15 Best Horror Movies Like Insidious

The best movies like Insidious tap into that delicious blend of supernatural scares, eerie atmospheres, and relentless tension that keeps viewers checking under the bed long after the credits roll. James Wan’s Insidious (2010) revived the haunted house genre with its chilling tale of astral projection, a creepy alternate dimension known as The Further, and an unforgettable demon with a love for Tiny Tim music. Combining spine-tingling visuals with a slow-building dread, Insidious found the perfect formula for modern horror – and horror fans have been chasing that same feeling ever since.

But what exactly makes a movie scratch that same Insidious itch? It’s not just about jump scares – although, let’s be honest, those help. It’s about layered storytelling, creepy lore, a lingering sense of doom, and the feeling that something is watching (even when no one’s there). Whether it’s spirits that refuse to move on, cursed objects, or creepy entities pulling the strings from another realm, the best movies like Insidious bring plenty of dread to the table. If you’re ready for more heart-pounding encounters with the paranormal, these chilling picks will absolutely deliver.

Collage of Elise (Lin Shaye), Josh (Patrick Wilson), and Renai (Rose Byrne) in Insidious.

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The Conjuring (2013)

Directed By James Wan

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The Conjuring

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Mystery

Thriller

Horror

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9/10

8.7/10

Release Date

July 19, 2013

Runtime

112 minutes

Director

James Wan

Writers

Chad Hayes, Carey W. Hayes

Sequel(s)

The Conjuring 2, The Conjuring 3

Cast

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The Conjuring

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Fans of Insidious will feel right at home with The Conjuring – and not just because James Wan directed both. Though based on a real case investigated by paranormal experts Ed and Lorraine Warren, The Conjuring is every bit as much a blockbuster jump scare experience as Insidious, with James Wan’s visual ingenuity on full display throughout. The non-stop terrorizing of the Perron family in the film by a devilish presence that inhabits their new home is packed full of unforgettably hair-raising frights and macabre designs. This haunting tale of a family plagued by dark forces in their farmhouse oozes the same kind of dread and escalating supernatural horror as Insidious.

Both Insidious and The Conjuring also use practical effects and sharp sound design to brilliant effect, keeping viewers on edge. What’s more, The Conjuring universe has grown to include sequels and spin-offs like Annabelle and The Nun, expanding the lore in much the same way Insidious did with its own sequels. For fans who love the way Insidious focuses on unraveling sinister mysteries and facing off with malevolent spirits, The Conjuring 2 and The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It are must-sees that continue the creepy legacy with plenty of chills and emotional stakes.

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It Follows (2015)

Directed By David Robert Mitchell

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It Follows

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Horror

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7/10

6.5/10

Release Date

March 27, 2015

Runtime

100minutes

Director

David Robert Mitchell

Writers

David Robert Mitchell

Cast

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    Olivia Luccardi

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Finding a way to fight back against a seemingly unstoppable paranormal threat is a big part of what makes the plots of movies like Insidious so popular, and few modern films have combined this effect with shocking jump scares quite as well as 2015’s It Follows. DIrected by David Robert Mitchell, the premise of It Follows is simple enough as it revolves around a curse transmitted person-to-person by sexual intercourse, resulting in a shape-shifting entity slowly stalking the victim until it catches up to them and brutally murders them. The path to beating the curse is more complex, however, and the film treats its concept with a level of seriousness and thought that Insidious fans will respect, if not outright love.

While It Follows takes a very different visual and narrative approach than Insidious, the core theme of an inescapable, supernatural force binds them together. Both movies explore the idea of a relentless entity that attaches itself to a person and refuses to let go, no matter where the victims they’re tormenting run. Much like Insidious, it’s the creeping tension and growing sense of dread that makes the horror of It Follows so effective. True, the overall tone’s a different flavor of haunting, but one that sticks with you long after it’s over – just like Insidious.

Grave Encounters (2011)

Directed By Colin Milihan

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Grave Encounters

Not Rated

Thriller

Horror

Release Date

September 9, 2011

Runtime

93 minutes

Director

Colin Minihan

Writers

Colin Minihan, Stuart Ortiz

Producers

Shawn Angelski, Mark Knechtel

Cast

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    Sean Rogerson

    Lance Preston

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    Ashleigh Gryzko

    Sasha Parker

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    Merwin Mondesir

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Insidious fans who enjoyed the paranormal investigation angle of the film the most will certainly want to check out 2011’s Grave Encounters. The found-footage horror movie focuses on a team of ghost hunters who lock themselves in an abandoned psychiatric hospital that is allegedly haunted by the ghosts of its mistreated patients and unethical staff. Though several shades darker and more grounded in reality than a horror movie like Insidious, Grave Encounters also inevitably descends into a surreal state of nightmarish horror that leaves a lasting impression.

The oppressive atmosphere and nightmarish architecture throughout Grave Encounters feel very Insidious-like, with the hospital itself becoming a twisted maze of terror. Both films explore the idea of being trapped in a reality that’s just slightly off, where rules bend and malevolent entities dominate. Fans of Insidious’s creepy visuals and mind-bending space will find a similar thrill here. The sequel, 2012’s Grave Encounters 2, is just as creepy, diving deeper into the twisted mythos and offering more otherworldly horror. If you’re craving a paranormal thrill ride with claustrophobic dread and shocking scares at the level of Insidious, Grave Encounters more than fits the bill.

