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Friday, May 29, 2026

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

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The A Nightmare on Elm Street series is unique among horror franchises because Freddy Krueger’s world had no rules. Every dream sequence could become a miniature horror movie unto itself: surreal, funny, grotesque, stylish, or genuinely terrifying. The best sequences weren’t always the bloodiest kills. They captured the irrational feeling of actual nightmares: warped spaces, impossible physics, and imagery that lodged permanently in your brain.

Here are ten of the best dream sequences from the franchise:

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

10. The Highway Crossing – Wes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994)

By the time New Nightmare arrived, Freddy had become a pop culture comedian. Wes Craven’s meta-reboot aimed to change that perception. The highway crossing scene is simple in terms of dream imagery, but its simplicity is paired with one of the franchise’s biggest real-world action set pieces. Heather Langenkamp watching her young son cross several lanes of high-speed traffic while Freddy lurks nearby (first as a towering figure in the sky who hooks the kid on one of his claws, then as an army of Freddies standing by the side of the road) is grounded in relatable parental panic.

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

9. Mark’s Comic Book Death – A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Dream Child (1989)

At this point, the franchise had fully embraced fantasy-horror imagery, and nowhere is that clearer than in Mark’s death sequence. A comic book artist obsessed with superheroes suddenly finds himself trapped inside his own animated nightmare. He tries to fight back as his comic book character The Phantom Prowler, but it doesn’t work. Freddy just transforms into a comic-book supervillain (Super Freddy!) while Mark himself becomes a paper-thin cartoon figure and gets shredded. It’s a wildly creative blend of practical effects, hand-drawn animation, and comic book imagery that manages to be funny and unsettling at the same time.

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

8. Joey’s Wet Dream Death – A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)

The waterbed sequence works because it weaponizes vulnerability and embarrassment in a way only Elm Street really could. Having a nude model swimming inside his waterbed seems like a great turn of events for Joey (who was tricked by Freddy in the guise of an attractive nurse in the previous film), but then his fantasy turns into a nightmare as Freddy emerges from within the waterbed itself and pulls Joey into the water. Adding insult to injury, Freddy drops the groan-inducing quip “How’s this for a wet dream?” while killing the kid.

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

7. Freddy Snake – A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)

Dream Warriors is where the franchise fully realized how limitless Freddy’s dream world could become. The nightmares in the first movie had been scary as hell, but more grounded. The second movie drifted into haunted house and possession territory. The third one is where the filmmakers really leaned into the franchise’s potential – and the scene where Freddy becomes a giant snake-like creature to attack a character is a strong demonstration of that potential, proving that Freddy isn’t bound by a single physical form. He’s whatever the nightmare needs him to be. The practical snake creature effect is incredible, as the monstrosity is also still very clearly Freddy, complete with facial expressions and dialogue.

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

6. Spencer’s Video Game Death – Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991)

Although Robert Englund prefers the hearing aid murder in this film, no sequence better captures the full cartoon insanity of late-stage Freddy than Spencer’s death. Armed with a Nintendo-style Power Glove, Freddy turns Spencer into a video game character, bouncing him around a virtual environment while mocking him the entire time. The dialogue is cringeworthy. (“Now I’m playing with power.”) The visuals are absurd. The entire sequence feels like horror colliding with Saturday morning television. And yet it works because the franchise understood something important: dreams can be ridiculous and terrifying simultaneously.

Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares

5. The Bathtub Scene – A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

It’s quick and simple, but it’s one of the most iconic moments to come out of the ‘80s horror boom because sometimes the scariest nightmares are the simplest. Heroine Nancy lowers herself into a warm bath for a calming moment. Too calming. She falls asleep, and Wes Craven transforms the moment into pure vulnerability as Freddy’s glove slowly rises from between her legs beneath the water. The image sticks with us because it violates what’s supposed to be a safe space: what Norman Bates did for showers, Freddy Krueger did for bathtubs.

4. Debbie’s Cockroach Death and the Time Loop – A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)

This sequence is pure body horror nightmare fuel. Debbie’s transformation into a cockroach is already grotesque enough, with cracking skin, twitching limbs, and practical effects that still make audiences squirm decades later. But what elevates the sequence is the editing structure surrounding it. While Freddy is tormenting Debbie, heroine Alice and her love interest Dan are desperately trying to get across town to save her – but instead, they get caught in a nightmare time loop, reliving the same moments over and over. The time loop is trippy, while the cockroach death is nasty, surreal, and unforgettable.

