Connect with us

Editorials

13 Underrated Horror Movies with Unforgettable Endings

Published

on

Twists are ingrained into the DNA of horror movies. The ending of The Sixth Sense is so iconic that the next generation comes out of the womb knowing that Bruce Willis was dead the whole time. Would a Saw movie be a Saw movie without the cued music and dramatic reveal? But of course, you can only watch these films so many times before the magic has dwindled. Even the great Lin Shaye saying, “It’s not the house that’s haunted. It’s your son,” in Insidious loses its mystique after multiple views. If like many horror fans, you already know the twists in A Tale of Two Sisters, Us, The Others, and Orphan, like the back of your hand, you need something more. Step away from the box office with me and enjoy these 13 underrated horror films whose twist endings are unforgettable.

For general horror movie recommendations, check out Underrated Horror Gems of 2022 You May Have Missed.

13 Underrated Horror Movies with Twist Endings

Trigger warning: These spoilers are not for the faint of heart.

13. Dark Circles

After having a baby, a new mom begins seeing a strange apparition in the house. Is it haunted, or is she hallucinating due to sleep deprivation?

Spoiler: It’s the scary movie you’ve seen a thousand times before until it isn’t. The apparition the sleep-deprived new mother keeps seeing is a person secretly living in their home- a squatter. There’s no ghost, and she’s not crazy. It’s a third option I didn’t see coming and is honestly scarier for it.

12. Funny Games (2007)

Two killers descend upon a vacationing family.

Advertisement

Spoiler: Just as the mother finally gets the upper hand, snatching a shotgun and eliminating one of her captors, in the most meta-act on this list, Michael Pitt’s character retrieves a remote and rewinds the scene. This time, he moves the shotgun out of the mom’s reach, and it’s clear there is no hope for this family.

This ending understandably splits audiences, as some find it too over the top, while others see the symbolic meaning.

11. Dumplings

A woman finds eternal youth by eating specially made dumplings.

Spoiler: The dumplings are made from aborted fetuses, but that’s only the beginning. As our main character stops eating the dumplings, she realizes their effect reverses. In a desperate attempt to regain her beauty, the main character makes a dumpling of her own.

10. April Fool’s Day (1986)

A group of classmates stays on an island with their wealthy peer, Muffy St. John. Things take a horrific turn when bodies begin piling up.

Advertisement

Spoiler: During a showdown between one character and the purported killer – none other than Muffy’s evil twin “Buffy,” – the fight leads to the living room where all of the friends who allegedly died throughout the events of the film are sitting around, completely unharmed. No one is dead; it was all an April Fool’s prank.

9. We Need to Do Something

A troubled family is locked in a bathroom together while mysterious havoc rages outside.

Spoiler: While some moments were laughable (the dad whipping the mom with the decapitated snake, for example), the twists hit hard, and you’re guaranteed to remember specific remnants when it’s all over. The little boy dying from the snake bite and the reveal that the daughter messing with witchcraft was to blame for whatever hell is happening outside all build up to a finale where the daughter wakes up in the bathroom all alone.

Eventually, her mother returns, clearly suffering from whatever she’s encountered after managing to escape the bathroom finally. Given her state and urgency to get back inside, it’s clear that after everything, there is no escape, no resolution, nor do we get to see what’s lurking outside. The family that needs to do something is powerless to do anything, and the same as they’ll never see outside this bathroom, neither will we.

8. The Lie

This film was the first in the Welcome to the Blumhouse film series.

After a father/daughter trip goes awry, a swirl of consequences follows. Is it scary? No. Will you remember the ending? Yep!

Advertisement

Spoiler level one: At the beginning of the movie, a father and daughter duo happens across the daughter’s best friend and offers her a ride. After the friend goes missing, the daughter confesses to killing her.

Spoiler level two: Her divorced parents work together to cover up the daughter’s involvement in the murder, but the best friend’s father gets involved. As he gets close to discovering the daughter’s secret, the parents kill him.

