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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Scariest Moment in Each Texas Chainsaw Massacre Film

Cody

With a Texas Chainsaw Massacre TV series in the works (and a new film also in development), we here at JoBlo and Arrow in the Head have decided to compile a list of some of the Scariest Moments in the Franchise – and for the sake of fairness, we have made sure to choose at least one scene from every one of the movies. Rather than ranking the franchise’s scariest moments from 1 to 10, this list highlights the single most terrifying scene from each Texas Chainsaw Massacre film, along with a few additional standout moments from the 1974 original that defined the series.

Some of the entries in this series aren’t very popular, but on this list we’re trying to see the good in all of them. Give the Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Scariest Moments in the Franchise list a look below, and let us know what your favorite scary moments in the franchise are by leaving a comment.

As you’ll see, the scariest moment in the entire Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise is widely considered to be the dinner scene from the 1974 original, thanks to its chaotic editing, extreme performances, and overwhelming intensity.

Edwin Neal

THE TEXAS CHAIN SAW MASSACRE (1974)

Scariest Scene: Hitching a Ride

What Happens:
In 1974, director Tobe Hooper gifted the world with one of the most intense, terrifying horror films ever made. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (or The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, as shown in the title sequence and on the movie’s copyright) is filled with jaw-dropping moments, with the first scary scene coming early on, in broad daylight. Five young people out driving on a brutally hot day decide to give a hitch-hiker a break from the heat – and instantly regret their decision when this guy (played by Edwin Neal) turns out to be very strange. He has pictures he took in a slaughterhouse, he cuts himself with a knife like it’s a party trick, and it’s clear that if they keep riding with him for very long something terrible is going to happen. Sure enough, the situation falls apart very quickly.

Why It’s Scary:
The horror unfolds in broad daylight, creating a sense of reality and unpredictability. The tension escalates as the hitchhiker’s behavior becomes increasingly disturbing.

Caroline Williams

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (1986)

Scariest Scene: Radio Station Raid

What Happens:
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 is a brilliant sequel, with director Tobe Hooper and writer L.M. Kit Carson increasing the humor while still delivering a movie that is completely nuts. There’s terrific acting performances, awesome gore, incredible production design – and an unexpected but hilarious story of “unrequited love” between Leatherface (Bill Johnson and Bob Elmore) and radio DJ Stretch (Caroline Williams). The sequence where Leatherface and Chop Top (Bill Moseley) raid the radio station is pure nightmare fuel, as Chop Top makes a mess of Stretch’s pal L.G. (Lou Perryman)… but then it takes a turn when Leatherface, tasked with killing Stretch, falls in love with her instead. And starts acting like his chainsaw is an extension of himself…

Why It’s Scary:
The scene mixes violence with bizarre character behavior, creating an unpredictable and unsettling tone.

Leatherface

LEATHERFACE: TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE III (1990)

Scariest Scene: Roadside Tire Change Stalking

What Happens:
Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III was a rough production and director Jeff Burr wanted his name taken off of it, but it’s actually a good slasher movie and a solid attempt on New Line Cinema’s part to turn Leatherface into their next big icon as the Elm Street movies were winding down. That plan just didn’t work out. The Leatherface character (played by R.A. Mihailoff, with Kane Hodder handling stunts), now surrounded by a new family that includes Viggo Mortensen, is quite intimidating in this one and does a lot of night stalking. The scariest scene involves Ryan (William Butler) trying to change a car tire while Michelle (Kate Hodge) holds a lantern for him – but she keeps getting distracted by a squeaking sound out in the darkness. We know the squeak is coming from Leatherface’s leg brace as he gets closer and closer…

Why It’s Scary:
The suspense builds through sound and anticipation, with the audience aware of the threat before the characters are.

Matthew McConaughey

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE: THE NEXT GENERATION (1994)

Scariest Scene: Vilmer’s Antics

What Happens:
Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation is a lot of things, but scary isn’t exactly one of them. The movie was written and directed by the first film’s co-writer Kim Henkel, and he didn’t catch lightning in a bottle twice. Next Generation‘s greatest asset is the performance delivered by Matthew McConaughey in the role of Vilmer, one of Leatherface’s relatives this time around. McConaughey put a lot of energy into bringing Vilmer to life, and this is a guy you would not want to cross paths with. When he gets in heroine Renee Zellweger’s face, strangles her, puts a knife to her throat, sticks his fingers in her mouth, screams in her ear – he really is a scary person inside a goofball movie.

Why It’s Scary:
The intensity of Vilmer’s behavior and performance creates genuine fear despite the film’s overall tone.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2003

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (2003)

Scariest Scene: Suicide Re-Enactment

What Happens:
Director Marcus Nispel’s 2003 remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre certainly gets the adrenaline pumping with its extended climactic chase sequence (it was very clever to set part of this chase inside a slaughterhouse), but Leatherface isn’t the scariest character in this movie. That honor goes to R. Lee Ermey’s Hoyt, who claims to be the local sheriff. In the film’s scariest scene, Hoyt forces a character who witnessed a girl shooting herself in the head to re-enact the suicide, complete with the barrel of a gun in their mouth and their finger on the trigger. Some of Hoyt’s lines are so grotesque and inappropriate that they come off as humorous, but there are times when he gets so intense you expect him to kill everyone right then and there.

