6 Most Universally Beloved Horror Movies of All Time, Ranked



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There are horror movies people admire, horror movies people fear, horror movies people endlessly cite, and horror movies that somehow cut across almost every possible divide at once. Those are rarer. I mean the ones that are loved by critics, genre obsessives, casual viewers, filmmakers, and the kind of people who do not even think of themselves as horror fans but still know the scenes, the images, the music, the feeling. And by the way, universal love in horror is hard because horror is supposed to divide people. It is supposed to get under the skin in very specific ways.

So when a horror film becomes this widely beloved, it usually means it is doing several things at once at an absurdly high level. It means the craft is undeniable. And it means the film keeps paying off across generations as an actual experience people still want to revisit, argue about, and hand to the next person with that look of, “no, seriously, you need to see this.” These six are those movies.

6

‘The Thing’ (1982)

McCready looking ahead in John Carpenter's The Thing (1982)
Kurt Russell in ‘The Thing’
Image via Universal Pictures

The reason The Thing is so beloved is that it attacks one of the most basic human needs: certainty about who is standing next to you. That is why the movie never dies. A monster in the dark is frightening. A monster that can be anyone in the room turns every conversation, every glance, every injury, every delay into a possible death sentence. Watching the film, it’s impossible to notice that John Carpenter probably understood that from the first frame, and the whole film tightens around that idea until paranoia becomes the real atmosphere.

What keeps The Thing from being just a concept classic is how tactile and physical it is. The dog sequence, the blood-test scene, Norris’s chest opening up in that obscene defibrillator moment, Palmer changing, Blair quietly becoming his own apocalypse in the shed, the movie just keeps proving it knows exactly how to escalate mistrust into body horror and body horror into total social collapse. Then there’s MacReady (Kurt Russell), a competent, angry, increasingly isolated man trying to hold onto decision-making in a place where facts are evaporating. That final stare between him and Childs (Keith David) is why the film is universally beloved: it leaves you trapped in doubt, and doubt is exactly where the movie always wanted you.

5

‘Halloween’ (1978)

Laurie Strode holding a knife and looking scared in Halloween (1978).
Laurie Strode holding a knife and looking scared in Halloween (1978).
Image via Compass International Pictures

Do I even need to say this? What people love about Halloween goes deeper than “it invented slasher grammar,” even though its influence is obviously enormous. Again, this also comes from Carpenter. And Haddonfield is his world. It is not a gothic nightmare world. It is suburban daylight, sidewalks, hedges, laundry, babysitting, school. Then Michael Myers (Nick Castle) enters that ordinariness as shape, patience, and intrusion. That is why no Halloween party is without him now. He is still just as terrifying because there’s just something to that intrusion — feels less like a person making choices and more like evil discovering it can stand in the background and wait.

The movie’s writing is deceptively clean. Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) is simply more attentive, more inward, more real than the people around her, which makes her a perfect center for a movie about noticing danger too late. Then Dr. Sam Loomis (Donald Pleasence) is there to tell you, in plain terms, that what escaped is not normal. Once the stalking begins in earnest, across the street, behind the hedge, in the house, upstairs, behind the couch, Halloween becomes a pure machine of dread. That control is why everyone loves it.

4

‘Alien’ (1979)

Sigourney Weaver in a space suit looking up in Alien.
Sigourney Weaver in a space suit looking up in Alien.
Image via 20th Century Studios

Alien is beloved universally even today because it gives you one of the greatest horror setups ever written and then refuses to waste a second of it. The crew of the Nostromo are workers first, not mythic archetypes dropped into a haunted-house-in-space premise. They gripe about pay, procedure, and authority. They feel lived in. That matters, because when the signal pulls them off course and Kane (John Hurt) ends up beneath that egg, the horror starts infecting a world that was already convincing before the monster arrived. That makes everything hit harder.

And what a run Alien has. The facehugger. The chestburster, still one of the most violent moments ever filmed. Dallas (Tom Skerritt) in the vents. Brett (Harry Dean Stanton) under the chains. Ash (Ian Holm) revealing the real corporate logic underneath the mission. Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) discovering that survival is happening inside a system that already accepted their expendability. That is layered horror writing. The xenomorph is terrifying, obviously, but the film’s greatness also comes from how it entwines bodily violation, corporate indifference, and the total hostility of space itself. Weaver is the anchor because Ripley’s authority feels earned scene by scene. By the time she is alone with the cat and the creature, the film has stripped everything down to intelligence, nerve, and terror. That purity is why people love it so fiercely.