Spoiler level three: As the parents are trying to destroy the evidence implicating them in this murder, the friend, who the daughter claimed was dead, walks into the garage. The girls had concocted a scheme to let the friend spend the weekend with her boyfriend, uninhibited by parental inquiry. The friend was okay all along.

The daughter explains she didn’t want to let it go this far, but seeing her parents together again made her so happy. The police close in as the movie draws to a close. The film’s slow pacing pays off in quite a memorable finish.

7. The Dark and The Wicked

A brother and sister visit their ailing parents and encounter a demonic entity.

Advertisement

Spoiler: The brother suddenly leaves, deciding nothing can be done, in an attempt to escape the evil and return to his wife and children. His sister is left behind, and she eventually succumbs to the evil herself. When the brother gets home, he finds his entire family slaughtered. He immediately takes his own life. His family then walks into the kitchen. It was a hallucination caused by the evil entity. Evil won.

6. Triangle

Something is amiss from the very beginning. As our main character boards a boat, something seems off, and as the strange events worsen, the protagonist fights to return to her son.

Spoiler: As was evident from the beginning, our main character is trapped in an ever-repeating time loop. The first time I watched it, I wondered whether the time loop was the twist. I was delighted and horrified that the time loop was the plot, and the twist was much more meaningful.

It’s a personal hell she has trapped herself in to save her son and punish herself for her abusive actions toward him. After seeing herself literally from the outside looking in, abusing her autistic son, she rescues him from herself, only for him to die. A cab driver, who seemingly served as a ferryman between worlds, asks if she wants to try again. And she did – even though all the evidence showed she couldn’t make a difference.

5. You’re Next

As a family gets together in an attempt to mend their broken bonds, they become the victims of a home invasion where people in animal masks begin killing them off one by one.

Advertisement

Spoiler: Our final girl Erin has excellent survival training and sets up traps around the house. She fights back and discovers that her boyfriend and brother are behind the attack. She kills her treacherous boyfriend just as the police finally arrive at the house. The police witness this and shoot Erin. Then, a trap that Erin set for the assailants goes off, killing the officer. The movie closes with the words “You’re Next” on the wall as Erin bleeds out.

4. Would You Rather

A group of strangers is subjected to a game of “Would You Rather” for a large cash prize. The game slowly escalates in torturous intensity, leaving lives in its wake.

Spoiler: As I’m sure you’ve begun to gather from the other items on this list, I am a sucker for horror movies where the protagonists lose. It’s not that I don’t enjoy a happy ending now and again; it just makes the stakes feel higher when there’s no guarantee that a character will walk away unscathed.

This twist works so that our protagonist both wins and loses. After subjecting herself to torment to help her brother, she finally wins the game to go home and find her brother has killed himself. Womp womp, it was all for naught. Ironic, memorable, and gut-wrenching. It completely blindsided me.

But in all seriousness, if you or someone you know is thinking about suicide, call or text 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline or visit their website.

Advertisement

3. Don’t Look Now

A father grieving the loss of his daughter begins seeing a strange figure who bears a striking resemblance to his deceased child.

Spoiler. Okay, this one gives me the giggles. Maybe it’s because of how devastatingly morbid it is; maybe it’s because I would have never guessed it in a thousand years. But the reveal – when it is, in fact, not glimpses of his dead daughter he has been seeing, but a murderous short woman who then ruthlessly murders him – gets me every time. Good luck ever forgetting that ending!

2. Oculus

To me, this film isn’t underrated because it’s one of my all-time favorites. However, because I think this 2013 gem by Mike Flanagan isn’t talked about often enough, I will shamelessly include it here.

A brother and sister reunite as adults and try to obtain proof that a haunted mirror ruined their childhoods.

Spoiler:

Advertisement

Just as Tim engages the kill switch to destroy the mirror once and for all, the Lasser Glass’ mind-warping ways win out. Tim doesn’t see his sister Kaylie standing in front of the mirror, and he impales her instead of the mirror.