3. Phillip’s Puppet Death – A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)

Arguably the most famous kill in the entire franchise. Freddy slicing open Phillip’s arms and legs before pulling out his veins like marionette strings is one of the most horrifying concepts the series ever produced. The image is grotesque enough on its own, but the sequence becomes tragic as Freddy marches Phillip helplessly through the asylum, eventually dropping him to his death. The genius of the scene is how perfect the metaphor is. Dreams often involve helplessness, loss of control, and manipulation by unseen forces. The puppet imagery makes it literal.

2. “I’m Your Boyfriend Now” Blood Geyser – A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

Few moments in horror history are as jaw-dropping as the original film’s bedroom geyser sequence. Nancy’s desperate phone calls weren’t enough to keep her boyfriend Glen from falling asleep – and once he loses consciousness, Freddy’s clawed hand emerges from the mattress between his legs and pulls him into the bed. Then comes the explosion. Glen’s death turns the bedroom ceiling into a tidal wave of blood while the rotating-room practical effects make the entire sequence feel physically impossible. As if that weren’t enough, Nancy’s disconnected phone rings and it’s Freddy on the line. He taunts her, “I’m your boyfriend now, Nancy,” before his tongue erupts through the receiver.

1. The Neighborhood Chase and Anti-Gravity Bedroom Butchery – A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

The original Elm Street remains unmatched because its low-key nightmares are truly scary. Here, Tina walks through an empty neighborhood in the middle of the night, where she encounters Freddy. He chases her back to her home while tormenting her with bizarre sights – he elongates his arms one moment, then gleefully slices off his own fingers the next. Getting back home doesn’t mean safety for Tina, because then the sequence explodes into the anti-gravity bedroom attack.

Tina is dragged across walls and ceilings while her boyfriend watches helplessly below, covered in blood. The rotating-room practical effects remain extraordinary even today, but the unforgettable power of the scene comes from its impossibility. Reality itself has broken apart. That moment defined the franchise.

RankSequenceFilmWhy It Stands Out
10The Highway CrossingWes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994)Combines grounded parental panic with surreal Freddy imagery
9Mark’s Comic Book DeathThe Dream Child (1989)Wild blend of animation, comic-book visuals, and horror
8Joey’s Wet Dream DeathThe Dream Master (1988)Turns adolescent fantasy into a waterbed nightmare
7Freddy SnakeDream Warriors (1987)Showcases the franchise embracing full dream-fantasy horror
6Spencer’s Video Game DeathFreddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991)Peak cartoon-era Freddy absurdity
5The Bathtub SceneA Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)Minimalist nightmare imagery that became instantly iconic
4Debbie’s Cockroach Death and the Time LoopThe Dream Master (1988)Grotesque body horror mixed with disorienting dream logic
3Phillip’s Puppet DeathDream Warriors (1987)One of horror’s greatest practical-effects kills
2“I’m Your Boyfriend Now” Blood GeyserA Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)Surreal practical effects and shocking escalation
1The Neighborhood Chase and Anti-Gravity Bedroom ButcheryA Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)The sequence that defined Freddy’s dream-world horror

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the Elm Street franchise different from other slasher series?

Unlike killers such as Jason Voorhees or Michael Myers, Freddy Krueger attacks his victims inside their dreams. That concept allowed the films to become far more surreal, visually inventive, and psychologically driven than most slasher franchises.

Which Elm Street movie has the best dream sequences overall?

Many fans consider A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors to have the franchise’s most imaginative dream sequences, while the original 1984 film is often regarded as the scariest and most atmospheric.

Were the dream sequences created with CGI?

Most of the classic Elm Street dream scenes relied heavily on practical effects, rotating sets, puppetry, makeup effects, and optical tricks. The practical craftsmanship is a major reason the sequences still hold up decades later.

Why is the original A Nightmare on Elm Street still considered the scariest?

The original film keeps Freddy mysterious and its nightmares relatively grounded. Instead of leaning heavily into comedy or fantasy, the movie focuses on uncanny dream logic, vulnerability, and the fear of falling asleep.

What is the most famous kill in the franchise?

Phillip’s puppet death in Dream Warriors and Glen’s blood geyser death in the original film are generally considered the two most iconic kills in the series.

The A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise remains one of horror’s most imaginative series because Freddy Krueger’s dream world had no creative limits. One scene could play like psychological horror, the next like dark fantasy, body horror, or outright surreal comedy. Even when some sequels struggled critically, the series almost always delivered at least one unforgettable nightmare sequence. That’s why these scenes still endure decades later. They aren’t just slasher kills, they’re warped little horror films built around the irrational logic of dreams.

