10 Best Movies & Shows To Watch After Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

From previous Winona Ryder/Tim Burton projects to other spooky supernatural comedies, there are a ton of great movies and TV shows to check out after Beetlejuice Beetlejuice. Burton has returned to the horror genre for the first time in more than a decade to deliver the long-awaited sequel to Beetlejuice. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice deftly recaptures the creepy fun of the classic original movie with old-school practical effects, family-friendly jump scares, and a brilliant performance by Michael Keaton in the title role. It’s so good, it’ll have audiences clamoring for more.

After watching Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, there are plenty of other similar movies to check out. There have been other fun-filled horror comedies with a similar tone – including a strikingly similar one released earlier this year – and the cast of Beetlejuice 2 has appeared in a bunch of great projects. Before Jenna Ortega was cast to play Lydia Deetz’s daughter in Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Burton directed her in her breakout role as Wednesday Addams. There are several projects that give off the same whimsical, yet spooky vibe that fall right in line with Burton’s hit sequel.

10 Beetlejuice (1988)

It’s Never A Bad Time To Rewatch The Original Classic

Michael Keaton looking surprised as Betelgeuse in Beetlejuice

It’s never a bad time to rewatch the classic original Beetlejuice movie, and there’s no better time for a rewatch than after watching the sequel. From the model town in the Maitlands’ attic to the choir rendition of “Banana Boat” at Charles’ funeral, Beetlejuice 2 is full of Easter eggs referencing the most iconic moments from its predecessor. The Beetlejuice sequel plays masterfully on the audience’s nostalgia for the original movie, and the perfect follow-up to that nostalgia bait is a rewatch.

As great as Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is, the original is arguably an even better movie. It has more laughs, and it has more effective jump scares. Plus, it was Burton’s first foray into his signature blend of the mundane and the macabre. After watching Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, it’s the perfect time to rewatch the original film.

9 Wednesday (2022-Present)

Revisit Jenna Ortega’s Breakout Role

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Before Burton cast Jenna Ortega to play Lydia Deetz’s rebellious teenage daughter in the Beetlejuice sequel, he’d previously worked with her on Netflix’s Wednesday series. After Scream, X, and Studio 666 had established Ortega as a modern-day scream queen, Wednesday turned her into one of the biggest stars in the world. Ortega’s turn as Wednesday Addams was essentially a prototype for her performance as Astrid Deetz in the Beetlejuice sequel.

Much like Astrid, Wednesday is a deadpan misanthrope who doesn’t get along with her classmates, unwittingly falls in love with a villain, and secretly has a heart of gold. Astrid fans will surely love Wednesday just as much. There’s even a nod to Wednesday’s iconic dance sequence in Beetlejuice 2’s “MacArthur Park” finale. This paranormal Netflix series is the perfect show to watch after Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

8 Frankenweenie (2012)

Tim Burton’s Last Suburban Horror Satire

Victor and Sparky smile at each other in the movie Frankenweenie.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is the first time Burton has returned to the horror genre in more than a decade. In the past 10 years, Burton has helmed the biopic Big Eyes, the Y.A. fantasy movie Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, and the live-action remake of Disney’s Dumbo. Burton’s last horror film was Frankenweenie way back in 2012, a stop-motion animated feature adaptation of his 1984 short of the same name.

Much like the Beetlejuice sequel, Frankenweenie brings creepy horror tropes into the mundanity of suburbia. It revolves around a little boy named Victor, who reanimates the corpse of his beloved dog and ends up causing a town-wide panic when more people use his power to bring their own pets back from the grave. It’s just as much fun as Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, perfectly blending comedy with horror.

