10 Horror Movies With Massive Retcons That Changed Everything

A lot of beloved horror franchises started as solo movies destined to remain nothing more than scary stories with the sole purpose of terrifying the audience. However, more than once, these films were so groundbreaking that the viewer wanted to learn more about the plot, the heroes, and most of the time, the villains too. As a consequence, the producers, to satisfy the fans, had to expand the story and devise new twists to bring back both its leading characters and the antagonists.

One of the best ways to do that is by retconning the original story. The use of retcons is to change previously established facts in a story to reshape the narrative. Often, it is done to keep a franchise evolving and dynamic. Whether by rewriting character fates, erasing entire sequels, or perhaps also introducing thrilling plot twists and keeping the audience entertained, this literary device has been used multiple times in the history of the horror genre.

10

Michael Is Laurie’s Brother

Halloween II (1981)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Halloween II 1981 Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Halloween II

R

Horror

Release Date

October 30, 1981

Runtime

92 Minutes

Director

Rick Rosenthal

Writers

John Carpenter, Debra Hill

Prequel(s)

Halloween

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Jamie Lee Curtis In The Lionsgate Films' 'Borderlands' Special

    Jamie Lee Curtis

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Donald Pleasence

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Charles Cyphers

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Jeffrey Kramer

Halloween II is a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s original 1978 Halloween starring Jamie Lee Curtis. In the sequel, Laurie Strode is transported to Haddonfield Memorial Hospital to recover from her injuries, but Michael Myers continues to hunt her down. Halloween II is also the film that established Michael and Laurie were siblings, which would become one of the most controversial twists in the Halloween franchise.

Story By

John Carpenter, Debra Hill

Studio(s)

Dino De Laurentiis Corporation

Distributor(s)

Universal Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

One of the most famous and significant horror/slasher franchises in the history of cinema, the Halloween saga, has multiple times changed previously established facts about the identity and story of its serial killer. Michael Meyers is a terrifying presence that looms over the story, terrorizing anyone who comes face to face with him. His origins, however, have been readapted according to the movie.

Featured Image: Halloween poster (left) Michael Myers from Halloween Kills (right)

Related

This Character Survived 1981’s Halloween II (But Not For Long)

One of the weakest deaths of the Halloween franchise was redeemed when Michael Myers returned to deliver a far more definitive kill to [SPOILER].

Posts

In his first appearance, Michael is said to have killed his sister when he was only a kid, to later return to his childhood town and go on a murder spree. However, Halloween 2 turned the tables and revealed that Michael was actually the brother of Laurie Strode (Jaime Lee Curtis), who also happens to be his favorite victim. The plot twist, albeit divisive, changed the motivations of the notorious killer, making his unreasonable and obsessive hunt for Laurie a more personal matter. The retcon explained Michael’s obsession with Laurie.

9

Roman Manipulated Billy & Stu

Screams 3 (1997)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

scream 3

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Scream 3

r

Horror

Thriller

7.5/10

Release Date

February 4, 2000

Runtime

116 minutes

Director

Wes Craven

Writers

Wes Craven

Prequel(s)

Scream, Scream 2

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Wes Craven

    Wes Craven

  • Headshot Of Courteney Cox In The Los Angeles Premiere Of Warner Bros. Television's 'Shining Vale'

    Courteney Cox

Written by Ehren Kruger and directed by Wes Craven, Scream 3 is the third installment in the long-running slasher franchise and once again stars Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox Arquette, and David Arquette. This time, a film chronicling the Ghostface killing is under development when the slasher makes an appearance and begins taking out the cast members.

Studio(s)

MiraMax

Distributor(s)

Dimension Films, MiraMax

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

The original Scream film ended with a massive plot twist when it turned out that Sydney’s psychopathic stalker, Ghostface, was her boyfriend, Billy Loomis, with the help of his friend, Stu Macher. Billy, in particular, had a personal vendetta against Sydney’s mother, Maureen, whom he confessed he had murdered after finding out about her love affair with his father. The conclusion was already shocking enough. However, the creators wanted to bring the original story a step further.

This retcon expanded Sidney’s tragic backstory and shifted Billy and Stu from independent killers to pawns in Roman’s scheme, completely reframing the narrative and the characters’ arcs.

In Scream 3, the audience finds out that Billy and Stu, albeit guilty, were not the masterminds behind the horrors that took place in the first film. On the other hand, the man behind the show was Roman Bridger, Sydney’s half-brother on his mother’s side. Roman orchestrated the murder of Maureen, who he blamed for rejecting him, and manipulated Billy into seeking revenge by revealing his father’s affair with the woman. This retcon expanded Sidney’s tragic backstory and shifted Billy and Stu from independent killers to pawns in Roman’s scheme, completely reframing the narrative and the characters’ arcs.

