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The Best Horror You Can Stream on Shudder in September 2024

We are officially into the Halloween season, and it is Shudder’s time to shine. The beloved streamer serves us nightmare fuel, hidden gems, and deep cuts all year long, but she always steps it up a bit in Autumn. Maybe it is all the PSLs and comfy cardigans. If so, I have even more in common with the best horror streamer out there. While I unpack if Shudder and I are starting to spend too much time together, you should see which deadly, demonic, and disturbing movies I am looking at in this September lineup. 

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We are officially into the Halloween season, and it is Shudder’s time to shine. The beloved streamer serves us nightmare fuel, hidden gems, and deep cuts all year long, but she always steps it up a bit in Autumn. Maybe it is all the PSLs and comfy cardigans. If so, I have even more in common with the best horror streamer out there. While I unpack if Shudder and I are starting to spend too much time together, you should see which deadly, demonic, and disturbing movies I am looking at in this September lineup. 

The Best Movies to Stream on Shudder This Month

All You Need is Death (2023)

A young couple who collects ballads stumble upon something sinister when they record and translate an ancient, taboo folk song. I have been trying to watch this movie for over a year, and I am so glad that Shudder is allowing me to finally do that this month. I want to hear this creepy song and see what this couple conjures up. I hope it is gruesome, awful, and all the other fun things I deserve. 

You can watch All You Need is Death on September 7th.

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Blue Sunshine (1977)

People begin going bald and becoming homicidal maniacs in Los Angeles – and it just might have something to do with the LSD the murderers took ten years ago. I have a soft spot for ’70s sci-fi horror, so I was sold even before I found out there would be a drug-induced killing spree. I will run at this title the second it hits the streamer. 

You can watch Blue Sunshine on September 9th.

The Demon Disorder (2024)

A man haunted by the death of his father gets a phone call from one of his brothers informing him that their youngest brother is possessed by their dead dad. I am so here for family drama, possessions, and sending parents to hell. More importantly, this movie is an Australian horror film, and those filmmakers rarely fail to understand the demonic assignment over there. 

You can watch The Demon Disorder on September 6th.

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In A Violent Nature (2024)

A rotten corpse is reanimated when a mysterious locket is removed from its resting place. The undead spirit sets his sights on the group of teens who disturbed his slumber by taking the necklace. I enjoyed this movie and think the sound design should be nominated for so many awards. I know that I am a sucker for a summer slasher set in the woods, but I think this one is a lot of fun. I am excited that more people will finally get to check it out.

You can watch In A Violent Nature on September 13th.

The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue (1974)

A cop pursuing two murder suspects is unaware the gruesome crimes are being committed by the living dead. This is a Spanish zombie flick from the 1970s. I want this movie injected directly into my eyeballs because nothing will ever sound as cool again. What a time to be alive and to be a Shudder subscriber. This film is also known as Let Sleeping Corpses Lie if you are also about to Google it and make it your new personality. 

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You can watch The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue on September 9th.

Well, there you have it—five new reasons for Shudder to keep taking our money. Consider me booked and busy this month because the streamer will have my undivided attention. 

Sharai is a writer, horror podcaster, freelancer, and recovering theatre kid. She is one-half of the podcast of Nightmare On Fierce Street, one-third of Blerdy Massacre, and co-hosts various other horror podcasts. She has bylines at Dread Central, Fangoria, and Horror Movie Blog. She spends way too much time with her TV while failing to escape the Midwest. You can find her most days on Instagram and Twitter. However, if you do find her, she will try to make you watch some scary stuff.

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The Best Horror You Can Stream on Shudder in July 2025

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Looks like another July will be spent getting cozy with Shudder in this house. Between all the new (to me) international titles and the conclusion of Hell Motel on July 29th, the app has filled my calendar for the month. Hold my texts, keep your emails in the draft folder, and don’t look for me outside. My TV and I are on a mission, and we’re prioritizing the five titles below. I hope they grab your attention and make it into your Shudder viewings this summer as well. However, I’ll be too busy watching them to know what anyone else is doing, so happy streaming whatever you decide to get into. 

While we have you here, you should consider joining us for Bloody Brunches! Every Sunday at 11 AM CST / 12 PM EST, we’ll be livestreaming a new episode of Hell Motel. Who know’s who you’ll see, sometimes Ian Carpenter and crew stop by!