Why It’s Scary:
The psychological intimidation and realism of the situation make it deeply disturbing.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE: THE BEGINNING (2006)

Scariest Scene: Draft Dodger Confrontation

What Happens:
The Chainsaw remake didn’t set up a franchise very well, killing off Hoyt and hacking one of Leatherface’s arms off, so they had to make a prequel set in 1969 as the follow-up. R. Lee Ermey’s intensity in the role of Hoyt steals the show once again, and this time he puts brothers Eric (Matt Bomer) and Dean (Taylor Handley) through quite a torturous experience… which he probably would have done anyway, but his distaste for them is increased when he finds out one of them was trying to dodge being drafted for the Vietnam War. Ermey gets to play a twisted variation on his Full Metal Jacket character (and his own real life drill sergeant past) as he deals with these two.

Why It’s Scary:
The scene is driven by psychological torment and Hoyt’s aggressive authority.

Texas Chainsaw 3D

TEXAS CHAINSAW 3D (2013)

Scariest Scene: Monster in the Basement

What Happens:
There are questionable decisions (ignoring that the original film was set in 1973) and bad lines (“Do your thing, cuz!”) in John Luessenhop’s Texas Chainsaw 3D, but it’s an entertaining slasher nonetheless. A standout sequence is a chase that includes a flipped van and a visit to a carnival. But the best jumps come when characters venture into the basement of the house the final girl played by Alexandra Daddario has just inherited and find that Leatherface lives down there. Three times Luessenhop provides startling reveals of Leatherface during a basement exploration scene, so choose which time works best for you: when Leatherface attacks the hitcher (who was stupidly left alone in the house despite being a stranger), nice guy Kenny, or the cop.

Why It’s Scary:
Repeated jump scares and confined spaces heighten tension and surprise.

Leatherface

LEATHERFACE (2017)

Scariest Scene: Gorman House Riot

What Happens:
Leatherface may not be with his family with the majority of this “origin story” from directors Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo (he’s not even Leatherface until the very end), but that doesn’t mean he isn’t surrounded by homicidal maniacs. Locked away in the Gorman House Youth Reformery for several years in his youth, the Leatherface-to-be escapes during a riot. This riot takes up several minutes, and in that time a few of the young patients – Bud (Sam Coleman), Ike (James Bloor), Clarice (Jessica Madsen), Jackson (Sam Strike) – murder staff members and even a couple fellow patients. To be trapped in a place being overrun by violent, disturbed youngsters, as Nurse Lizzy White (Vanessa Grasse) is, would not be pleasant.

Why It’s Scary:
The chaos creates a sense of overwhelming danger.

Texas Chainsaw Massacre

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (2022)

Scariest Scene: Under the Floorboards

What Happens:
After contributing to the Evil Dead franchise but before he went to space for Alien: Romulus, Fede Álvarez got his hands on Chainsaw, crafting the story for and producing this Netflix release, which was directed by David Blue Garcia. It’s a short movie (the end credits start rolling after just 73 minutes), and most of its running time is packed with suspenseful sequences designed to put viewers on the edge of their seats. The scene of hipsters getting massacred on a bus is the coolest part, but there are plenty of options for the scariest. How about when a young woman is trapped in a wrecked vehicle with dead bodies while Leatherface cuts himself a new face mask just a few feet away? Or the extended sequence where another young woman witnesses multiple attacks while hiding from Leatherface in a house? She eventually ends up in the crawlspace under the house – and that’s when Leatherface starts sawing through the floorboards. He manages to clip a pipe along the way, dumping sewage all over the girl. Now that’s scary. I’d rather deal with Leatherface than get doused with sewage.

Why It’s Scary:
Claustrophobia, helplessness, and physical discomfort combine to make the scene especially intense.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) – Additional Terrifying Moments

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

Introducing Leatherface

What Happens:
With their ride running low on gas, Kirk (William Vail) and Pam (Teri McMinn) seek help at a farmhouse – which we’ll find out is the home of Leatherface (Gunnar Hansen). An icon was born the moment this hulking, horrifying character stepped onto the screen and slammed a hammer into Kirk’s head. After Pam finds that this house is full of bizarre works of art made out of human body parts, Leatherface catches sight of the girl and they both let out screams at the same time as he chases her down. She gets caught and placed on a meathook while Leatherface saws up the corpse of her boyfriend. Audiences watching this movie for the first time in 1974 didn’t know what hit them.