What are your favorite Elm Street nightmare sequences? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

The post Freddy’s Greatest Hits: Ranking the Best Elm Street Nightmares appeared first on JoBlo.


Thursday, May 28, 2026

Stranded on Earth: How Night Skies Became E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial book coming this October

While the world waits for the chance to check out director Steven Spielberg’s latest alien-related film, Disclosure Day, when it’s released next month, film historian and author Max Evry is looking back at an earlier Spielberg alien classic with the book Stranded on Earth: How Night Skies Became E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, which traces the journey from the abandoned alien horror project Night Skies to the creation of E.T.

The hardcover first edition of Stranded on Earth will debut in the U.S. and Canada on October 6, followed by release in the UK and Europe on November 12. The book will be available through major retailers and independent bookstores, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Bookshop in the United States, as well as Amazon and Indigo in Canada.

What do we know about Stranded on Earth?

Part film history and part investigative chronicle, Stranded on Earth follows Spielberg’s fascination with UFOs and extraterrestrial storytelling from his teenage feature Firelight in the 1960s through the success of 1977’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The book then dives into the ambitious — and ultimately doomed — production of Night Skies, a dark science-fiction horror film that gradually evolved into the heartfelt classic E.T.

Through extensive research and new interviews with Spielberg collaborators, actors, artists, and industry insiders, Evry uncovers the creative chaos, studio politics, abandoned concepts, and radical rewrites that transformed a frightening alien thriller into one of the most beloved films in cinema history.

Stranded on Earth follows Evry’s acclaimed 2023 book Masterpiece in Disarray: David Lynch’s Dune and continues his exploration of ambitious, transformative science-fiction filmmaking. The book also examines how the DNA of the abandoned Night Skies project echoed throughout Hollywood, influencing genre-defining works such as Poltergeist and Gremlins while helping shape the explosion of sci-fi horror and fantasy storytelling throughout the 1980s and beyond.

Evry provided the following statement: “For years, Night Skies has been an asterisk in the shadow of that era’s most popular movie. The story of this unmade project is just as fascinating as how E.T. itself came to be. My book explores both, and so much more. As with my book on David Lynch’s Dune, the deeper I dug, the bigger — and wilder — the story became.

Does Stranded on Earth: How Night Skies Became E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial sound like a book you’d be interested in reading? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

Stranded on Earth

The post Stranded on Earth: How Night Skies Became E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial book coming this October appeared first on JoBlo.


Angel Heart TV series coming from A24, HBO, Zach Baylin, and Zac Efron

An adaptation of William Hjortsberg’s 1978 novel Falling Angel, the 1987 neo-noir psychological horror film Angel Heart has developed a strong cult following in the decades since its release – a fact which has now paved the way for the concept to receive the TV series treatment from A24, HBO, Black Rabbit creator Zach Baylin, and star / executive producer Zac Efron.

What is Angel Heart about?

Written and directed by Alan Parker, Angel Heart has the following synopsis: Harry Angel is a private detective contracted by Louis Cyphre to track down the iconic singer Johnny Favorite. However, everybody that Angel questions about Favorite seems to meet a tragic demise. Eventually the trail leads Angel to New Orleans where he learns that Favorite had dabbled in the black arts. As Favorite’s whereabouts and true identity become clear, Angel learns that being hired by Cyphre was not a random choice.

The film starred Mickey Rourke, Robert De Niro, Lisa Bonet, and Charlotte Rampling.

Deadline reports that the TV series will draw inspiration from both Fallen Angel and its sequel Angel’s Inferno (which was written by Hjortsberg but not published until three years after he passed away). The series will follow a down-and-out NYC paparazzi, who makes his living finding and photographing people who don’t want to be found, who is hired by a mysterious man to find a missing woman. But the deeper he digs to find her, the more it looks like a group of powerful elites, and maybe something supernatural, are covering up the disappearance.

Zac Efron will be taking on the lead role and executive producing alongside Zach Baylin, who is writing the series. In addition to Black Rabbit, Baylin’s credits include King Richard (which earned him an Oscar nomination), Creed III, Gran Turismo, Bob Marley: One Love, and The Order.

Jonathan van Tulleken, best known for his work on Shogun, is expected to direct several episodes as well as executive produce. Other executive producers include Baylin’s partner Kate Susman through their Youngblood Pictures, Marc Toberoff, Max Hjortsberg, Lorca Hjortsberg, Alice P. Neuhauser, Joe Hipps for Cut To, Stuart Manashil, Kevin Turen, and Harrison Kreiss.