7 Ghostbusters: Afterlife (2021)

Beetlejuice Isn’t The First Classic ’80s Supernatural Comedy To Get A Legacy Sequel

Mckenna Grace and Finn Wolfhard in the Ghostbusters car in Ghostbusters Afterlife

Beetlejuice isn’t the first classic supernatural comedy from the ‘80s to get a legacy sequel focused on the next generation. Much like Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Ghostbusters: Afterlife revolves around the daughter of a beloved franchise character grappling with his legacy, and a new generation carrying the baton. Egon Spengler’s daughter Callie is just as embarrassed by her dad’s reputation as a Ghostbuster as Astrid is embarrassed by her mom’s reputation as a TV ghost whisperer.

Egon’s granddaughter Phoebe picks up the torch, just like Astrid does in Beetlejuice 2. Ghostbusters: Afterlife manages the same perfect balance of nostalgic fan service and new characters and storytelling that made the Beetlejuice sequel such a success. It brings back the old cast for a heartwarming reunion, but it also makes endearing icons out of all the newcomers.

6 Schitt’s Creek (2015-2020)

Catherine O’Hara’s Iconic TV Show

Johnny (Eugene Levy) And Moira (Eugene Levy) in a field in the sun in Schitts Creek Season 6 Premiere

Before she reprised her role as Delia Deetz in the Beetlejuice sequel, Catherine O’Hara became a bigger star than ever with her turn as Moira Rose in Schitt’s Creek. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice even contains a sly reference to one of Schitt’s Creek’s best Moira gags: the schlocky horror B-movie that Moira starred in, The Crows Have Eyes III: The Crowening. Schitt’s Creek revolves around a wealthy family who lose all their money and have to relocate to the small town they bought as a joke.

There’s a lot of overlap between the characters of Moira and Delia. Like Delia, Moira is a pretentious wannabe artist with a hilarious eccentric streak, and O’Hara is just as iconic in both roles. Like Bob’s Burgers and Ted Lasso, Schitt’s Creek pushes back against the cynicism of most modern TV comedy with a delightful feel-good tone.

5 Edward Scissorhands (1990)

Another Great Tim Burton & Winona Ryder Collaboration

Edward looks remorseful and Kim looks contemplative in a promotional still for Edward Scissorhands

After Burton and Keaton reunited to make Batman, the director reteamed with his other Beetlejuice star, Winona Ryder, for another fantasy comedy set in another creepy small town. Edward Scissorhands stars Johnny Depp as the unfinished creation of an old inventor: an ageless humanoid with scissor blades for fingers. Ryder plays Kim, the daughter of a door-to-door Avon sales rep who takes pity on Edward. Although Kim is initially scared of Edward, the two eventually fall in love.

Edward Scissorhands is a much more earnest, heartfelt movie than Beetlejuice. Edward is a tragic figure; he’s a sweet, kind-hearted man who wouldn’t harm a fly, but most people can only see him as a monster. With a sympathetic monster in the lead role and a touching love story at the heart of the movie, Edward Scissorhands is one of Burton’s most sincere films.

4 The Frighteners (1996)

Another Haunted House Comedy

Michael J Fox talking to ghosts in The Frighteners

Beetlejuice isn’t the only tongue-in-cheek comedy about a haunted house. Long before he would bring Middle-earth to life on the big screen, Peter Jackson was a horror filmmaker. His last horror film before The Lord of the Rings trilogy was The Frighteners, a supernatural comedy starring Michael J. Fox as a con artist who can see and hear ghosts. He uses his spectral friends to haunt people’s houses, then charges them a hefty fee to “exorcize” the ghosts from their homes.

Much like Beetlejuice, The Frighteners is a paranormal caper revolving around an unscrupulous entrepreneur who uses his ability to haunt houses to make a quick buck. Fox is just as funny and charismatic a lead as Keaton. Jackson balances the tone perfectly, starting off as a straightforward comedy before sliding into more disturbing territory.