The Best Movies to Stream on Shudder This Month

Lake Placid (1999)

A small group of people try to capture a gigantic crocodile terrorizing the people of Black Lake, Maine. I am not an aquatic horror girl, and I am usually unimpressed with 90s action horror titles. I make a special exception for Lake Placid though. Sure, it stars Bridget Fonda, Bill Pullman, and Oliver Platt. However, real film buffs know that it’s really the late Betty White who carries this movie. Her foul-mouthed character stood on business and is the reason most of us revisit this title during the summer.

You can watch Lake Placid on July 1st.

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Nyi Blorong (1982)

The South Sea Queen’s daughter rises to take a human lover. I have a long history of disliking snakes and movies about snakes. However, I’m leaning into this 1982 film because I deserve a retro Indonesian horror fantasy moment. I am also excited because it stars the late Suzzanna, the queen of Indonesian horror. I only learned about her a few years ago and wanted to spend some time with her work. As usual, Shudder is making it too easy to become a better cinephile. 

You can watch Nyi Blorong on July 7th.

The Housemaid (2018)

An orphaned girl is hired as a housemaid at a haunted rubber plantation in 1953 French Indochina. Once there, she falls in love with the landowner, which sends the ghost of his dead wife into a jealous rage. I was excited to watch this just because it sounds chaotic, and I do not see enough Vietnamese horror for my liking. However, I recently discovered it is also an IFC Midnight title, so now my expectations are through the roof. IFC has been the home of upsetting, weird, and unique horror since 2010. I have a date with Shudder on July 14th, because I want this movie in my eyeballs the second it becomes available.

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You can watch The Housemaid on July 14th.

Swallow (2020)

A pregnant housewife is compelled to eat dangerous objects, leading her husband and in-laws to become more controlling. Swallow had the misfortune of debuting during the top of the pandemic, so many people missed it. I found it on accident during Thanksgiving back when Showtime still had its own app. It’s quiet chaos that surprised me in a good way. I have been trying to make everyone I know watch it, and Shudder is making that so much easier this month. I am overdue for a rewatch myself, so I will also be hitting play while it’s available this July. 

You can watch Swallow on July 21st.

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Monster Island (2024)

A Japanese ship transporting prisoners of war and a British POW are stranded on an island where a mythical creator hunts them. Can they work together now that their very survival depends on it? I was bummed I missed this movie at Overlook Film Fest this year because all my friends loved it. So, obviously, I am thrilled Monster Island (also known as Orang Ikan) is hitting the Shudders streets so soon. I do not know what the other monster movies are doing this July because my heart belongs to this baby.

You can watch Monster Island on July 25th.

So, as usual, I will be hiding in my apartment and trying to make Shudder Saturdays my personality. I’m running at their international titles like it’s my job and revisiting a few movies I never spend enough time with. I hope your Shudder watches spark as much joy for you as I expect mine will this July. 

 

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‘Bride of Frankenstein’ at 90: Why Universal’s Horror Classic Still Haunts and Inspires

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In the 90 years since its release, The Bride of Frankenstein is still the Universal Monsters franchise’s strongest film.

I first watched The Bride of Frankenstein on cable around 15 years ago. Director James Whale’s fable of a misunderstood creature’s quest for a bride really stayed with me after subsequent viewings. Speaking of The Bride, she’s the Universal Monster with the most potential for a gripping and modern reimagining that hasn’t been fully tapped into yet. Universal’s newest theme park Epic Universe, opening back in May, inspired a deeper dive into The Bride of Frankenstein, the titular role and its legacy.

Unveiling The Bride: The Plot and Power of the 1935 Classic

Immediately following 1931’s Frankenstein, The Bride of Frankenstein centers on Henry Frankenstein (Colin Clive) as the sinister Dr. Pretorius (Ernest Thesiger) urges him to collaborate on creating a mate for The Monster (Boris Karloff). In the meantime, The Monster travels across the countryside, learns to speak, and meets Pretorius. When both scientists complete and unveil The Bride (Elsa Lanchester), she rejects The Monster, motivating him to pull a lever and famously say, “We belong dead.” Pulling the lever ignites an explosion, killing The Monster, The Bride, and Pretorius.

Just as it took two scientists’ minds to create her onscreen, two individuals gave life to The Bride’s characterization and look: Lanchester and makeup master Jack Pierce, who designed nearly all the original Universal Monsters.