What do you think of Angel Heart getting the TV series treatment? Share your thoughts on this one by leaving a comment below.

Angel Heart

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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Fiona: Maggie Grace to star in witch horror film based on Knifepoint Horror podcast episode

Last year, it was announced that director Daniel Stamm (The Last Exorcism) would be making a horror film called Winthrop (since retitled Lockbox), based on an episode of the Knifepoint Horror anthology horror podcast. That project is reportedly in post-production now – and Deadline reports that Peak Pictures and Capstone Studios, the companies behind Lockbox, are now moving forward with another Knifepoint Horror-inspired horror film. This one is called Fiona, and Maggie Grace (Fear the Walking Dead) is set to star.

What is Fiona about?

Knifepoint Horror writer, creator, and narrator Soren Narnia crafted the story of a lonely, divorced doctor who falls in love with a mysterious woman in rural America, only to discover she is channeling the raw forces of Mother Nature toward an apocalyptic purpose. He must then decide whether to save the woman he loves or the world she intends to destroy.

Grace is joined in the cast of the film adaptation by Steve Howey (Off Campus). Nicholas McCarthy (The Prodigy) is directing from a script by Justin Yoffe and Evan Hart.

Kearie Peak of Peak Pictures is producing, along with Capstone Studios.

What has been said about Fiona?

Peak provided the following statement: “There’s something in Fiona that speaks to a collective exhaustion with each other, with the state of the world, with the damage humanity continues to inflict on itself and the environment. The film channels that anxiety into horror that feels primal, emotional, and strangely cathartic.

McCarthy added, “As a lifelong fan of horror movies, I’ve always wanted to make a movie about a witch — and with Fiona, I finally found the perfect project. I love Soren Narnia’s Knifepoint Horror universe and can’t wait to bring it to life.

Deadline notes that the Knifepoint Horror podcast has developed a cult following in the years since its 2010 launch, reaching over 10 million downloads across all platforms.

Fiona is scheduled to begin filming in Toronto tomorrow, May 28. The film will receive a North American theatrical release via Aura Entertainment before streaming on MGM+.

Are you a fan of the Knifepoint Horror podcast, and are you glad to hear that Maggie Grace will star in the Fiona adaptation? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

The post Fiona: Maggie Grace to star in witch horror film based on Knifepoint Horror podcast episode appeared first on JoBlo.


The Best Horror Movies of 1980

best horror movies 1980 main

Many horror fans feel that the ’80s were the best decade the genre ever saw, so we here at Arrow in the Head have decided to go back to the beginning and take a look at the Best Horror Movies of 1980. In the list below, we take a journey through 1980, picking ten of the best horror movies the year had to offer along the way. See what you think of our list, and let us know what your picks would have been by leaving a comment!

FilmRelease DateDirectorSubgenreKey StrengthsNotable Cast
The FogFeb 1, 1980John CarpenterSupernatural horrorAtmosphere, ghost revenge storyJamie Lee Curtis, Adrienne Barbeau
Cannibal HolocaustFeb 7, 1980Ruggero DeodatoFound footage / exploitationDisturbing realism, shocking violenceRobert Kerman
The ChangelingMar 26, 1980Peter MedakHaunted houseCreepy atmosphere, mysteryGeorge C. Scott
Friday the 13thMay 9, 1980Sean S. CunninghamSlasherCamp setting, gore FXBetsy Palmer
ManiacMay 10, 1980William LustigPsychological slasherIntense performance, gore effectsJoe Spinell
The ShiningMay 23, 1980Stanley KubrickPsychological / supernaturalCinematography, performancesJack Nicholson
Prom NightJul 18, 1980Paul LynchSlasher mysteryWhodunit structure, dance sequenceJamie Lee Curtis
Mother’s DaySep 19, 1980Charles KaufmanExploitation horrorDark humor, revenge elementsBeatrice Pons
Terror TrainOct 3, 1980Roger SpottiswoodeSlasherCostume-switch gimmick, train settingJamie Lee Curtis
Motel HellOct 18, 1980Kevin ConnorHorror-comedySatire, bizarre humorRory Calhoun
The Fog

THE FOG (February 1)

  • Director: John Carpenter
  • Release Date: February 1, 1980
  • Subgenre: Supernatural ghost horror
  • Setting: Coastal seaside town
  • Primary Threat: Vengeful undead sailors
  • Key Themes: Revenge, buried history, paranoia
  • Production Notes: Major reshoots improved scares and pacing
  • Tone: Atmospheric and eerie
  • Notable Cast: Jamie Lee Curtis, Adrienne Barbeau, Tom Atkins