Why It’s Scary:
The sudden violence and shocking imagery introduced audiences to a new level of horror.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

Dinner with the Family

What Happens:
After being pursued by Leatherface in one of the greatest chase sequences ever put to film, our heroine Sally (Marilyn Burns) is captured by his family and forced to sit at the dinner table with Leatherface, his brothers the Hitch-Hiker and the Cook (Jim Siedow), and their ancient, hammer-wielding, blood-sucking Grandpa (John Dugan). The dinner scene is pure madness, shot and cut in such a way that it seems like Hooper is trying to drive the viewer insane right along with this twisted family. Burns gave one of the most convincing “screaming and crying in fear” performances of all time, and the actors playing her tormentors gave her a lot to play off of. When Leatherface takes a knife to her finger, Hansen even cut Burns for real.

This is why the dinner scene stands as the film’s most terrifying sequence overall.

Why It’s Scary:
The scene’s editing, performances, and sheer madness create one of the most disturbing sequences in horror history.

Scariest Scene in Each Texas Chainsaw Massacre Movie

  • 1974 – Dinner scene / Hitchhiker encounter / Leatherface introduction
  • 1986 – Radio station raid
  • 1990 – Roadside tire change stalking
  • 1994 – Vilmer’s antics
  • 2003 – Suicide re-enactment
  • 2006 – Hoyt vs. draft dodgers
  • 2013 – Basement reveals
  • 2017 – Gorman House riot
  • 2022 – Crawlspace / floorboards attack

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the scariest scene in each Texas Chainsaw Massacre movie?

Each film in the franchise has its own standout moment. For example, the 1974 original is known for the dinner scene, while the 2003 remake features the disturbing suicide re-enactment led by Hoyt.

Why isn’t this list ranked from 1 to 10?

Instead of ranking scenes against each other, this article highlights the single scariest moment from each film, since every entry in the franchise has a different tone and style of horror.

Which Texas Chainsaw Massacre movie is the scariest overall?

The 1974 original is widely considered the scariest due to its realism, documentary-style filmmaking, and intense performances.

What makes the original 1974 film stand out?

It features multiple iconic horror moments, including the hitchhiker scene, Leatherface’s introduction, and the dinner sequence, all of which helped define the franchise.

Are the sequels as scary as the original?

Most sequels lean more into stylization, gore, or dark humor, while the original film focuses on raw psychological terror.

Which villain is the most frightening in the series?

While Leatherface is the central icon, characters like Hoyt in the 2003 remake and Vilmer in the 1994 film stand out for their unpredictable and aggressive behavior.

The post The Scariest Moment in Each Texas Chainsaw Massacre Film appeared first on JoBlo.


Rebirth of the Living Dead casts scream queens Jewel Shepard, Michelle Bauer, and Brinke Stevens

Back in 1968, writer/director George A. Romero and co-writer John A. Russo managed to redefine the word “zombie” with the classic film Night of the Living Dead, despite the fact that they didn’t consider the ghouls in their movie to be zombies. Romero went on to tell further zombie stories with the likes of Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead, and Russo has also gone back to the world of flesh-eating ghouls with the novel Return of the Living Dead (which spawned a classic movie that was completely different from the source material) and the comic book Escape of the Living Dead, among other stories. Now, Russo is teaming with director Dustin Ferguson for a new zombie movie called Rebirth of the Living Dead – and it’s set to star legendary scream queens Michelle Bauer (Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers), Brinke Stevens (The Slumber Party Massacre), and Jewel Shepard, who played Casey in The Return of the Living Dead!

What is Rebirth of the Living Dead about?

Following the events of both Night of the Living Dead and the Return of the Living Dead novel, Rebirth of the Living Dead picks up nearly 50 years later in Los Angeles where “Trioxin Trash” is the new drug on the street. This “ultimate high” turns users into brain-craving Living Dead and it’s up to a lone scientist and a young couple to uncover the cure before it’s too late.

Details on the characters Bauer, Stevens, and Shepard will be playing have not been revealed. The character featured on the poster below is played by Jaedra DiGiammarino (Witchcraft 17).

Rebirth of the Living Dead comes along just months after Ferguson and Russo worked together on Midnight 3, a sequel to Russo’s 1982 slasher Midnight, which was followed by a sequel (Midnight 2: Sex, Death and Videotape) in 1993 and a remake in 2020.

Want to contribute to Rebirth of the Living Dead?

Ferguson has previous ties with the Living Dead series as a Producer/Director of Special Features for the Blu-Ray of Return of the Living Dead Part 2, and is also the owner of the “Lost Cut” of Return of the Living Dead ///. He promises that this film will not only directly follow previous events, but also pay homage to several classic moments from the different Living Dead films as well.

A fundraising campaign with a goal of $10,000 is in progress on IndieGogo. As of this writing, with 23 days left to go, the campaign has raised $1,770. Perks include a mobile game, receiving a signed DVD or Blu-ray copy of the film, getting a signed poster, having your picture in the movie, getting a special thanks in the credits, or becoming a producer. There’s even a “Be a Zombie in the Movie” perk!

