Editorials
Top 10 Child Deaths in Horror Movies
With Terrifier 3 coming out soon and promising the deaths of between 1 and 200 children as Art the Clown brings his brand of bloody mayhem to the Christmas season, we thought there might never be a better time to dissect the greatest examples of one of the most controversial types of kill in horror movies: Child deaths. Now these don’t get the same negative reaction as pet deaths in horror movies because Letterboxd morality is a puzzle even Jigsaw and Pinhead couldn’t solve if they worked together, but still, if you express enthusiasm for a fictional brat getting butchered, you still get a lot of side-eye.
With Terrifier 3 coming out soon and promising the deaths of between 1 and 200 children as Art the Clown brings his brand of bloody mayhem to the Christmas season, we thought there might never be a better time to dissect the greatest examples of one of the most controversial types of kill in horror movies: Child deaths. Now these don’t get the same negative reaction as pet deaths in horror movies because Letterboxd morality is a puzzle even Jigsaw and Pinhead couldn’t solve if they worked together, but still, if you express enthusiasm for a fictional brat getting butchered, you still get a lot of side-eye.
So let me say that nobody at Horror Press is advocating for child deaths in real life, obviously, but a good solid scene where a kid gets iced can spice up a horror movie in one of two ways. 1) It pushes the envelope, proving a movie is willing to transgress and really “go there.” 2) It has the same campy effect as watching an anvil fall on Daffy Duck (in a movie with the proper calibration of tones.)
This list is a blend of those two feelings, though I am trying to avoid going too miserable and joyless, so there’s no Pet Sematary on this list.
Oh, and it goes without saying that spoilers abound further down, so without further ado…
The Top 10 Instances of Child Death in Horror Movies
10. Prom Night (1980)
The beginning of Prom Night is the scene that provides the motivation for the killer’s entire rampage several years down the line, and it is the rare slasher prologue that totally earns it. The “Killers Are Coming” chant that the kids do during their weird tag-style game in the abandoned building is eerie enough, but when it builds to a crescendo with them backing a helpless little girl into a corner to the point that she falls to her death out a window, it is appalling, devastating, and fills you with rage toward those little shits.
9. Immaculate (2024)
I’m going to throw an extra SPOILER tag here because this movie is so new.
This one is weighted a little lower on the list because you technically see neither the child nor the death when Sydney Sweeney births her “immaculately” conceived baby and immediately smashes it with a rock, but otherwise, it’s superb. You get every last bit of information you need by watching the entire scene play out on her face, and it’s a hell of a gonzo way to close out a motion picture.
8. Silent Night (2012)
There aren’t that many child deaths on film where you can say, “She deserved it” without being at least a little facetious, but oh boy did this tween girl deserve the hell out of being cattle prodded by evil Santa and then impaled with a fireplace poker in Silent Night. Her entrance sees her barreling into the movie to knock her mom’s medicine out of her shaking hand. Actual dialogue:
Mrs. Morwood: “Those are mommy’s heart pills! I need those!”
Evil Brat: “You need to take me to the mall.”
Yeah, she got what was coming to her.
7. Halloween Ends (2022)
Another kid who very much deserved his fate is Jeremy Allen, the absolute gremlin who locked his poor hapless babysitter Corey Cunningham in the attic during the prologue to Halloween Ends. Was him being knocked 11,000 stories down his inexplicably tall Illinois home worth being the reason for the birth of one of the franchise’s most controversial villains? Honestly, yes.
6. The Ruins (2008)
Now The Ruins’ child death is ruthless and efficient, setting the stakes and the tone perfectly. Early on, when a character angrily throws a clump of vines at a child from the tribe, trapping them in the ancient ruin in the middle of nowhere, the child is instantly shot by his elders. This proves that 1) These people are not messing around when it comes to quarantining the vines on the ruins, and 2) This movie is going to be unrepentantly nasty. Both things continue to be true over the course of the movie.
5. Bloody Moon (1981)
Now here’s a silly one, as a palate cleanser. One of my personal favorites, a sequence in Jess Franco’s Bloody Moon sees the killer follow one of the most brutal murders in the movie (a tied-up woman getting decapitated by a masonry saw) by having the killer speed away from the scene in a car. A kid who has been playing in the area accidentally witnessed this and is now running down the mountain road to tell someone. While making their getaway, the killer absolutely creams this kid with their car and doesn’t even slow down. Two birds with one stone!
4. Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)
Come on, you had to have known Halloween III would be on this list somewhere. A little piece of Stonehenge in his Halloween mask turns his head into bugs and snakes! Honestly, if I had to pick the way I shuffle off this mortal coil, this might be it.
3. The Good Son (1993)
The ending of The Good Son is absolutely wild for a multitude of reasons. The movie largely follows the tête-à-tête between innocent cousin Elijah Wood and evil murder-boy Macaulay Culkin, and the finale sees Culkin’s mom holding onto them both as they dangle off a seaside cliff and being forced to choose which one to save. So not only are you treated to the glorious sight of Kevin from Home Alone plunging to his death in the Atlantic Ocean, you’re forced to contend with the fact that his own mother is responsible for this. It’s dark stuff, and it’s yet another reason why The Good Son is a surprisingly gnarly movie.
2. The Blob (1988)
Poor Douglas Emerson. Somehow, playing Scott Scanlon as a series regular on season 1 of Beverly Hills, 90210 before his abrupt demotion to recurring in early season 2, at which point he was quickly featured in a Very Special Episode where he accidentally shot himself in the tummy at his own birthday party still isn’t the most horrible way he has died onscreen. Back when he was even younger, he had the shit Blobbed out of him in a sewer. What a way to go.
1. Hereditary (2018)
I mean… You know the scene I’m talking about, right?
You gotta.
The thing about the Hereditary car death, on top of the fact that it informs the entire remainder of the movie after it happens, is that it kind of combines the two aspects of onscreen child death that I described earlier. It is potent and grim and terrible, really helping you buy into Toni Collette’s grief as a parent. However, the fact that the movie resolutely refuses to show anything until that delayed, extended look at the rotting head on the side of the road is a little playful, in a gallows humor kind of way.
Editorials
‘Ready or Not’ and the Cathartic Cigarette of a Relatable Final Girl
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, and “Love Me Tender” by 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.
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.
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.
Editorials
Horror Franchise Fatigue: It’s Ok To Say Goodbye To Your Favs
I’ve come to the kind of grim conclusion that sooner or later we’re all going to succumb to horror franchise fatigue. Bear with me, this editorial is more stream of consciousness than most of the ones I’ve written for Horror Press. For those unaware, the forthcoming Camp Crystal Lake show spent a short period of time shooting at a beloved local North Jersey restaurant near me in August. This meant progress for the A24 project that has been radio silent for a while; it also meant no rippers while it was closed for filming, but who said Jason’s reign of terror would be without consequence?
When Horror Franchise Fatigue Becomes An Issue
My friends mentioned it on an idle afternoon, and I carried that conversation over to another friend later that week. It inevitably turned into what all conversations of long-lived franchises do. Talking about how far the series had come, how influential it was, and how it died. Or at least, died without a death certificate. Nothing will keep a studio from coming back to a franchise if that’s where the money is, barring legal troubles and copyright shenanigans.
Revisiting Friday the 13th: A Franchise Rewatch Gone Wrong
As I fondly thought about the Friday series, I was spurred to watch the films. I would watch it all, from start to finish, all twelve movies. Not for any particular article, though the planned process was similar. They’re fascinating films that were both helped and harmed by their immense financial success, so they were as good as any franchise to analyze the changes in. I would note the difference between directors, the shift in tone. How cultural consciousness changed the films as they went on. I would dissect them to see what was at the heart of these movies.
I got about 15 minutes into Part 4 before stopping my marathon.
Horror Franchise Fatigue and the Loss of Enjoyment
Now, this might sound strange. I liked The Final Chapter, I like pretty much all the Friday films (especially the worst ones). And I know that I enjoy them, not from some abstract nostalgia driven memories, but because I had seen several of them recently enough to know that. What it came down to was a very simple question of whether or not I was having fun watching them. The enjoyment was the point, but by the fifth day, I wasn’t feeling anything. I wanted to love the Friday the 13th films the same way I did when I previously watched them, but it just didn’t happen.
And I was confused, how a franchise I had enjoyed so much had just become so unmoving. It wasn’t the experience I had had before. But the truth was that experience couldn’t be restored, and that desire to bring it back was actively harming my enjoyment of the films.