In a riveting final shot, Tim is led out of the house by police, yelling, “It wasn’t me; it was the mirror!” This shot is intercut with a similar clip of young Tim crying the same thing as a child after his father’s murder- showing history repeated itself.

The past, present, and future occurring concurrently is a recurring theme we would see again in many Mike Flanagan productions such as The Haunting of Hill House, Midnight Club, and The Haunting of Bly Manor.

1. I See You

Strange things begin happening in a house.

Spoiler: this entire movie is one big plot twist. Much like Dark Circles, the beginning of the film presents as a paranormal horror until the movie reveals people are phrogging in the house (hidden squatters who move from one home to another). But that’s only the beginning of the film. As the phroggers learn of infidelity and murder, it all culminates in a shocking conclusion.

Advertisement

If you don’t know how it ends – plot twist – I won’t be spoiling it here today.

From demonic tricks, questionable meals, treachery, heroism, and more, these 13 horror movies with twist endings are bound to leave a lasting imprint on your memory.

Let us know what you think of these choices, or give us your underrated horror movie recommendations in the comments below!

A writer by both passion and profession: Tiffany Taylor is a mother of three with a lifelong interest in all things strange or mysterious. Her love for the written word blossomed from her love of horror at a young age because scary stories played an integral role in her childhood. Today, when she isn’t reading, writing, or watching scary movies, Tiffany enjoys cooking, stargazing, and listening to music.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Editorials

The 10 Most Satisfying Deaths in Horror Movies

Published

on

Horror Press’ exploration of catharsis this month lends itself naturally to the topic of satisfying horror movie deaths. While murdering people who vex you in real life is rightly frowned upon, horror allows us to explore our darker sides. Fiction gives us the catharsis and relief to allow us to survive that ineradicable pox that is other people. To that end, here are the 10 most satisfying deaths in horror movies.

PS: It goes without saying that this article contains a few SPOILERS.

The 10 Most Satisfying Deaths in Horror Movies

#10 Franklin, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

I ranked this death from the original Texas Chain Saw Massacre lowest for two reasons. First, I think Franklin’s whole vibe is a perfect fit for the unnerving, overwhelming atmosphere of Tobe Hooper’s masterpiece. Second, I think it’s important for representation that onscreen characters from marginalized groups be allowed to have flaws. That said, Franklin Hardesty is one of the most goddamn annoying characters in the history of cinema. Endless shrieking and raspberry-blowing will do that for ya. His death via chainsaw comes as a profound relief. His sister Sally spends the next 40 minutes or so screaming nonstop, and that’s considerably more peaceful.

#9 Lori, Happy Death Day

This is less about the character herself and more about Tree’s journey. After watching her time-loop for so long, being thwarted at every turn, Lori’s poison cupcake is a real gut-punch. Tree’s vengeance allows her to break out of the time loop once and for all (until the sequel). It also allows us to rejoice in the fact that her work to improve herself hasn’t been for naught.

#8 Billy, Scream (1996)

There are a hell of a lot of satisfying kills perpetrated upon Ghostfaces in the Scream franchise. However, the original still takes the cake. Sidney Prescott curtly refuses to allow a killer to plug a sequel at the end of her survival story. Instead, she plugs him in the head, saying, “Not in my movie.” It’s not just a great ending to a horror movie. It’s a big middle finger to sleazy teenage boyfriends the world over.

Advertisement

#7 Crispian, You’re Next

Ooh, when Erin finds out that this rotten man has knowingly brought her along to a home invasion… His attempt to charm (and bribe) her might have won over a weaker person. But in addition to putting her in danger, he has willingly had his family slaughtered for money. Erin won’t stand for that, and her takedown of yet another Toxic Horror Boyfriend is cause for celebration.