8

The Xenomorph’s Life Cycle Is Never The Same

Alien: Covenant (2017)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Alien Covenant Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Alien: Covenant

R

Thriller

Adventure

Sci-Fi

ScreenRant logo

7/10

16

9.1/10

Release Date

May 19, 2017

Runtime

123 Minutes

Director

Ridley Scott

Writers

dante harper, John Logan, Jack Paglen, Michael Green

Prequel(s)

Aliens

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Michael Fassbender In The UK premiere of 'Kneecap'

    Michael Fassbender

    David

  • Headshot Of Katherine Waterston

    Katherine Waterston

    Walter

Alien: Covenant, directed by Ridley Scott, follows the crew of the colony ship Covenant as they discover an uncharted planet. Initially seeming like a paradise, the planet soon reveals dark secrets. Katherine Waterston, Michael Fassbender, and Billy Crudup lead the cast in this science fiction horror film, which serves as a direct sequel to Prometheus and continues to explore the origins of the Alien species.

Main Genre

Sci-Fi

Studio(s)

20th Century

Distributor(s)

20th Century

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

The Alien franchise has undergone numerous changes over the years, but one of the most glaring retcons concerns the life cycle of the Xenomorph. The original film that came out in 1979 introduced the creature’s development in a straightforward manner: an egg hatches a facehugger, which implants an embryo into a host, leading to the birth of a chestburster that matures into the deadly adult Xenomorph.

However, the later films of the franchise completely changed their life cycle. For instance, in Alien: Covenant, the creatures appear to leave the chest when they are already developed, completely eradicating what we had learned in the first movie. The permanent changes in the nature of these creatures allow to keep the mystery, and therefore also the terror, surrounding them alive, but makes their story and identity slightly confusing.

7

The Timeline & Personality

The Omen Franchise

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

The First Omen Movie Poster Showing a Nun in a Red Doorway and a Shadow of a Cross-1

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

The First Omen

R

Horror

ScreenRant logo

8/10

7.4/10

Release Date

April 5, 2024

Runtime

119 Minutes

Director

Arkasha Stevenson

Writers

Ben Jacoby, Tim Smith, Arkasha Stevenson, Keith Thomas

Sequel(s)

The Omen

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Nell Tiger Free

    Nell Tiger Free

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Tawfeek Barhom

The First Omen is a horror film from director Arkasha Stevenson that acts as a prequel to the 1976 film The Omen. The film follows a young woman who goes to Rome to become a nun but begins to question her faith after encountering a terrifying darkness that aims to spawn an evil incarnate.

Main Genre

Horror

Studio(s)

Phantom Four

Distributor(s)

20th Century

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

The final film of the Omen series completely changes the timeline of the original story. In The Omen, Damien Thorn is a five-year-old kid. The movie came out in 1976, and the shots, costumes, and environment all seem to suggest that the story is also set in the mid-’70s.

However, in the third installment of the saga, Damien is 32 and the year is 1982. This would place the first movie in the 1950s.

Aside from this peculiarity, the franchise had other twists over the years that changed the origin story, especially concerning the character of Damien. Perhaps, the most significant retcon occurs in the First Omen. Contrary to what was established in the 1976 film, where it was said that Damien’s mother was a jackal, we find out that the boy actually has a human mother, Margaret, a novice nun and the protagonist of the prequel.

6

Leatherface’s Identity Constantly Changes

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Franchise

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2003 Movie Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

R

Horror

Thriller

Release Date

October 17, 2003

Runtime

98 Minutes

Director

Marcus Nispel

Writers

Scott Kosar

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Jessica Biel

    Jessica Biel

  • Headshot Of Jonathan Tucker In The Fashion Trust U.S. Awards 2023

    Jonathan Tucker

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Erica Leerhsen

  • Headshot Of Mike Vogel

    Mike Vogel

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a 2003 horror film directed by Marcus Nispel. A group of young adults traveling through rural Texas encounters a family of cannibalistic psychopaths, instigating a series of violent and gruesome events. Jessica Biel stars as Erin, the lead character struggling to survive. This film serves as a remake of Tobe Hooper’s 1974 classic, introducing the terror of Leatherface to a new generation.