Does Rebirth of the Living Dead sound interesting to you, and will you be contributing to the fundraising campaign? Share your thoughts on this Dustin Ferguson / John A. Russo / Jaedra DiGiammarino / Michelle Bauer / Brinke Stevens / Jewel Shepard project by leaving a comment below.

Rebirth of the Living Dead

The post Rebirth of the Living Dead casts scream queens Jewel Shepard, Michelle Bauer, and Brinke Stevens appeared first on JoBlo.


Roger Avary to direct Biblical epic Paradise Lost for AI-oriented Ex Machina Studios

In 1667, poet John Milton published the first edition of what’s widely considered to be his masterpiece: a Biblical epic poem called Paradise Lost. 359 years later, director Roger Avary is set to bring the story of Milton’s poem to the screen – and he’s going to be using AI to do it.

What is Paradise Lost about?

Milton’s poem, told through more than ten thousand lines of verse, concerns the story of the fall of man: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden.

Almost twenty years ago, Sinister and Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson was developing a film adaptation of Paradise Lost. He couldn’t get the project into production, but he did share a batch of concept art online some years ago.

In 2012, Legendary Pictures was working with The Crow and Dark City director Alex Proyas on a film adaptation that was set to star Bradley Cooper as Lucifer, Benjamin Walker as the archangel Michael, Diego Boneta as Adam, and Camilla Belle as Eve, among other cast members. That version was scrapped just short of a production start because Legendary decided it didn’t want to put up a budget of any more than $120 million, and Proyas’s vision required more than that.

Nine years ago, there was talk of a Paradise Lost TV series, but that also went nowhere.

Who’s behind this Paradise Lost film adaptation?

As mentioned, Roger Avary – who co-wrote Pulp Fiction and directed the films Killing Zoe and The Rules of Attraction – will be at the helm of this version of Paradise Lost, which is set up at the AI-oriented production company Ex Machina Studios. Ex Machina and Avary believe that AI will enable them to make Paradise Lost on a responsible (but ambitious) budget “while preserving the primacy of real actors, human-authored narratives, and guild-aligned production practices.”

Ex Machina co-founder and CEO Marco Weber is producing the film, with production designer Kirk Petruccelli executive producing. The producers told Deadline this will be “the ultimate faith-based heroic saga: a cosmic war in the heavens where the charismatic, rebellious archangel Lucifer defies God, is hurled into the abyss of Hell, and vows revenge on all creation. From the fiery lake of damnation, Lucifer rises as Satan to seduce humanity’s first parents, Adam and Eve, in the flawless Garden of Eden, triggering the Fall of Man and the loss of Paradise itself. At its core, Paradise Lost asks the question every generation must answer: When faced with reckoning and crisis, do we obey, rebel, or redeem?

Avary also wrote the video game adaptation Silent Hill and brought another epic poem, Beowulf, to the screen with Robert Zemeckis. Avary provided the following statement: “Beowulf was a revisionist reimagining made on a massive budget, but with Paradise Lost I’m taking a more faithful approach at a fraction of the cost, using cutting-edge generative AI to bring Milton’s vision to life in ways unimaginable just a few years ago. This project brings together everything I’ve learned as a filmmaker and proves that powerful storytelling doesn’t require blockbuster budgets, but the right tools and team. Partnering with Ex Machina and Marco Weber, we’ve created something I believe will move audiences, spark conversations, and remind us why we tell stories in the first place — to wrestle with what it means to be human in the face of the divine. I’m grateful for the opportunity to share it with the world.

Weber added, “Roger Avary and Milton. Not much more that needs to be said. We are really excited about this one and cannot wait to see it come to life.” Coincidentally, Weber is working with Alex Proyas on a separate project called Heaven, which is using AI to help imagine “a technologically perfected afterlife.”

What do you think of Roger Avary using AI to make Paradise Lost? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

The post Roger Avary to direct Biblical epic Paradise Lost for AI-oriented Ex Machina Studios appeared first on JoBlo.


Top 10 Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked (From Friday the 13th to Cult Classics)

Jake

Summer camp horror movies are a blood-soaked cornerstone of the slasher genre where horny counselors, isolated cabins, and dark woods guarantee a body count before sunrise. From the early ’80s boom that gave us masked maniacs and legendary final girls to later cult favorites that twisted the formula, the subgenre is a proving ground for creative kills and backwoods terror. For this list, we’re ranking the 10 best summer camp horror movies based on a mix of atmosphere, kill ingenuity, impact, and pure rewatchability. Fire up the grill, crack a cold one, and keep your eyes on the lake, because these are the top 10 summer camp horror flicks, and not everyone’s making it to morning.

Friday the 13th

1. FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980)

Director: Sean S. Cunningham
Subgenre: Slasher
Setting: Camp Crystal Lake

Why it stands out:
The template for summer camp slashers, this low-budget box office juggernaut turned an isolated lakeside camp into a slaughterhouse and launched one of horror’s most enduring franchises.