#6 Charles, Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan

Charles McCulloch might be one of the nastiest characters in film history. While school administrators are hardly any student’s best friend, his cold cruelty is downright abnormal. How he manages to be simultaneously overbearing and wicked to his niece, Rennie, I’ll never know. But thankfully, Jason Voorhees drowns him in a vat of toxic waste, removing the need to solve that mystery. Not all heroes wear capes. Sometimes they wear hockey masks.

#5 Tyler, The Menu

Up next on the tasting tray of cinema’s worst boyfriends, we have Tyler. He’s not technically Margot’s boyfriend, because she’s an escort he invited to a fancy dinner. But he should still land in the hall of fame. That’s because he brought her despite knowing ahead of time that nobody was meant to leave the restaurant alive. Thankfully, he gets one of the best Bad Boyfriend deaths of them all. He dies at his own hands. By hanging. After being thoroughly humiliated with proof that all the mansplaining in the world can’t make someone a good chef. Delectable.

#4 The Baby, Immaculate

You may remember this kill from my Top 10 Child Deaths article. The ending of Immaculate is (there’s no other word for it) immaculate. Shortly after Sister Cecilia learns that she has been unwillingly impregnated with the son of Christ, she gives birth. Instead of letting the church manipulate her further after violating her body, she smashes that godforsaken thing with a rock. In the process, she sheds years of ingrained doctrine and sets herself free once and for all. This is the ending that Antichrist movies have historically been too cowardly to give us. The fact that this character is a potential messiah makes it that much more cathartic.

#3 Carter, The Final Destination

I mean, come on. This guy is literally credited as “Racist” at the end of the movie. Pretty much every Final Destination movie has an asshole character who you crave to see die. But this epithet-spewing, cross-burning bigot is by far the worst of the bunch.

Advertisement

#2 Dean, Get Out

Racism comes in many forms, as Jordan Peele’s Get Out highlights. The Armitage family’s microaggressions quickly become macroaggressions, more than justifying Chris’ revenge slayings. While this whole portion of the movie is immensely satisfying, Dean’s death might just be the most cathartic. This is because he is killed via the antlers of a stuffed deer head. Chris uses the family’s penchant for laying claim to their prey’s bodies against them with this perfectly violent metaphor.

#1 Adrian, The Invisible Man (2020)

Here we have the final boss of Toxic Horror Boyfriends. This man is so heinously abusive that he fakes his own death in order to torment his ex even more. Cee using his own invisibility suit against him to stage his death by suicide is perfectly fitting revenge.

Continue Reading

Editorials

‘Ready or Not’ and the Cathartic Cigarette of a Relatable Final Girl

Published

on

I was late to the Radio Silence party. However, I do not let that stop me from being one of the loudest people at the function now. I randomly decided to see Ready or Not in theaters one afternoon in 2019 and walked out a better person for it. The movie introduced me to the work of a team that would become some of my favorite current filmmakers. It also confirmed that getting married is the worst thing one can do. That felt very validating as someone who doesn’t buy into the needing to be married to be complete narrative.

Ready or Not is about a fucked up family with a fucked up tradition. The unassuming Grace (Samara Weaving) thinks her new in-laws are a bit weird. However, she’s blinded by love on her wedding day. She would never suspect that her groom, Alex (Mark O’Brien), would lead her into a deadly wedding night. So, she heads downstairs to play a game with the family, not knowing that they will be hunting her this evening. This is one of the many ways I am different from Grace. I watch enough of the news to know the husband should be the prime suspect, and I have been around long enough to know men are the worst. I also have a commitment phobia, so the idea of walking down the aisle gives me anxiety. 

Grace Under Fire

Ready or Not is a horror comedy set on a wealthy family’s estate that got overshadowed by Knives Out. I have gone on record multiple times saying it’s the better movie. Sadly, because it has fewer actors who are household names, people are not ready to have that conversation. However, I’m taking up space this month to talk about catharsis, so let me get back on track. One of the many ways this movie is better than the latter is because of that sweet catharsis awaiting us at the end.