Production on John Carpenter’sThe Fog was a bit of a mess, and Carpenter has even flat-out stated that his first cut of the film “sucked”. The project always had an interesting concept: the story of undead sailors invading a seaside town, enveloped in a thick fog, to get revenge for their murders 100 years earlier. Problem was, the scare sequences just didn’t work as originally shot. Reshoots were required to punch them up with added jumps and violence, and those reshoots saved The Fog from being a disappointment. The film also receives a boost from its cast, which includes Adrienne Barbeau, Jamie Lee Curtis, Tom Atkins, Janet Leigh, and Hal Holbrook.

best horror movies 1980 2

CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST (February 7)

  • Director: Ruggero Deodato
  • Release Date: February 7, 1980
  • Subgenre: Found footage exploitation horror
  • Setting: Amazon rainforest
  • Primary Threat: Cannibal tribe and human cruelty
  • Key Themes: Media ethics, exploitation, savagery
  • Historical Significance: Early found footage pioneer
  • Tone: Graphic and disturbing
  • Content Warning: Extreme violence and animal cruelty

Ruggero Deodato’s Cannibal Holocaust is not an easy movie to watch, and I might be fine if I never sat through it again, but the fact that it is so deeply disturbing makes it rank as one of the best horror movies of 1980. An early found footage movie, it follows a crew that claims to be making a documentary about a cannibal tribe in the Amazon, but footage they never intended to be shown reveals that they were actually terrorizing the tribe and staging moments of shocking violence. Which is why the tribe ends up striking back against them. Cannibal Holocaust has the power to make you queasy even when it’s not showing those infamous moments of actual animal deaths.

best horror movies 1980 3

THE CHANGELING (March 26)

  • Director: Peter Medak
  • Release Date: March 26, 1980
  • Subgenre: Haunted house mystery
  • Setting: Historic Seattle mansion
  • Primary Threat: Restless spirit
  • Key Themes: Grief, loss, hidden secrets
  • Tone: Slow-burn supernatural suspense
  • Notable Feature: Emotional opening tragedy sequence

After losing his wife and young daughter in a tragic accident shown in the film’s gut-punch of an opening sequence, composer John Russell (George C. Scott) moves from New York out to Seattle… and picks a bad place to settle into: a historic mansion that happens to be inhabited by a spirit that drags him into a complicated mystery. Directed by Peter Medak, The Changeling is a little slow, but also manages to be quite creepy while telling a very interesting story. Plus you get to witness George C. Scott calling a ghost a “goddamn son of a bitch.”

Friday the 13th

FRIDAY THE 13TH (May 9)

  • Director: Sean S. Cunningham
  • Release Date: May 9, 1980
  • Subgenre: Camp slasher
  • Setting: Camp Crystal Lake
  • Primary Threat: Mrs. Voorhees
  • Key Themes: Revenge, trauma, isolation
  • Special Effects: Gore FX by Tom Savini
  • Legacy: Spawned major horror franchise

A lot of slasher movies came out of the ’80s, but one of the best ones was Sean S. Cunningham’s summer camp slasher Friday the 13th, which spawned a massive franchise that is still dearly beloved by fans more than 40 years later. It took a few films for all of the elements to come together for the franchise, but this is a great movie even if it doesn’t feature a hockey mask-wearing Jason Voorhees. The isolated Camp Crystal Lake setting is wonderfully creepy, FX legend Tom Savini provided some awesome gore as the counselors are knocked off, and Betsy Palmer delivers an iconic performance as the bereaved and insane Mrs. Voorhees.

best horror movies 1980 4

MANIAC (May 10, Cannes premiere)

  • Director: William Lustig
  • Release Date: May 10, 1980 (premiere)
  • Subgenre: Psychological slasher
  • Setting: New York City
  • Primary Threat: Frank Zito
  • Key Themes: Isolation, psychosis, misogyny
  • Tone: Grimy and nihilistic
  • Standout Element: Joe Spinell’s unsettling performance

Tom Savini created some of the grossest special effects of his career for William Lustig’s slasher Maniac, but as gross as they are, they aren’t nearly as troubling as Joe Spinell’s performance in the titular role of Frank Zito. Driven insane by some major mommy issues, Frank roams New York City at night, murdering random people and collecting scalps to stick on the mannequins he keeps at home. There isn’t much to Maniac beyond murder scenes and Frank giving crazy monologues, but Spinell, Savini, and Bond girl Caroline Munro – who shows up as a photographer Frank makes a connection with – make it a must-see.