Main Genre

Horror

Studio(s)

Next Entertainment, Platinum Dunes, Radar Pictures

Distributor(s)

New Line Cinema

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

One of the most consistent aspects of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise is its inconsistency when it comes to the main villain of the story: Leatherface. The identity of the serial killer has gone through some significant changes over the various films, especially when it comes to his earlier story, family composition, and motivations. The first installment introduces us to the masked monster as a degenerate man who kills his victims and then gives them to his brother to cook. However, the sequels and spin-offs proposed many different narratives surrounding him.

While in the first two films, Leatherface’s family remains more or less the same, in the other productions of the franchise, new relatives are introduced, while others are abandoned. Similarly, the character of Leatherface seems to change names. He is called Bubba Sawyer in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, and Jed Sawyer in Texas Chainsaw 3D.

5

The Doll Is Haunted

Brahms: The Boy II (2020)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

01504265_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Brahms: The Boy II

PG-13

Horror

Mystery

Thriller

Release Date

February 20, 2020

Runtime

86 minutes

Director

William Brent Bell

Writers

Stacey Menear

Producers

Andre Lamal, Gary Lucchesi, Jim Wedaa, Matt Berenson, Richard S. Wright, Robert Simonds, Roy Lee, Tom Rosenberg, Eric Reid, Jackie Shenoo, Adam Fogelson

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Katie Holmes

    Katie Holmes

    Liza

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Christopher Convery

    Jude

  • Headshot Of Owain Yeoman

    Owain Yeoman

    Sean

  • headshot Of Ralph Ineson

    Ralph Ineson

    Joseph

Brahms: The Boy II follows a family that relocates to the Heelshire Mansion, where their young son forms an unsettling bond with a life-like doll named Brahms. This horror thriller explores the chilling atmosphere surrounding the mansion and the mysterious influence the doll exerts on the family.

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

The Boy might not be the horror cult that some of the other movies on this list have become over the years, but it certainly has its merits. One of the most ingenious ideas of the film was to subvert the trope of the haunted doll. The shocking ending revealed the toy was not possessed. It was merely a decoy for the real threat: Brahms Heelshire, the supposedly dead son of the film’s couple, who had been alive and hidden in the mansion’s walls for the whole time.

However, the producers, probably driven by the desire to continue the story, completely undid the clever plan of the first movie. Brahms: The Boy II reveals that the famous doll is haunted and possesses supernatural abilities and the ability to influence those who own it. The movie completely ruined the plot twist of the first installment and fell into the older and over-used trope of the evil doll.

4

Jason Is Alive

Friday The 13th Franchise

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

friday the 13th

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Friday the 13th Part 2

r

Horror

Mystery

ScreenRant logo

6/10

8/10

Release Date

May 1, 1981

Runtime

87minutes

Director

Steve Miner

Writers

Ron Kurz

Prequel(s)

Friday the 13th

Cast

See All

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Amy Steel

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    John Furey

Friday the 13th Part 2 was directed by Steve Miner and written by Ron Kurz. It’s a direct sequel to the horror/slasher film Friday the 13th and is the second overall movie in the series. Two months after the first film’s events, the only surviving camper is murdered by a new unknown entity, acting as a catalyst for a new massacre at Camp Crystal Lake.

Studio(s)

Georgetown Productions Inc.

Distributor(s)

Paramount Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

One of the biggest retcons in the history of horror cinema belongs to Friday the 13th and its sequels. The whole plot of the original film centers on the fact that Jason Voorhees drowned as a child at Camp Crystal Lake because of the staff’s negligence. His tragic fate serves as the backstory for his grieving and vengeful mother, Pamela Voorhees, who is the film’s killer. However, the future films of the franchise reveal a different story.

From a tragic and innocent victim of circumstances that act as a catalyst for the murders taking place in the saga, Jason becomes the central antagonist of the story.

Friday the 13th Part 2 drastically rewrote the original story. The film shows Jason had actually survived the drowning and had been living in the woods all along. This retcon completely revolutionized the trajectory of the film series. From a tragic and innocent victim of circumstances that act as a catalyst for the murders taking place in the saga, Jason becomes the central antagonist of the story. This rewrite completely contradicted the premise of the 1980 film and turned Jason into one of the most iconic slasher villains.

3

Ben Willis Is A Serial Killer

I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

I Still Know What You Did Last Summer

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Your comment has not been saved

I Still Know What You Did Last Summer

R

Horror

Mystery

Thriller

Release Date

November 13, 1998

Runtime

100 minutes

Director

Danny Cannon

Writers

Lois Duncan, Trey Callaway

Cast

  • Headshot Of Jennifer Love Hewitt In The Cafe Los Angeles Premiere

    Jennifer Love Hewitt

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Freddie Prinze Jr.