3 Lisa Frankenstein (2024)

A Similar Recent Supernatural Horror Comedy

The Creature holding Lisa's head and looking at her lovingly in Lisa Frankenstein

What makes the Beetlejuice movies so unique is that they bring the unsettling terror of supernatural horror into the familiar, everyday environment of the suburbs. This same juxtaposition was pulled off brilliantly earlier this year in the soon-to-be cult classic horror comedy Lisa Frankenstein. Written by the Oscar-winning screenwriter of Juno, Diablo Cody, Lisa Frankenstein stars Kathryn Newton as a teenage outcast who falls in love with a reanimated corpse from the Victorian era, played by Cole Sprouse.

Both Beetlejuice Beetlejuice and Lisa Frankenstein wring morbid laughs out of death and the afterlife. Lisa Frankenstein is set in the 1980s, so it has the same flashy, glitzy ‘80s vibes that defined the original Beetlejuice movie. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is the only official Beetlejuice sequel to be released in 2024, but Lisa Frankenstein plays like an unofficial sequel.

2 Stranger Things (2016-2025)

Winona Ryder’s Comeback Role

Joyce holding an ax and looking determined in Stranger Things

Around the time O’Hara scored a major career comeback with her role in Schitt’s Creek, Ryder scored her own career comeback with her own hit show. Stranger Things combines influences from the coming-of-age classics of Amblin and the terrifying horror stories of John Carpenter and Stephen King. It could be described as The Goonies meets Firestarter, or Halloween meets Stand by Me. Ryder plays Joyce Byers, the mother of a young boy whose mysterious disappearance may have something to do with monsters lurking in a parallel dimension.

In Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, the older version of Lydia Deetz has more in common with Joyce from Stranger Things than the teenage Lydia from the original film. Like Joyce, in the sequel, Lydia is the flustered mother desperately trying to protect her kid from supernatural monsters bleeding in from another dimension. Stranger Things is perfect for Beetlejuice 2 fans.

1 The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)

Another Great Self-Aware Horror Parody

Tim Curry as Dr Frank-N-Furter sings Sweet Transvestite in The Rocky Horror Picture Show

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is both an effective horror movie and a self-aware horror satire. It has references to everything from Jaws to The Amityville Horror to Mario Bava’s Black Sunday. The first name in self-aware horror parody is 1975’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show, the mother of all cult classics. It revolves around a couple named Brad and Janet whose car breaks down outside a gothic mansion containing every horror archetype from a mad scientist to an alien visitor.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show borrows from the sci-fi and horror B-movies of the ‘30s, ‘40s, ‘50s, and ‘60s. It’s jam-packed with homages to the genre’s classics and, much like Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, it has a handful of catchy musical numbers. Rocky Horror combines its humor with its horror just as effectively as Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, and it’s perfect for fans of the movie.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Film Poster Beetlejuice Beetlejuice 74

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PG-13ComedySupernaturalFantasyHorror

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is the sequel to the original Tim Burton classic that starred Michael Keaton and Wynona Rider in a horror-comedy that involved ghosts trying to scare off new homebuyers from taking their house. The sequel brings back Michael Keaton as the hilarious and sleazy ghost with selfish intentions, now joined by Jenna Ortega in a new role.

Director Tim Burton Release Date September 6, 2024 Studio(s) KatzSmith Productions , Tim Burton Productions , Warner Bros. Pictures , Plan B Entertainment Distributor(s) Warner Bros. Pictures Writers Alfred Gough , Miles Millar , Mike Vukadinovich , Seth Grahame-Smith , Michael McDowell , Larry Wilson Cast Michael Keaton , Winona Ryder , Catherine O’Hara , Jenna Ortega , Justin Theroux , Willem Dafoe , Monica Bellucci , Arthur Conti , Nick Kellington , Santiago Cabrera , Burn Gorman , Danny DeVito , Sami Slimane , Amy Nuttall , Mark Heenehan , Charlie Hopkinson , Liv Spencer , Skylar Park , Matthew Lyons , Jane Leaney , David Ayres , Sophie Holland , Walles Hamonde Runtime 104 Minutes Main Genre Comedy Expand