The Shining

THE SHINING (May 23)

  • Director: Stanley Kubrick
  • Release Date: May 23, 1980
  • Subgenre: Psychological supernatural horror
  • Setting: Overlook Hotel
  • Primary Threat: Madness and ghosts
  • Key Themes: Family collapse, isolation, addiction
  • Source Material: Novel by Stephen King
  • Legacy: Widely regarded as a horror classic

Stephen King may not like this adaptation of his novel The Shining, and some fans agree that the film dropped the ball when bringing King’s story to the screen, but if you can separate it from the book, director Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining stands up as an all-time great horror film, an incredibly well-crafted examination of a family’s destruction in a ghost-ridden hotel. It’s packed with thrills and scares, and carried by unforgettable performances from Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd, and Scatman Crothers. When a film is this fascinating on its own, I can’t bring myself to be too concerned with how well it matches the source material.

Prom Night Paul Lynch Jamie Lee Curtis

PROM NIGHT (July 18)

  • Director: Paul Lynch
  • Release Date: July 18, 1980
  • Subgenre: Slasher mystery
  • Setting: High school prom
  • Primary Threat: Unknown killer
  • Key Themes: Childhood guilt, revenge
  • Tone: Stylish and suspenseful
  • Notable Feature: Famous disco dance sequence

Halloween heroine Jamie Lee Curtis’s horror streak continued with this “dead teenager” whodunit from Paul Lynch. Prom Night is pretty much your average slasher, but manages to stand out from the pack due to the cast (Leslie Nielsen plays Curtis’s father), some memorable death scenes, a three minute disco dance break, and an opening scene that I found to be deeply disturbing when I first saw this movie at a young age. A group of kids are playing a “Hide and Seek”/”It”-style game called “Killers” in an abandoned convent, and their creepy game results in the accidental death of a 10 year old.  This death is the reason for all the murders that follow years later.

Mother's Day Charles Kaufman Frederick Coffin Michael McCleery Beatrice Pons

MOTHER’S DAY (September 19)

  • Director: Charles Kaufman
  • Release Date: September 19, 1980
  • Subgenre: Exploitation revenge horror
  • Setting: Rural woodland area
  • Primary Threat: Violent family unit
  • Key Themes: Abuse, revenge, twisted family dynamics
  • Tone: Darkly comedic and disturbing
  • Notable Connection: Released by Troma Entertainment

Filmed at the same time and in the same area as the “killer mommy” classic Friday the 13th, Mother’s Day was directed by Charles Kaufman, the brother of Troma’s Lloyd Kaufman. It’s clear that Charles has a sense of humor that’s very much in line with his brother’s, as the film about an awful mother (Beatrice Pons) and her two dimwitted sons (Frederick Coffin and Michael McCleery as Ike and Addley) tormenting a trio of women (Nancy Hendrickson, Deborah Luce, and Tiana Pierce) on a camping trip has some really goofy, amusing stuff in it. It also has disturbing moments, and some satisfying violence when the women are able to strike back against their attackers.

Terror Train Roger Spottiswoode

TERROR TRAIN (October 3)

  • Director: Roger Spottiswoode
  • Release Date: October 3, 1980
  • Subgenre: Slasher
  • Setting: Moving train during New Year’s Eve
  • Primary Threat: Costume-switching killer
  • Key Themes: Revenge, humiliation
  • Tone: Claustrophobic and suspenseful
  • Notable Feature: Appearance by David Copperfield

Jamie Lee Curtis was in three films that were released in 1980, and every one of them made it onto this list. She isn’t a horror fan herself, but somehow ended up starring in a lot of classics. Director Roger Spottiswoode’s slasher Terror Train starts off with a group of college students playing a really appalling prank on one of their classmates. Jump ahead three years and those college students are having a New Year’s Eve costume party on a moving train – and someone starts slashing their way through the partiers, switching costumes between kills. Most of the characters in the film are either unlikeable or bland, but you get to see some David Copperfield magic and in the end Curtis screams her way through an extended chase sequence.


Motel Hell Rory Calhoun Kevin Connor

MOTEL HELL (October 18)

  • Director: Kevin Connor
  • Release Date: October 18, 1980
  • Subgenre: Horror-comedy
  • Setting: Rural motel and farm
  • Primary Threat: Vincent and Ida
  • Key Themes: Cannibalism, capitalism, rural grotesque
  • Tone: Satirical and bizarre
  • Memorable Scene: Chainsaw duel with pig mask imagery

Rory Calhoun delivers a terrific performance in director Kevin Connor’s Motel Hell, playing a farmer and motel owner who sells a line of smoked meat products that just happen to be made from human flesh. Calhoun’s character Vincent and his sister Ida (Nancy Parsons) capture people, sever their vocal cords, and keep them buried from the neck down in their secret garden, waiting for the right time to harvest their meat. Boasting a crazy sense of humor and some very strange characters, Motel Hell is an entertaining horror comedy that builds up to a chainsaw duel where one of the participants wears a pig’s head over their own. Classic.