The Bride’s Hiss: How Lanchester Stole the Show with Limited Screentime

The Bride not being the film’s main protagonist is ironic since she’s the title character. Making the most of her brief performance, Lanchester’s swan-like mannerisms as The Bride sharply contrast with the humanity Karloff brings out of The Monster. After her dual role as The Bride and author Mary Shelley herself in the film, Lanchester took on more horror film roles like Henrietta Stiles in Willard (1971). It’s not hard to imagine what could’ve been for her career if she reprised her role in The Bride of Frankenstein’s sequels Son of Frankenstein and Ghost of Frankenstein. If a lab explosion couldn’t kill The Monster, wouldn’t it be the same for The Bride?

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Besides the white streaks, Lanchester surprisingly didn’t wear a wig to portray The Bride since Pierce shaped her red hair to look the way it does. Pierce’s work on The Bride is just as iconic if not more so than Lanchester’s performance, ensuring the character became inseparable from her intended suitor in pop culture’s eyes. Case in point: There’s so much officially licensed merchandise playing up a romance between the two characters, even though The Bride can’t stand her intended mate. Beyond Lanchester and Pierce, there is one man responsible for how the film itself would come out.

James Whale’s Masterpiece: Directing The Bride of Frankenstein

Whale stitched great set designs, fantastic performances and composer Franz Waxman’s eerie score together to create a masterpiece.

Having Frankenstein, The Old Dark House and The Invisible Man under his belt by the mid-‘30s, it’s clear Whale creatively peaked while working on The Bride of Frankenstein. Although so much about Whale’s talents has been said, there’s a reason why his work on the film stands out across his filmography: He really went wild when directing it. Every character is practically cartoony, the sets are more elaborate and the plot is thematically richer than the original’s. Being an openly gay filmmaker, he cranked up The Bride of Frankenstein’s camp to legendary heights.

The Bride of Frankenstein is the final horror movie Whale directed. The novel Father of Frankenstein and its film adaptation Gods and Monsters, starring actor Ian McKellen as Whale, dramatize his life after directing the film. According to the reference book Universal Horrors by Tom Weaver, Michael Brunas and John Brunas, he initially didn’t want to direct his horror work’s apex. Just like Henry Frankenstein’s relationship with the monster he created, The Bride of Frankenstein’s production is a case of life imitating art. The Monster’s in-universe infamy further parallels Whale’s Frankenstein duology’s lasting popularity.

How The Bride of Frankenstein Shaped Horror Sequels and Adaptations

The Bride of Frankenstein’s influence can be seen across other horror films and Frankenstein adaptations.

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Having “Bride of” in a horror sequel’s title is synonymous with including the main character’s female counterpart, leading to Bride of Re-Animator, Bride of Chucky, etc. The similarities go further than the titles, with The Bride of Frankenstein inspiring the former’s plot and furthering Tiffany’s arc in the latter. The Bride of Frankenstein inevitably shaped Frankenstein’s future adaptations as well.

Directed by Kenneth Branagh, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein from 1994 closely follows the original novel. Breaking away from the novel’s narrative, its third act pays homage to The Bride of Frankenstein when Victor brings Elizabeth back to life with similarly brief screentime. Mia Goth’s seemingly red hair on the set of Guillermo Del Toro’s upcoming Frankenstein may hint at her character similarly becoming The Bride.

The Bride’s Untapped Potential for a Modern Horror Remake

With Warner Bros. releasing its own take on the character with The Bride! in 2026, it makes Universal’s reluctance to make a new remake downright egregious.

The Bride is still the literally redheaded stepchild among the Universal Monsters. When it comes to being neglected by Universal, The Creature From the Black Lagoon is the only character who rivals The Bride, but that’s another story. Universal did plan a remake directed by Bill Condon, who helmed Gods and Monsters, for its aborted Dark Universe film franchise.

The Bride’s Absence in Epic Universe’s Monsters Unchained Ride

Looking at Epic Universe, the Monsters Unchained: The Frankenstein Experiment ride apparently leaves The Bride out, even though she makes more sense to be in it than The Phantom of the Opera. However, The Bride does make meet-and-greet appearances across Dark Universe’s grounds.

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Several ideas can be incredible for when Universal finally releases a remake of The Bride of Frankenstein someday. Based on what I’ve heard about 2023’s Poor Things, it’s exploration of a mad scientist’s creation’s experiences in a restrictive society is closer to what a modern reimagining should be. Having a woman behind the camera can lead to a feminist vision, delving into The Bride questioning her life’s purpose.

Until the day a proper remake debuts, the original 1935 film remains The Bride of Frankenstein’s definitive incarnation.

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