are unnerving and also a bit hard to describe. The Wolf House feels like a cinematic nightmare, but in a way that’s admirable, since it is a horror movie, after all, and terror should be an emotion that’s mined here. Still, it’s surprising the extent to which this one gets terrifying.
8
‘Talk to Me’ (2022)
Sophie Wilde holding the cursed embalmed hand at a party in Talk to MeImage via Head Gear/Causeway Films
Instantly feeling like a horror highlight of the 2020s so far, Talk to Me seemed like it came out of nowhere, even if you were familiar with the Philippou brothers and the cinematic chops they’d flexed, funnily enough, with their YouTube channel RackaRacka. But that channel was more about comedy than anything else, and Talk to Me isn’t very funny, nor is it trying to be.
In fact, it’s very upsetting, and so is the 2025 movie the Philippou brothers made as a follow-up, Bring Her Back. But Talk to Me is fast-paced and visually kind of expressive in a way that lines up with some of the videos the Philippou brothers made before they entered the feature film world, so that’s something. Talk to Me gets bold stylistically and also ends up surprisingly unpredictable on a narrative front, so it earns some pretty serious points for originality, in the end.
7
‘Saw’ (2004)
Adam, played by actor Leigh Whannell, on the floor looking confused in SawImage via Lions Gate Films
It might be hard to call some of its sequels original, even beyond the fact that they were sequels (they really start to blur together at a point, though in an occasionally fun way), but Saw (2004) was a real breath of fresh air back when it first came out. It blended the crime, horror, and mystery genres in ways that had been seen before, but the kind of energy it had felt unique, and so too was the grittiness and low-budget feel of it all a novelty.
Saw famously feels, for at least half or so of its runtime, like the horror movie equivalent of a bottle episode, while the other half of the movie deals with a tense serial killer hunt. It’s not like a half-and-half movie, but it’s the way the two storylines are cut between, and then eventually revealed as related, that really makes this first entry in a long-running series so memorable.
6
‘The Cabin in the Woods’ (2011)
If you only had the title to go off, you’d probably assume The Cabin in the Woods was anything but original, since so many horror movies have involved characters going to some kind of isolated house and being attacked there, either by supernatural forces or someone less fantastical, like a serial killer. And that is what this movie is kind of about, at first, but there’s a lot more going on.
It doesn’t take long for the first twist in The Cabin in the Woods to be revealed, and once it is, there’s a sense of all bets being off in a way that feels genuinely exciting. Also, it’s like Psycho in the way that even if the first twist might be the most surprising, it’s not the only one the film has up its sleeve, and The Cabin in the Woods ultimately remains exciting, weird, and hard-to-predict all the way up until the second the end credits start rolling. At that point, it’s also pretty fun to go right back to the start and watch it all again, catching all the foreshadowing you might’ve missed the first time around.
5
‘Hereditary’ (2018)
Toni Collette as Annie Graham standing in the rain in HereditaryImage via A24
Hereditary might well be scarier as a drama than a horror movie, seeing as it pushes things very far as an exploration of grief and trauma, and that makes it a genuinely uncomfortable watch at times. But then when it comes to horror, there’s also a ton here that’s unsettling… probably. Everyone finds different things scary, and Hereditary is one of those films that got a fair bit of pushback by people expecting too much, or expecting something different.
It happens to critically acclaimed horror movies more than it seems to happen to critically acclaimed movies from other genres, but at the same time, something has to be pretty great to a bunch of people before some other people can find it overhyped or disappointing. Ari Aster’s continued making interesting movies since this one for sure, but none have hit quite as hard as Hereditary (though Beau Is Afraid, which isn’t exactly a horror movie, could well be even more original, for what that’s worth).
4
‘Get Out’ (2017)
Chris, played by actor Daniel Kaluuya, desperately reaches out into the void as he falls deeper into the ominous “sunken place” in 2017’s Get Out.Image via Universal Pictures
Boasting one of the best screenplays of the century so far, Get Out can also claim to be one of the best and most original horror movies of the century to date, but it’s also a bit like Hereditary in the sense that it was hyped up so much that some will label it overrated. Anyway, maybe it’s better to feel sorry for such people, since if you’re not in that camp, Get Out is thrilling.
It’s a movie about prejudice that doesn’t feel like it forces anything or preaches, and it finds interesting new ways to explore things that other (largely non-horror-related) movies might have already done. It’s subversive and approachable at the same time, and marked another great comedy-to-horror transition for its director, Jordan Peele, in a similar way to how both Zach Cregger and the Philippou brothers made such a jump.
3
‘Shaun of the Dead’ (2004)
Zombies walking toward Simon Pegg and Nick Frost in ‘Shaun of the Dead’Image via Universal Pictures
Shaun of the Dead rides a fine line between horror and comedy, being a parody of zombie movies and also a good zombie movie at the same time. It follows a bit of a deadbeat and his even more deadbeat friend, and the extent to which the slightly less deadbeat of the two goes to in an attempt to turn his life around and win back his long-suffering girlfriend, even though there’s a whole zombie apocalypse going on as well.
If you had to pick one genre this belongs to most of all, it’s probably a comedy, since there’s more in Shaun of the Dead that’s funny than genuinely scary, but the final act is admirable for how tense it gets. Also, there’s a bit more here that’s moving than you might expect, so the whole thing ends up delivering on multiple fronts as far as emotions are concerned, and that’s a big contributing factor to why it felt – and still feels – so original.
2
‘Executive Koala’ (2005)
Image via THE KLOCKWORX
A movie most people probably haven’t heard of, Executive Koala is about as novel as horror movies can get, and also, it’s not entirely a horror movie, and is instead Executive Koala. This is its own thing, and words fail to do it justice, but in an attempt to highlight how wonderfully absurd it is… uh… it’s about a koala. And he works a white-collar job. And he might also be a serial killer, but he’s not sure.
So, it’s a bit like The Trial, American Psycho, and BoJack Horseman all rolled into one, plus a bunch of other things, making Executive Koala perhaps the Long Island iced tea of movies. It’s like that cocktail: too many ingredients to the point that it should feel overstuffed and repulsive, but it somehow goes down smooth and then you’re wondering if that says anything bad about you, as a person, but also don’t worry about it; just enjoy your Long Island iced tea/Executive Koala.
1
‘Sinners’ (2025)
Michael B. Jordan starring in Ryan Coogler’s Sinners.Image via Warner Bros.
“Wait, there were so many movies that clearly inspired Sinners,” you might be saying, and you also might be right. This grabs bits and pieces from numerous horror movies both old and somewhat contemporary, and does the same for movies that aren’t exactly definable as horror. And then all those bits and pieces and thrown in a blender, and you’d think it would result in a mess, but Ryan Coogler’s got steady hands and he works that blender like a pro.
It’s the first movie of his not part of a franchise or based on a true-life story, so it’s entirely original and shines as a result. Again, original so long as you’re okay with something that borrows small parts of older movies, but it’s the way those influences are used and combined that ensures Sinners ends up feeling entirely like its own beast.
Release Date
April 18, 2025
Runtime
138 minutes