FAQ

What are the best horror movies of 1980 according to this article?

The article selects these ten films:

  • The Fog
  • Cannibal Holocaust
  • The Changeling
  • Friday the 13th
  • Maniac
  • The Shining
  • Prom Night
  • Mother’s Day
  • Terror Train
  • Motel Hell

Why is 1980 considered an important year for horror?

1980 was the beginning of one of horror’s strongest decades, featuring:

  • the rise of the slasher boom
  • influential supernatural horror
  • exploitation cinema
  • early found footage experimentation
  • horror-comedy hybrids

Which subgenres are represented?

The list includes:

  • Slasher
  • Supernatural horror
  • Found footage
  • Psychological horror
  • Exploitation horror
  • Horror-comedy

Which actors appear multiple times?

Jamie Lee Curtis appears in:

  • The Fog
  • Prom Night
  • Terror Train

Which film launched the biggest franchise?

Friday the 13th became one of horror’s most successful long-running franchises.

Which film is considered the most controversial?

Cannibal Holocaust is highlighted as deeply disturbing due to its violence and real animal deaths.

Which film had production problems?

The Fog underwent major reshoots after director John Carpenter felt the original cut did not work.

Do you think these are the best horror movies of 1980? If you think we missed one, sound off in the comments below!

The post The Best Horror Movies of 1980 appeared first on JoBlo.


Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Poltergeist: Joseph Kahn stirs up the “Hooper or Spielberg” debate, Caroline Williams responds

Originally released on June 4, 1982, Poltergeist was made on a budget of $10.7 million and ended up earning more than $121 million at the box office… and for more than forty years, viewers have been debating which member of the creative team should get the credit for that success. Was credited director Tobe Hooper really responsible for calling the shots, or did he let producer/writer Steven Spielberg take the helm? Apparently this is a debate that will never die, as director Joseph Kahn decided to stir it up again on social media – and Hooper’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 star Caroline Williams is taking him to task for it.

What is Poltergeist about?

Officially on the record, Tobe Hooper, who had previously made The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Eaten Alive, Salem’s Lot, and The Funhouse, directed Poltergeist from a screenplay Steven Spielberg wrote with Michael Grais and Mark Victor. Spielberg also crafted the initial story.

The film has the following synopsis: Strange and creepy happenings beset an average California family, the Freelings — Steve, Diane, teenaged Dana, eight-year-old Robbie, and five-year-old Carol Ann — when ghosts commune with them through the television set. Initially friendly and playful, the spirits turn unexpectedly menacing, and, when Carol Ann goes missing, Steve and Diane turn to a parapsychologist and eventually an exorcist for help.

Craig T. Nelson, JoBeth Williams, Dominique Dunne, Oliver Robins, Heather O’Rourke, Beatrice Straight, Michael McManus, Virginia Kiser, Martin Casella, Richard Lawson, James Karen, Dirk Blocker, and Zelda Rubinstein star, with appearances by The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2‘s Lou Perryman and Predator‘s Sonny Landham.

What did Joseph Kahn say about Poltergeist?

Kahn wrote on X, “I am a huge Spielberg nerd, and also a Tobe Hooper fan (especially Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2). So, knowing both styles in and out, I say this with full conviction and authority: Spielberg directed Poltergeist. I think at a certain point Tobe spoke to the actors, but no question, Spielberg staged the scenes, the camera work, the lighting, the editing, the music, story, script, locations, casting, basically everything else. Except talk to the actors…and even on that part, debatable. Anyone who doesn’t think Spielberg directed it simply has no eye for cinema. No sense of editing or movement. It’s night and day. It’s like watching Michael Jordan wear a Tobe Hooper skin suit and do dunks from the free throw line. And no, people cannot suddenly emulate this style. If they could there would be a million Spielbergs. There is only one. And I’ll add one very f*cking obvious thing: Poltergeist is shot with Spielberg’s LENSES. Spielberg controls actual T Stops and DEPTH OF FIELD like few directors do, certainly not Hooper.

Kahn got a lot of responses, some agreeing with him and some disagreeing. Then Williams stood up for her director.

What did Caroline Williams say?

