
Here we go again. We’ve previously suggested five great movies that proved you don’t need an epic runtime to deliver the goods, as well as another list of five amazing action movies perfect for a quick watch. This time, we’re turning down the lights and focusing on horror.
From Gothic monsters and Italian nightmares to alien parasites and claustrophobic supernatural terror, the genre has produced no shortage of unforgettable movies that waste little time getting to the good stuff. These films may be short, but they still deliver plenty of atmosphere, scares, gore, and thrills.
Same rules as always. 90 minutes or less. If it goes over by even a minute, it’s out. Let’s do this!
Night of the Creeps (1986) – 88 minutes

When alien parasites begin turning the students of a small college town into zombie-like killers, two awkward freshmen and a hardened detective must work together to stop the outbreak.
“I’ve got good news and bad news, girls. The good news is your dates are here… the bad news is… they’re dead.” It’s one of horror’s great lines, delivered by the one and only Tom Atkins.
Fred Dekker’s Night of the Creeps gleefully throws alien parasites, zombies, college comedy, 1950s science fiction, and hard-boiled detective clichés into a blender. The result shouldn’t work nearly as well as it does, but Dekker’s affection for every genre he’s playing with holds the whole wonderfully strange concoction together.
And then there’s Atkins. He nearly steals the entire movie—screw it, he absolutely does—as the world-weary Detective Cameron, stalking through the film with a cigarette, a haunted past, and an endless supply of memorable one-liners. He’s just so damn good.
Thrilling, funny, gory, and unapologetically weird, Night of the Creeps is the very definition of a cult classic. It’s a joyous celebration of horror that knows exactly how ridiculous it is and never stops having fun.
Dracula (1958) – 82 minutes

After Jonathan Harker falls victim to Count Dracula, Dr. Van Helsing sets out to destroy the vampire before he can claim another victim.
It was a glorious day when I discovered Hammer Horror. Here was an entire world of Gothic terror populated by cinema’s most iconic monsters, all presented with lurid sexuality, bright red blood, lavish period atmosphere, and incredible actors.
Dracula, released as Horror of Dracula in the United States, is one of Hammer’s very best. It strips Bram Stoker’s story down to its essentials and races through them with remarkable confidence and energy. Christopher Lee’s Dracula is commanding, seductive, and genuinely frightening, becoming my favourite interpretation of the legendary vampire.
The always fantastic Peter Cushing makes Van Helsing every bit Dracula’s equal. Watching Lee and Cushing face off is a thrill, and the pair share an undeniable chemistry that would serve Hammer well for years. They would reunite many times, becoming the studio’s own dynamic duo of horror.
The film helped reinvent the vampire movie for a new generation, and more than six decades later, it remains one of the finest and most entertaining Dracula films ever made.
Demons (1985) – 88 minutes

A group of strangers attending a mysterious movie screening become trapped inside the theatre when members of the audience begin transforming into bloodthirsty demons.
Unlike many horror fans, I didn’t start regularly watching scary movies until my teens. My parents were fairly strict about anything they considered inappropriate or too frightening, and, for whatever reason, I actually listened to them.
That didn’t mean I was completely sheltered from horror. Most of my early exposure came through friends whose parents seemingly let them watch whatever they wanted. When I was seven years old, I attended a sleepover birthday party for my friend Geoff, where his mother had rented a stack of gruesome horror movies. One of them was Lamberto Bava’s Demons.
I vividly remember sitting there in the middle of the night, peering through my fingers as the movie unleashed one horrifying creature after another. The mysterious man in the metallic mask, Rosemary’s transformation in the bathroom, and several of the film’s more gruesome attacks remained lodged in my brain for a long time.
I didn’t rediscover the film until many years later, when I started exploring Italian horror, and you know what, it’s still just as impactful as it was when I was little; only this time, I’m not hiding my face behind my hands.
Packed with grotesque transformations, pounding heavy-metal music, and increasingly outrageous set pieces, Demons barely gives you a chance to catch your breath. Logic may occasionally take a back seat, but that hardly matters when the result is this entertaining.
Blood and Black Lace (1964) – 88 minutes

A masked killer begins murdering the models at a prestigious fashion house, exposing a web of secrets, rivalries, and hidden relationships.
Mario Bava is one of horror’s true masters and is frequently regarded as the father of giallo, the Italian subgenre that would explode in popularity throughout the 1970s. Although Bava’s The Girl Who Knew Too Much is often considered the first true giallo, the director took the formula to a new level with Blood and Black Lace.
Few horror movies are as visually striking as this one. The film’s vivid lighting, elaborate compositions, and shadowy fashion-house setting give nearly every frame the appearance of a macabre painting. Its masked, black-gloved killer, bold use of colour, and intricately staged murders would influence countless giallo films and slashers in the decades that followed.
Yet Blood and Black Lace is more than an important piece of horror history. It remains a beautifully crafted, deeply atmospheric murder mystery and a stunning showcase for Bava’s unmatched visual style.
The Autopsy of Jane Doe (2016) – 86 minutes

A father-and-son team of coroners examines the unidentified body of a young woman, only to uncover a series of increasingly disturbing and inexplicable clues.
The Autopsy of Jane Doe takes place almost entirely inside a single mortuary, but director André Øvredal finds countless ways to make the confined setting feel increasingly terrifying. What begins as a seemingly routine examination gradually descends into something far more sinister, with the skin-crawling tension steadily tightening as the night unfolds.
Brian Cox and Emile Hirsch give the film a believable emotional foundation as a father-and-son team of coroners attempting to understand the impossible body before them. Despite apparently being dead for several days, Jane shows no external signs of trauma, and her blood still flows. As the autopsy progresses, each new discovery only deepens the mystery, blurring the line between reality and something much more frightening.
It’s a smart, deeply unsettling example of how much horror can be generated through suggestion, atmosphere, and carefully controlled pacing. By revealing its secrets one disturbing layer at a time, The Autopsy of Jane Doe turns a simple examination into a claustrophobic nightmare.
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