Key themes: revenge, isolation, moral punishment
Notable for: iconic twist ending, franchise legacy, practical gore

Come on now, who didn’t see this one camping out at the top? Friday the 13th locked in the tone that we’re looking for with this type of movie, with isolated campgrounds, hormonal counselors, and a body count that stacks like firewood. Rather than rehash why it’s the big kahuna (you already know), let’s just acknowledge the obvious: this is the one everything else is chasing.

The original stands alone, but if we’re talking how to mainline your Voorhees fix, I’m a Final Chapter guy. Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter kicks like a mule, featuring a young Corey Feldman, a bug-eyed dance clinic from Crispin Glover, skinny-dipping twins, and a healthy death toll. That’s peak franchise mayhem, and it all traces back to this nasty original that made Crystal Lake a no-go zone after dark.

The Burning

2. THE BURNING (1981)

Director: Tony Maylam
Subgenre: Slasher
Setting: Camp Blackfoot

Why it stands out:
A nastier, grittier rival to Friday the 13th, featuring Tom Savini’s effects work and one of the most famous massacre scenes in slasher history.

Key themes: revenge, bullying, brutality
Notable for: raft massacre, early roles for future stars, graphic practical effects

It’s pretty hard to fathom that one of the best Friday the 13th imitators was co-written by Harvey Weinstein. Yes, that Harvey Weinstein! In any event, Tony Maylam’s The Burning doesn’t just bear the distinction of featuring screen debuts of Jason Alexander and Holly Hunter, it also boasts some of FX maven Tom Savini’s finest work. In fact, he opted to work on this film over Friday the 13th Part 2, which was filming at roughly the same time (they came out a week apart).

The premise is a simple one: after a summer camp prank goes terribly awry, a burned counselor seeks grisly revenge by picking off a new breed of campers one by one. The raft massacre kicks serious ass, but I personally love the incendiary bookends. I love how the finale goes down, delivering the perfect poetry of the circular comeuppance our man Cropsy endures.

Sleepaway Camp

3. SLEEPAWAY CAMP (1983)

Director: Robert Hiltzik
Subgenre: Slasher / Psychological Horror
Setting: Camp Arawak

Why it stands out:
What begins as a standard camp slasher leads to one of the most shocking endings in horror history.

Key themes: identity, trauma, repression
Notable for: twist ending, unsettling tone, cult status

Known for having one of the all-time most jaw-dropping conclusions, Sleepaway Camp elevates itself above the sea of slasher yarns and becomes something far more psychologically damning. Seriously, I still haven’t gotten over the damage incurred by that ending! But for those who missed this Robert Hiltzik diamond, the film follows your typical summer-camp horror paradigm. When the shy young Angela is sent away to summer camp with her cousin, grisly bouts of butchery soon start to occur. The whodunit aspect, while always fun within the slasher subgenre, plays as really more of a red herring here, as there’s no way in hell you could predict the gut-socking finale.

Shot in New York for a mere $350,000, Sleepaway Camp proves you can’t put a price on ingenuity. A truly disturbing film!

Top 10 Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked

4. A BAY OF BLOOD (1971)

Director: Mario Bava
Subgenre: Proto-slasher / Giallo
Setting: Lakeside estate

Why it stands out:
A major influence on the slasher boom, this Italian shocker paved the way for countless camp-set kill sequences.

Key themes: greed, betrayal, inheritance
Notable for: inventive kills, genre influence, early slasher blueprint

Heartfelt props must be cast to Mario Bava’s precursory summer camp horror sequence in the 1971 film A Bay of Blood (a.k.a. Twitch of the Death Nerve), as it inspired an overt rehash in one of my favorite Friday the 13th films, Part 2. Only difference: A Bay of Blood doesn’t feature a campground, but an abandoned resort in a wooded area that a slew of teenagers find and take refuge in. Still, the conventions shine through crystal clear (pardon the pun).

What struck me about the uncut version of this film was the unremitting carnage and advanced death toll. Not only is this Bava’s favorite of his own films, he also served as his own cinematographer on the film, often using a child’s wagon as a dolly for tracking shots.

Piranha 1978

5. PIRANHA (1978)

Director: Joe Dante
Subgenre: Creature Feature / Horror-Comedy
Setting: Lost River waterways

Why it stands out:
A blood-soaked riff on Jaws, swapping sharks for genetically engineered piranha.

Key themes: scientific hubris, nature unleashed
Notable for: satirical tone, creature chaos, cult following

Joe Dante’s schlocky Piranha adheres to the Roger Corman academy of guerilla filmmaking, as this tale of a summer vacation savagely interrupted by school of man-eating fish obviously tried to capitalize on the massive success of Jaws. Still, with a deft directorial hand and the first feature screenplay by the great John Sayles, hints of potential greatness can be found. Personally, I like the casting of Kevin McCarthy and Barbara Steele as a way to tether old and new horror iconography.