3

‘The Shining’ (1980)

Jack Nicholson in 'The Shining'
Jack Nicholson in ‘The Shining’
Image via Warner Bros.

What makes The Shining so universally beloved is that it works at every level people want from horror and then keeps going past them. It works as haunted-hotel dread. It works as domestic collapse. It works as psychological horror. It works as visual nightmare. It works as a movie that seems to have secret doors in it even when you have already seen it ten times. That is not normal. Most horror classics are loved for one dominant strength. The Shining feels bottomless because the atmosphere itself is doing narrative work.

Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) is one big reason. Nicholson gives him enough charm at the start to make the slide into rage and madness more dangerous. Wendy Torrance (Shelley Duvall) gives the movie its living fear, the kind that has already learned to manage instability before the ghosts fully take over. Danny Torrance (Danny Lloyd), with the shining itself, gives the hotel a human sensor for evil before the adults can name it. Then the Overlook starts folding history, violence, and appetite into the walls: Room 237, the woman in the bathtub, Grady in the bathroom, the ballroom seduction, the manuscript, the axe, the maze. The movie never stops feeling wrong in new ways.

2

‘Psycho’ (1960)

Janet Leigh as Marion Crane screaming in the shower in Psycho.
Janet Leigh as Marion Crane screaming in the shower in Psycho.
Image via Paramount Pictures

Psycho does something almost no horror movie had done that cleanly at the time and almost none have done that perfectly since: it seizes control of your expectations and then murders them in public. Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) is the protagonist until Alfred Hitchcock takes the story in the shower and rips the floor out from under the audience. That structural audacity alone would keep the movie immortal. But it is beloved because everything after that still works just as hard.

Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) is one of the greatest horror characters ever created. And he’s not just a monster. He is awkward, courteous, wounded, repressed, almost sweet in spots, and then the movie keeps tightening the knot between pity and revulsion until they become inseparable. The parlor conversation with Marion is crucial for that reason. You can feel the whole sick architecture of Norman’s life vibrating behind every shy smile and every line about traps. Then Psycho becomes a new story without losing any momentum. Arbogast (Martin Balsam) on the stairs, Lila Crane (Vera Miles) in the house, the fruit cellar reveal, the mother’s corpse, Norman rushing in full costume, this is plot machinery operating at total efficiency. People love Psycho because it still feels dangerous, and because the danger begins at the level of form itself.

1

‘The Exorcist’ (1973)

Linda Blair as a possessed Regan seated in 'The Exorcist'.
Linda Blair as a possessed Regan seated in ‘The Exorcist’.
Image via Warner Bros.

This is number one because The Exorcist might be the only horror movie that is this beloved while also feeling this complete. It is terrifying, yes, but that is not enough to explain its hold. What makes The Exorcist endure is that it builds horror through process. And it keeps getting worse in ways people never forget. Regan MacNeil’s (Linda Blair) voice, the bed, the head-turn, the desecration, the obscene language, the sense that a child’s body has become the battleground for something ancient and hateful.

Her mother moves through doctors, tests, specialists, explanations, authority, and all the language of modern rational control first. That is brilliant, because by the time the film reaches Father Karras (Jason Miller) and the exorcism itself, the horror has already eaten through medicine, parenting, celebrity, and certainty. The movie earns the supernatural by exhausting the natural. But the reason it is beloved, not just feared, is the human structure underneath all that. Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn)’s desperation is real. Karras’s crisis of faith is real. Father Merrin (Max von Sydow)’s arrival carries genuine spiritual gravity. The Exorcist is sacrifice, guilt, faith, corruption, and love all colliding in one room. That is why it is still the king.



















Collider Exclusive · Horror Survival Quiz
Which Horror Villain Do You Have the Best Chance of Surviving?
Jason Voorhees · Michael Myers · Freddy Krueger · Pennywise · Chucky

Five killers. Five completely different ways to die — if you’re not smart enough, fast enough, or self-aware enough to avoid it. Only one of them is the villain your particular set of instincts gives you a fighting chance against. Eight questions will figure out which one.

🏕️Jason

🔪Michael

💤Freddy

🎈Pennywise

🪆Chucky

01

Something feels wrong. You can’t explain it — you just know. What do you do?
First instincts are the difference between the survivor and the first act casualty.