This movie puts Grace through it and then some. Weaving easily makes her one of the easiest final girls to root for over a decade too. From finding out the man she loves has betrayed her, to having to fight off the in-laws trying to kill her, as she is suddenly forced to fight to survive her wedding night. No one can say that Grace doesn’t earn that cigarette at the end of the film. As she sits on the stairs covered in the blood of what was supposed to be her new family, she is a relatable icon. As the unseen cop asks what happened to her, she simply says,In-laws.It’s a quick laugh before the credits roll, andLove Me Tenderby Stereo Jane makes us dance and giggle in our seats. 

Ready or Not Proves That Maybe She’s Better Off Alone

It is also a moment in which Grace is one of many women who survives marriage. She comes out of the other side beaten but not broken. Grace finally put herself, and her needs first, and can breathe again in a way she hasn’t since saying I do. She fought kids, her parents-in-law, and even her husband to escape with her life. She refused to be a victim, and with that cigarette, she is finally free and safe. Grace is back to being single, and that’s clearly for the best.

Advertisement

This Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy script is funny on the surface, even before you start digging into the subtext. The fact that Ready or Not is a movie where the happy ending is a woman being left alone is not wasted on me, though. While Grace thought being married would make her happy, she now has physical and emotional wounds to remind her that it’s okay to be alone. 

One of the things I love about this current era of Radio Silence films is that the women in these projects are not the perfect victims. Whether it’s Ready or Not, Abigail, or Scream (2022), or Scream VI, the girls are fighting. They want to live, they are smart and resourceful, and they know that no one is coming to help them. That’s why I get excited whenever I see Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett’s names appear next to a Guy Busick co-written script. Those three have cracked the code to give us women protagonists that are badasses, and often more dangerous than their would-be killers when push comes to shove. 

Ready or Not Proves That Commitment is Scarier Than Death

So, watching Grace run around this creepy family’s estate in her wedding dress is a vision. It’s also very much the opposite of what we expect when we see a bride. Wedding days are supposed to be champagne, friends, family, and trying to buy into the societal notion that being married is what we’re supposed to aspire to as AFABs. They start programming us pretty early that we have to learn to cook to feed future husbands and children.

The traditions of being given away by our fathers, and taking our husbands’ last name, are outdated patriarchal nonsense. Let’s not even get started on how some guys still ask for a woman’s father’s permission to propose. These practices tell us that we are not real people so much as pawns men pass off to each other. These are things that cause me to hyperventilate a little when people try to talk to me about settling down.

Marriage Ain’t For Everybody

I have a lot of beef with marriage propaganda. That’s why Ready or Not speaks to me on a bunch of levels that I find surprising and fresh. Most movies would have forced Grace and Alex to make up at the end to continue selling the idea that heterosexual romance is always the answer. Even in horror, the concept that “love will save the day” is shoved at us (glares at The Conjuring Universe). So, it’s cool to see a movie that understands women can be enough on their own. We don’t need a man to complete us, and most of the time, men do lead to more problems. While I am no longer a part-time smoker, I find myself inhaling and exhaling as Grace takes that puff at the end of the film. As a woman who loves being alone, it’s awesome to be seen this way. 

Advertisement

Ready or Note cigarette

The Cigarette of Singledom

We don’t need movies to validate our life choices. However, it’s nice to be acknowledged every so often. If for no other reason than to break up the routine. I’m so tired of seeing movies that feel like a guy and a girl making it work, no matter the odds, is admirable. Sometimes people are better when they separate, and sometimes divorce saves lives. So, I salute Grace and her cathartic cigarette at the end of her bloody ordeal.

I cannot wait to see what single shenanigans she gets into in Ready or Not 2: Here I Come. I personally hope she inherited that money from the dead in-laws who tried her. She deserves to live her best single girl life on a beach somewhere. Grace’s marriage was a short one, but she learned a lot. She survived it, came out the other side stronger, richer, and knowing that marriage isn’t for everybody.

Continue Reading

Horror Press Mailing List

Fangoria
Advertisement
Advertisement