Then, of course, there’s the playful sense of humor Dante imbues his film with, a staple he would become known for in works like Gremlins and The ‘Burbs. But las much as I appreciate the charm of Dante’s version, the fact it paved the way for Alexandre Aja’s supercharged 3D update is something I think we’re all truly grateful for.

6. MADMAN (1981)

Director: Joe Giannone
Subgenre: Slasher / Campfire Legend Horror
Setting: Camp North Point

Why it stands out:
A pure campfire tale brought to life, where speaking the killer’s name summons a hulking woodsman ready to butcher counselors.

Key themes: urban legend, fear of the unknown
Notable for: eerie atmosphere, folk-horror vibes, slow-burn tension

This film is to The Burning what The Burning is to Friday the 13th; basically a cheaper and slightly watered down version of the same thing. In fact, Madman began as a retelling of the Cropsy legend, but was subsequently rewritten when the production team learned The Burning boasted a similar premise.

That being said, Madman certainly has its merits as a standalone summer-camp slasher effort. Some of the kills involving an axe are genuinely mortifying, the dialogue isn’t as dopey as you might expect from a low-budget 80s horror flick, it has a pretty cool ending, and it features one of the most ridiculous hot tub scenes ever recorded. Plus, the final girl is played by Gaylen Ross from Dawn of the Dead, hiding behind the name Alexis Dubin.

Top 10 Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked

7. JUST BEFORE DAWN (1981)

Director: Jeff Lieberman
Subgenre: Backwoods Horror / Slasher
Setting: Remote forest campground

Why it stands out:
Less about body count and more about dread, this one leans into wilderness terror and primal survival.

Key themes: nature vs. civilization, survival
Notable for: suspenseful pacing, eerie setting, unconventional villains

I’m not sure how many of you have seen Jeff Liberman’s unheralded Just Before Dawn, but it’s worth seeking out. Lost in the vast shuffle of early 80s slasher fare, here’s a slow-burning creepshow with palpable atmosphere and brooding sense of impending menace. The great George Kennedy gives a solid performance as an cautionary park ranger, playing the part with a sly twinge of ulterior sleaze. Also, not to spoil anything, but it can be argued that Kevin Williamson and Wes Craven owe a debt of gratitude for the success of Scream to this film. That’s all I can say.

More glaringly, Just Before Dawn draws from films like Deliverance and The Hills Have Eyes, so perhaps Craven was repaying the homage a decade and a half later, though Lieberman claims to never have seen Hills prior to filming.

Cabin Fever

8. CABIN FEVER (2002)

Director: Eli Roth
Subgenre: Body Horror / Cabin Horror
Setting: Isolated cabin in the woods

Why it stands out:
An update to the formula, replacing masked killers with flesh-eating infection and escalating paranoia.

Key themes: contagion, paranoia, decay
Notable for: graphic body horror, dark humor, early 2000s revival energy

Eli Roth’s semi-satirical debut feature is a much-welcomed variation of the theme. Instead of a throng of kids being stalked and slashed in the woods by a deranged psychopath, they’re unsuspectingly infected by a putrid flesh-eating virus. The tonal ambiguity of the film stirred up love-it or hate-it reactions when it was released, and I was proudly in the former camp. My mind is still and will forever be boggled by the late sequence in which the foully mulleted Dennis goes mental, does some slow-mo martial arts, replete with cartwheels, all-the-while randomly screaming “Pancakes, Pancakes, Pancakes.” I’m forever a changed man after seeing that.

And let’s not forget about Deputy Winston. That dude’s off his rocker; far more interested in partying in Wambusa than doing any kind of police work. Props to Roth for infusing his faithful throwback horror joint with such an off-kilter sense of humor.

Top 10 Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked

9. SUMMER CAMP NIGHTMARE (1987)

Director: Bert L. Dragin
Subgenre: Thriller / Survival Horror
Setting: Youth camp turned battleground

Why it stands out:
A darker, more grounded take where the real horror comes from within, as campers revolt and descend into chaos.

Key themes: power, rebellion, societal breakdown
Notable for: Lord of the Flies-style conflict, psychological tension

Bert L. Dragin’s 1987 Summer Camp Nightmare is more of a violent, Lord of the Flies-type drama about authoritative abuse than an out-and-out horror joint, but there’s certainly enough unsettling moments to land the movie on this list. For those who missed it, Summer Camp Nightmare follows a cadre of male campers who stage a coup and lock up their camp director and counselors, overtaking the camp for themselves. Things really fall apart when the revolt extends to a nearby girls camp, where the ringleader of the boys goes off the deep end.

Penelope Spheeris (who directed Suburbia, Wayne’s World, Black Sheep) co-wrote the screenplay, adapting from William Butler’s novel The Butterfly Revolution. If you dig this one up, you won’t be disappointed.