Why Standalone Horror Experiences Still Matter
In contrast, I showed my favorite giallo film to some friends recently. Dario Argento’s Opera is a film I’ve seen plenty of times, and it was a big hit thanks to its Grand Guignol sensibilities and one-of-a-kind cinematography. As far as tales about an opera singer being forced to witness murders go, it got a warm reception. It was crass, it was odd, it was provocative.
And watching my friends’ reactions, from intrigue to disgust to enjoyment, was the exact kind of experience I was hoping for. It was a memorable experience that stuck with me as much as seeing the film for the first time did.
We Don’t Love Horror Franchises, We Love the Experience
It may sound ignorant, but largely, I feel we don’t love franchises. We love the experience. We love the feeling of seeing something come together over the course of hours, the novelty of characters growing and changing if it’s allowed by the scripts. The special emotion invoked when you spend so much time with a piece of media; it’s the same emotion that gets you hooked on a good TV show.
Now for some of you, this is splitting hairs. But I think the core of this is important to recognize: the franchise is just a vessel for the experiences the media provides. It’s shorthand for what you’ve felt and how you feel, a signifier rather than what’s really being signified. The Friday, and Nightmare, and Halloween “series”, as concepts are abstract enough to mean a million different things to a million different viewers, but at the end of the day they are all a collection of viewing experiences to someone.
Fan Culture, Shared Horror Memories, and Closure
Those experiences are the core of “fan culture”. We love how our experiences link with those of others, registering flashes of recognition at a turn of phrase or a reference to a scene. That nebulous tangling of thoughts and feelings with other people is at the essence of shared enjoyment. And if you’re lucky enough, we love to see the book close on a franchise. To see a film series end, having completed its journey is a reward of its own.
But unfortunately, we often don’t get the privilege of watching a series end gracefully or even end at all. The Halloween series and The Exorcist series with their latest entries are obvious examples, and they’ve put the two franchises at arm’s length for me. But they’re far from the only ones.
Scream, Legacy Characters, and the Cost of Overextension
I especially don’t think I can return to the Scream films for a good long while. Putting aside the absolute trash fire made by Spyglass Entertainment firing its lead, then rushing a 7th film so badly they lost the Radio Silence team, I had already tapped out the minute I had heard the film’s premise. If there ever was a horror protagonist who should have stayed retired, it was Sidney Prescott.
All respect to Neve Campbell for finally getting her paycheck, but I can’t think of something less appealing than Sidney coming back. I’ve always been a Scream 3 purist, so I firmly believe that she shouldn’t have been in any of the films after that. She had gotten her happy ending, and left horror as one of the greatest of all time.
But then dangling a legacy character of that significance over a shallow inflatable pool for a third time, and treating it as shark infested waters, just feels ridiculous. The trailer that dropped for it did very little to assuage the notion that it would be anything but predictable.
This isn’t to say I’ve written off Scream entirely, but familiarity in this case has bred some level of contempt. I can identify pretty clearly what I loved about the experience that the Scream franchise used to offer, and this is not it. It’s made me more or less sulky about what it has to offer now; that is, very little of the novelty and shock factor I loved it for.
Why It’s Okay to Walk Away From Horror Franchises You Love
All of these thoughts and encounters led to a series of questions I kept revolving through. Why do we play a game of loyalty to something so abstract as “the franchise”? Is the collection of experiences we attach to a series supposed to be an emotional wage we’re paid to stick around? Is that payment enough? Why should we keep watching a series if we’ve fallen out of love with what it has to offer?
I know as much as you do that the answer to that last question is “we shouldn’t”, and yet we still do. For those of us who have fallen into a similar pessimistic state about the franchises we enjoy, I guess this is all just a way of stating the obvious: it’s okay to leave a series behind. If it’s not fun or engaging or challenging, you can and should set it aside, at least temporarily. While I’m not a proponent of killing fond memories or condemning all nostalgia, that’s just the problem: I want to feel something more than I want to remember that feeling.
Choosing New Horror Over Nostalgia
The old experience of media we once loved can be nice, but there are more new experiences out there than we can have in a single lifetime. We have a near infinite amount to choose from. So, if we’re fortunate, one of them belongs to a series we love, and we can enjoy it once more. But for those of us who don’t have that luck, consider this a reminder that there is a lot more than these familiar faces to see. Next time you feel down about a series you miss or find yourself unable to continue watching, reach for something new. Something odd. Something you haven’t seen. It might just help.
Happy watching, horror fans.