Williams posted a letter Spielberg sent to Hooper on June 2, 1982 to lament that “some of the press has misunderstood the rather unique, creative relationship” they had behind the scenes on Poltergeist, and had started giving him credit for directing the film instead of Hooper. She has no time for anyone trying to “kick the pins out from under one of Tobe’s greatest achievements.”

She went on to say, “Joseph Kahn considers himself to be a film expert. He will never achieve the legendary heights that Tobe Hooper did and revels in trying to add to the libel that Tobe didn’t direct Poltergeist. Steven’s letter to Tobe puts the lie to that. When confronted with proof in print, he resorts to ‘Hollywood politics.’ He’s a mean, envious, ordinary little man who only feels himself when he’s pretending to be better than all the others. My views are well known and better expressed through John Bloom’s article Last of the Hippie Filmmakers. It explains Hollywood politics surrounding the film then and now.

Steven offered the film to Tobe & enthusiastically worked with him on it. All of the stars except the embittered Zelda Rubinstein said so. When I worked with Craig T. Nelson on The District we shared Tobe stories. At an industry party, I did the same with JoBeth Williams. Neither said that Tobe didn’t direct the film, were actually flattering about their portrayals of him. While I grow tired of this bullshit popping up occasionally, I enjoy the support of Mick Garris (listen to his podcast with me) and Joe Russo, who have taken up the cause. As I stated, John Bloom’s article Last of the Hippie Filmmakers states the case. … Mick was unit publicist and was there every day, as well as in production meetings, etc. He’s also the single most honorable man in show biz. Whatever he says, you can take to the bank.

So there we have the latest chapter in this seemingly endless debate. What do you think of the “did Tobe Hooper really direct Poltergeist” confusion? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

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Saccharine Review: A New Body Horror Flick Taking On Weight Loss Drugs

PLOT: A young woman (Midori Francis) who is desperate to lose weight is given access to a new wonder drug called “The Gray,” which allows her to lose weight—fast—but the consequences prove to be more dire than she anticipates.

REVIEW: We live in an interesting era. A lot of people struggle with their weight (most of us do at one point or another), but now there seem to be pharmaceutical solutions that are helping people lose weight and keep it off, upending diet culture in a real way. Natalie Erika James, who previously helmed the well-received Relic (as well as the misbegotten Rosemary’s Baby prequel Apartment 7A), takes on this new reality head-on with this intriguing new entry into the resurgent body-horror genre.

Our heroine, Midori Francis’s Hana, suffers from severe body dysmorphia. While a more extreme version of this film would have presented her as significantly overweight, Hana starts the movie looking like a pretty average person, although Francis does wear prosthetics that are never quite convincing. Yet she has some family trauma that’s made her fear her growing weight, plus she’s also lusting over a fit grad student, Madeleine Madden’s Alanya, who she feels will never notice her unless she’s rail-thin.

One night, when clubbing with her much more body-positive friend Josie (a likable Danielle Macdonald), she runs into a girl she knew in high school who was once obese but now looks like a model. She’s given some pills called “The Gray,” which she’s told will help her lose weight—although they cost upwards of $5K. Yet Hana also happens to be a med student, and she’s able to synthesize the drug herself, only to discover it contains human ash, prompting her to steal some from an obese cadaver she and her fellow grads have cruelly named Big Bertha. Soon Hana starts losing loads of weight, but also finds herself haunted by Bertha’s increasingly pissed-off ghost—or is she?

Saccharine review

Natalie Erika James tackles a lot here—from body dysmorphia to LGBTQ romance to body horror, with a ghost story thrown in too for good measure—but it mostly works. While a little too deliberately paced at close to two hours (there’s a smashing ninety-minute movie in there), Saccharine is always compelling, with some pretty gross gore effects thrown in for good measure. It will also strike a chord with anyone who’s ever wished they could take a shortcut and get the body of their dreams—even as getting the kind you see in movies is ultimately unattainable for a lot of us.

Midori Francis, who was a regular on Grey’s Anatomy, delivers a standout performance as the vulnerable Hana, with whom you always empathize, even if it’s a little hard to swallow that this med student would violate so many ethical lines without ever being caught. She keeps you invested in Hana’s journey, with James also keeping the horror vague enough that for much of it you never know whether the horror is real or just in Hana’s head.

While it’s not The Substance, and isn’t as much of a knockout as another great Sundance body-horror flick from last year, The Ugly StepsisterSaccharine is always stylish and compelling. It’s now playing in limited release and will come out on Shudder in a few months.

Sundance

GOOD

7

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