10. CHEERLEADER CAMP (1988)

Director: John Quinn
Subgenre: Slasher / Exploitation Horror
Setting: Cheerleading camp

Why it stands out:
A late-’80s blend of sleaze and slashing, delivering campy kills, dream sequences, and pure VHS-era energy.

Key themes: jealousy, sexuality, paranoia
Notable for: B-movie charm, over-the-top tone, cult appeal

I remember watching this low-rent slasher whodunit in high school, at my late best friend’s house (RIP Kane), with about six or seven others. Thick ganja smoke clouded the air, the 80-proof and German hops did laps, laughter was nary a stranger. And with that, I also remember digging the film quite a bit.

First off, the film has a highly impressive body count for a supposed throwaway late ’80s slasher flick. I’m talking double digits! I also quite enjoyed the murder mystery element to the film. Much like My Bloody Valentine, trying to figure out who among the bunch of randy teenagers is the actual killer becomes a large part of the fun. Plus, what’s not to love about Betsy Russell, Lucinda Dickey, and a pre-porn star Teri Weigel in cheerleader garb? Props to my man Karl Mnarl for correctly guessing the murderous culprit. We all laughed at your prediction at first.

Summary: Best Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked

If you’re looking for the ultimate campfire carnage lineup, these are the titles that define the subgenre:

  • Best overall: Friday the 13th – the gold standard of camp slashers
  • Best twist ending: Sleepaway Camp – still one of the wildest final reveals in horror
  • Best practical effects: The Burning – Tom Savini at his grisliest
  • Most influential precursor: A Bay of Blood – laid the groundwork for the body-count boom
  • Best modern update: Cabin Fever – infection replaces the masked maniac
  • Best creature feature twist: Piranha – summer camp meets feeding frenzy
  • Most underrated: Just Before Dawn – backwoods dread done right

From masked maniacs to flesh-eating microbes, these films prove one thing: if you’re heading to camp, you’re probably not making it back.

FAQ: Summer Camp Horror Movies

What is the best summer camp horror movie?

Most fans and critics point to Friday the 13th as the definitive entry. It established the setting, tone, and formula that countless films followed.

What summer camp horror movie has the best twist ending?

That honor usually goes to Sleepaway Camp, whose shocking final reveal remains one of the most talked-about endings in horror history.

Are all summer camp horror movies slashers?

Nope. While many are slashers (like The Burning), others branch into different subgenres, including creature features like Piranha and body horror like Cabin Fever.

What defines a summer camp horror movie?

These films typically feature:

  • Isolated woodland or lakeside settings
  • Young campers or counselors
  • A central threat (killer, creature, or contagion)
  • Themes of survival, revenge, or moral consequence

Are there any underrated summer camp horror movies?

Yes! Just Before Dawn and Madman are often overlooked but deliver strong atmosphere and unique takes on the formula.

What’s the difference between camp horror and cabin-in-the-woods horror?

Summer camp horror focuses on organized camps with groups of teens or counselors, while “cabin horror” (like Cabin Fever) usually centers on smaller groups in more isolated, less structured settings.

The post Top 10 Summer Camp Horror Movies Ranked (From Friday the 13th to Cult Classics) appeared first on JoBlo.


Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Hokum Review: An atmospheric horror flick with a strong performance by Adam Scott

PLOT: A misanthropic author (Adam Scott) travels to a remote inn in Ireland where his late parents once honeymooned, planning to spread their ashes. Once there, he becomes embroiled in a mystery that may involve a haunting, forcing him to reckon with his tortured past.

REVIEW: Neon has steadily built a reputation as Hollywood’s biggest horror studio, usurping the once-dominant A24. Their taste and track record are so strong that each new release turns into an event for horror fans. As such, among all the movies that premiered at SXSW (where I saw it), none seemed to have the anticipation of Hokum, which was programmed in their midnight section and is directed by Damian McCarthy, whose previous films, Caveat and Oddity, both took on Irish folklore.

Hokum does a similar thing, with it being a tale of Irish spirits haunting a creepy hotel, but by casting an American in Adam Scott’s cynical Ohm Bauman, it’s probably McCarthy’s most accessible work to date, with it being a well-executed ghost story wrapped up in a surprisingly potent morality tale.

Adam Scott is great as Ohm, an author dealing with childhood trauma who hides behind a façade of ego and even flashes of cruelty. Yet, he finds himself unexpectedly owing a personal debt to the hotel’s kind bartender (an excellent Florence Ordesh), and when she goes missing, he seems to be the only one committed to finding her, along with a local derelict, Jerry (David Wilmot), whom she was similarly kind to. The two find themselves working to unravel the mystery of her disappearance, leading to Ohm being trapped in a long-locked honeymoon suite said to be haunted by malevolent spirits.