  • Headshot Of Brandy Norwood

    Brandy Norwood

  • Headshot Of Mekhi Phifer

    Mekhi Phifer

Main Genre

Horror

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

I Know What You Did Last Summer is one of the 1990s cults that revitalized the slasher genre. The film features a group of teenagers who supposedly kill a man in a car accident and attempt to cover up the crime. However, as it turns out, the man, Ben Willis, was not dead at all and decided to go on a killing spree to avenge the fact that the kids had left him for dead. In the original film, Ben appears like an angry man seeking revenge against those who wronged him. However, the second installment completely modifies the character.

In I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, it is shown that Ben was already a serial killer before the accident. This strange development almost destroys the identity of the first movie’s villain, transforming him from an avenging man crushed under the wrongdoings he felt was the victim of to a sadistic and cruel serial killer

2

There Is A Way Out

Final Destination 5 (2011)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Final Destination 5 Movie Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Final Destination 5

R

Horror

Thriller

ScreenRant logo

7/10

Release Date

August 12, 2011

Runtime

92 minutes

Director

Steven Quale

Writers

Eric Heisserer

Prequel(s)

Final Destination, The Final Destination, final destination 2, Final Destination 3

Cast

See All

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Jacqueline MacInnes Wood

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Tony Todd

In the fifth installment of the Final Destination franchise, survivors of a suspension bridge collapse are killed in horrific ways after cheating death. Final Destination 5 recieved mixed reviews upon release but was praised for it’s inventive deaths and use of 3D technology. In 2019, it was confirmed that Final Destination 6 was in development.

Studio(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Distributor(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

One of the central points of the plot of the Final Destination franchise is the finality of it. It does not matter how much our beloved heroes try, fight, and brainstorm to find alternative solutions. Once they are marked, there is no escaping death. However, Final Destination 5 flips this idea on its head. The last installment introduced a major retcon to the series’ core rules by revealing that there might be a way to flee the terrifying design of Death. All the character has to do is kill someone else and take their remaining lifespan.

This revelation completely changed what the fans thought they knew about the rules of the Final Destination‘s universe, making the story more disturbingly complex while also introducing a moral dilemma. As horrifying as the reveal is, the viewer is left with a new perception of the events that occurred in the previous films, leading them to rewatch the entire saga with different eyes.

1

There Was A Secret Cave Under The Haunted House

Poltergeist II: The Other Side (1986)

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

01304337_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Poltergeist II: The Other Side

PG-13

Horror

Thriller

Release Date

May 23, 1986

Runtime

91 minutes

Director

Brian Gibson

Writers

Mark Victor

Producers

Freddie Fields

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Craig T. Nelson

    Craig T. Nelson

    Steve Freeling

  • headshot Of JoBeth Williams

    JoBeth Williams

    Diane Freeling

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Heather O’Rourke

    Carol Anne Freeling

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Oliver Robins

    Robbie Freeling

Poltergeist II: The Other Side follows the Freeling family as they seek refuge with Diane’s mother after Carol Anne’s abduction. The malevolent force, manifesting as Reverend Kane, pursues them with the intent to reclaim Carol Anne, igniting a battle against the supernatural in this horror sequel.

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Poltergeist was a critical and commercial success when it premiered in 1982. The story about a seemingly normal family whose house is haunted by malevolent spirits is a popular concept for a reason. However, the motivations behind the presence of the ghosts in the home provided an interesting twist, revealing that the family’s house had been built on top of a graveyard. By the end of the film, the place is destroyed. Nevertheless, given the major success the movie received, the creators had to find a way to continue the story.

Ben Solo to the left, Anakin Skywalker in Revenge of the Sith in the middle, and Ahsoka Tano in live-action to the right

Related

10 Things Star Wars Should Seriously Consider Retconning (& No, I’m Not Talking About The Entire Sequel Trilogy)

Star Wars is well-known for its retcons, and I believe these 10 retcons in Star Wars’ movies and TV shows would massively improve the franchise.

Posts

10

Poltergeist II: The Other Side completely rewrites the backstory of the house, giving a different meaning to the events that occurred in the first movie. The sequel introduced a hidden tunnel beneath the building and a different, albeit also terrifying, villain, Reverend Henry Kane, a cult leader who had caused the death of his followers in said underground cave. This change contradicted the original horror story about the spirits being angry at having their graveyard desecrated.