02

Where are you most likely to find yourself when things go wrong?
Setting is everything in horror. Where you are determines which rules apply.





03

What is your most reliable survival asset?
Every survivor has a quality the villain didn’t account for. What’s yours?





04

What kind of fear is hardest for you to fight through?
Knowing your weakness is the first step to not dying because of it.





05

You’re with a group when things start going wrong. What’s your role?
Horror movies are brutally clear about who survives group situations and who doesn’t.





06

What’s the horror movie mistake you’re most likely to make?
Honest self-assessment is a survival skill. Denial is not.





07

What’s your best weapon against something that can’t be stopped by conventional means?
Every horror villain has a weakness. The survivors are always the ones who find it.





08

It’s the final scene. You’re the last one standing. How did you make it?
The final survivor always has a reason. What’s yours?





Your Survival Odds Have Been Calculated
Your Best Chance Is Against…

Your instincts, your strengths, and your particular way of thinking under pressure point to one villain you actually have a fighting chance against. Everyone else — good luck.


Camp Crystal Lake · Friday the 13th

Jason Voorhees

Jason is relentless, but he is also predictable — and that is the gap you would exploit.

  • He moves in straight lines toward his target. He doesn’t strategise, doesn’t adapt, doesn’t outsmart. He simply pursues.
  • Your ability to keep moving, use the environment, and resist the panic that freezes most victims gives you a genuine edge.
  • The Crystal Lake survivors were always the ones who stopped running in circles and started thinking about terrain, water, and distance.
  • You think like that. Which means Jason, for all his indestructibility, would face someone who simply refused to be where he expected.


Haddonfield, Illinois · Halloween

Michael Myers

Michael watches before he moves. He is patient, methodical, and almost impossible to detect — until it’s too late for anyone who isn’t paying close enough attention.

  • But you are paying attention. You notice the shape in the window, the car parked slightly wrong, the silence where there should be sound.
  • Michael’s power lies in the invisibility of ordinary suburbia — the fact that nothing ever looks wrong until it already is.
  • Your spatial awareness and instinct to map every room, every exit, and every shadow before you need them is precisely the quality Laurie Strode had.
  • You are not a victim waiting to happen. You are someone who already suspects something is wrong — and acts on it.


Elm Street · A Nightmare on Elm Street

Freddy Krueger

Freddy wins by getting inside your head — using your own fears, your own memories, your own subconscious as weapons against you. That strategy requires a target who can be destabilised.

  • You are harder to destabilise than most. You’ve faced uncomfortable truths about yourself and you haven’t looked away.
  • The survivors on Elm Street were always the ones who understood what was happening and chose to face it rather than flee from it.
  • Freddy’s greatest weakness is that his power evaporates in the presence of someone who refuses to give him the fear he feeds on.
  • Your psychological resilience — the ability to stay grounded when reality itself becomes unreliable — is exactly the quality that keeps you alive here.


Derry, Maine · It

Pennywise

Pennywise is ancient, shapeshifting, and feeds on terror — but it has one critical vulnerability: it cannot function against someone who genuinely stops being afraid of it.

  • The Losers Club didn’t survive because they were braver than everyone else. They survived because they faced their fears together, and faced them honestly.
  • You ask the questions others avoid. You look directly at what frightens you rather than turning away.
  • That directness — the refusal to let fear fester in the dark — is Pennywise’s worst nightmare.
  • It chose the wrong target when it chose you. You are exactly the kind of person whose fear tastes like nothing at all.


Chicago · Child’s Play

Chucky

Chucky’s greatest advantage is that nobody takes him seriously until it’s already too late. He exploits the gap between how something looks and what it actually is.

  • You don’t have that gap. You take threats seriously regardless of how they present — and you never make the mistake of underestimating something because of its size or appearance.
  • Chucky relies on surprise, on the delay between recognition and response. You close that delay faster than almost anyone.
  • Your instinct to treat every unfamiliar thing with appropriate scepticism — rather than dismissing it because it seems absurd — is the exact quality that keeps you breathing.
  • Against Chucky, not laughing is already winning. You are very good at not laughing.


01389980_poster_w780.jpg


The Exorcist


Release Date

December 26, 1973

Runtime

122 minutes



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Safwan Azeem
Almontather Rassoul

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