Hokum

McCarthy does a good job establishing Ohm as an anti-hero who, while initially insufferably arrogant, proves to have a somewhat brave streak, making this—more than anything else—a redemptive tale. It’s also a very creepy one, with lots of subtle, spooky imagery in the first half paving the way for more grotesque, legitimately scary ghouls as the film goes on, and lots of screaming from the midnight audience I saw it with.

It also proves to be a pretty cracking mystery, even when not considering the supernatural element, which becomes a major part of the film’s second half. McCarthy has made a beautiful film, shot on location in West Cork, with gorgeous cinematography by Colm Hogan. It’s produced by veteran horror producer Roy Lee, with The Conjuring composer Joseph Bishara providing a spine-tingling soundtrack. Hokum, at times, feels almost like an elevated Conjuring installment with a bit of an international, indie flavour, and the local cast is terrific. Wilmot steals scenes as the surprisingly resourceful Jerry, who, like Ohm, is haunted by his own past, while Peter Coonan is good as the hotel manager who may or may not know more than he lets on.

While it remains to be seen if Hokum can tap into the zeitgeist the same way other Neon movies have, the audience at SXSW had a blast with it, and I never found it to be anything less than totally compelling. Neon is giving it a prime early May release date, and it could become a breakout hit, while Scott continues to impress as his career quickly rises thanks to Severance. This is another strong role for him.

JoBlo caught up with Hokum star Adam Scott and the I Love Boosters duo of LaKeith Stanfield and Boots Riley

Hokum

GREAT

8

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The Last House: Louis Leterrier’s sci-fi flick (formerly called 11817) gets a release date

Louis Leterrier has directed the action films The Transporter, Transporter 2, Unleashed, and Fast X, the action comedies The Brothers Grimsby and The Takedown, the mystery thriller Now You See Me, the fantasy adventure Clash of the Titans, and the comic book adaptation The Incredible Hulk (not to mention the TV shows The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance and Lupin), and over the decades his films have racked up $2 billion at the box office. His next project finds him directing and producing the film The Last House (formerly titled 11817), which has just gotten an August 7th release date from Netflix. The Last House has a screenplay by Matthew Robinson (The Invention of Lying), and see Leterrier venturing into the sci-fi horror realm.

Greta Lee (Past Lives, Tron: Ares) and Wagner Moura (The Secret Agent) star in this thriller about “what happens when inexplicable forces trap a family of four inside their house indefinitely. As both modern luxuries and life or death essentials begin to run out, the family must learn how to be resourceful to survive and outsmart who – or what – is keeping them trapped…

Check out these first look images:

Leterrier had this to say about the project: “Directing projects where the audience gets behind the characters has always been my focus. However complex, flawed, heroic, we identify with them as we live through their journey. It’s what excites me about 11817’s wholly original concept and the family at the heart of our story. This is an experience that movie audiences won’t forget.

The film is coming our way from Leterrier’s Carrousel Studios, Rocket Science, Thank You Studios, Chernin Entertainment (A North Road Company), and 3 Arts Entertainment. Rocket Science is financing and will handle foreign sales, while CAA Media Finance represents the North American rights. Leterrier will be producing alongside Thomas Benski and Omar Sy for Carrousel Studios, as well as Lars Sylvest for Thank You Studios, Kori Adelson for Chernin Entertainment, Oly Obst of 3 Arts Entertainment, Thorsten Schumacher for Rocket Science, and Joe Neurauter. Cecile Gaget serves as an executive producer for Carrousel Studios.

Are you interested in seeing a Louis Leterrier sci-fi horror film that stars Greta Lee and Wagner Moura? Share your thoughts on The Last House by leaving a comment below.

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Interview: Adam Scott and Damian Mc Carthy Talk Hokum

Damian Mc Carthy is one of the most exciting new names in horror. The filmmaker’s 2024 feature Oddity left a mark on genre fans. It led to the upcoming teaming up with the fantastic Adam Scott. In the curiously titled Hokum (read our review here), Scott portrays a bitter horror author. When the writer visits a small Irish town, he settles into a quaint inn to scatter his parents’ ashes near a local landmark. However, he finds himself facing off against the legend of a witch that haunts the inn.

One of my favorite sub-genres in horror is the haunted-house thriller. Yet rarely do they settle into me quite like Robert Wise’s brilliant The Haunting. Or the underappreciated George C. Scott spookfest, The Changeling. Hokum shocked me. It is easily one of the most unsettling and compelling films of the year. The script by Mc Carthy is sublime, and Mr. Scott gives one of his best performances. It’s an absolute must-see for horror fans—or pretty much anybody, if you appreciate smart and satisfyingly haunting thrillers.

I recently sat down to speak with Mr. Scott and Mr. Mc Carthy. One aspect I particularly loved was how Scott’s character was handled. It’s an excellent performance, one that he discussed taking on. Watching these two chat about this creepy feature gives me hope that they will collaborate again. Hokum is one of the best examples of modern folklore that you could hope for. This is horror at its finest, haunting and unforgettable. See it with a crowd.

Hokum haunts theatres this Friday.

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