Poltergeist (1982)

Directed By Tobe Hooper

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Poltergeist

PG-13

Supernatural

Horror

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4/10

9.3/10

Release Date

June 4, 1982

Director

Tobe Hooper

Writers

Steven Spielberg, Michael Grais, Mark Victor

Cast

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Much of the plot of Insidious is directly influenced by this horror movie classic from cinematic icons Tobe Hooper and Steven Spielberg. Elise and her paranormal investigators, Specs and Tucker, are quite clearly direct homages to the film as the story of each film boils down to a last-ditch attempt to rescue a child who has been taken into the spirit world by malevolent forces. Though Insidious is much more new-school in its approach to horror, the original Poltergeist remains an effectively frightening experience with wildly ghoulish concepts that are impressively realized.

A true classic, Poltergeist is a spiritual ancestor to Insidious, and horror fans will immediately recognize the shared DNA – especially since both include a child pulled into another realm. The use of paranormal experts, eerie TVs, and bizarre otherworldly dimensions set a precedent that Insidious followed decades later with its own modern spin. The ghostly encounters in Poltergeist are a mix of awe-inspiring and terrifying, creating that same disorienting blend of wonder and fear even with pre-CGI special effects. For Insidious fans who appreciate haunted-house horror with emotional stakes and creepy world-building, this one is essential viewing – and a masterclass in supernatural cinema.

Host (2020)

Directed By Rob Savage

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Host

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Horror

Mystery

Release Date

July 30, 2020

Runtime

65minutes

Director

Rob Savage

Writers

Rob Savage, Gemma Hurley, Jed Shepherd

Cast

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Horror movie fans who enjoyed Insidious’s twists on the idea of a haunting in a feature film plot will likely get a kick out of Host, which revolves entirely around a Zoom call between a group of friends that turns deadly when the séance that they conduct through the call invites a demonic presence into all of their lives. The idea of a movie that is made up entirely of a character’s computer screen had already been seen years earlier by the movie Unfriended, which many Insidious fans would also surely get a kick out of. However, Host has little time for build-up and goes straight for the jump scares, making it a more intense experience.

Host captures the same tight, intimate fear that Insidious fans crave. The pacing is relentless, the scares come fast, and the looming sense of doom is palpable. There’s a raw, immersive feel to Host that mirrors the immersive terror of Insidious‘s best moments, such as when Josh ventures into The Further. Host is also deeply innovative in how it modernizes ghost stories for the digital age, while still playing with timeless themes of possession and the unknown. If you’re into lean, mean horror with creative frights and tight suspense, Host is a modern masterpiece that gets under your skin just as fast as Insidious did.

Lights Out (2016)

Directed By David F Sandberg

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Lights Out

PG-13

Horror

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6/10

Release Date

July 22, 2016

Runtime

81minutes

Director

David F. Sandberg

Writers

Eric Heisserer

Cast

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Before joining James Wan’s Conjuring universe to direct a prequel about the iconic demonic doll Annabelle, director David F. Sandberg made a name for himself in modern horror movies with this expansion of one of his short film ideas – 2016’s Light’s Out. Lights Out is a concept-driven horror story that sees a family mercilessly stalked by a murderous figure that can only be seen in the dark. Like Insidious though, the movie places an equal amount of emphasis on family problems as it does on ghostly threats, masterfully spinning emotional tension into the ever-building sense of dread.

Lights Out also shares a key creative ingredient with Insidious: producer James Wan, whose signature touch is all over this film’s chilling set-pieces. Lights Out turns a simple concept – a monster that only appears in the dark – into a terrifying, full-blown nightmare. Fans of Insidious will appreciate the clever visual scares, emotionally anchored characters, and terrifying creature design. Like Insidious, Lights Out revolves around a family tormented by a supernatural entity tied to a dark past, and it builds its tension through suspense rather than gore. Lights Out also plays with light and shadow in creative ways, just as Insidious plays with dimensions and perception. It’s fast-paced, scary, and grounded in emotional trauma, making it the perfect companion watch for those who love haunted stories with heart.

Sinister (2012)

Directed By Scott Derrickson

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Sinister

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Thriller

Horror

Mystery

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7/10

8.4/10

Release Date

October 12, 2012

Runtime

110 minutes

Director

Scott Derrickson

Writers

Scott Derrickson, C. Robert Cargill

Sequel(s)

Sinister 2

Cast

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Sinister

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Scott Derrickson’s 2012 supernatural horror movie, Sinister, follows a writer who, after moving with his young family into a new house, discovers a box of 8mm home movies in the attic. Upon inspection, each one appears to be from a different home and depicts the gruesome murders of each house’s family, with an eerie figure connecting all of them. Sinister, much like Insidious, is a movie all about inducing terror by any means necessary, leading to all kinds of visceral frights and unforgettable jump scares throughout.

Both films follow protagonists who unknowingly bring darkness into their homes and are soon plunged into a fight against sinister forces beyond comprehension. The atmosphere in Sinister is thick with dread, and like Insidious, it leans on a creepy alternate mythology – in this case, involving a pagan deity and terrifying home movies. Ethan Hawke’s performance grounds the film emotionally, just as Patrick Wilson (who appears in both Insidious and The Conjuring) does in his respective roles. The scares in Sinister are deeply unsettling and creatively executed, drawing on both psychological horror and shocking visuals. If you loved the blend of slow-burn tension and brutal payoffs in Insidious, Sinister is a must.

Ethan Hawke and a Demon in Sinister

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Ouija: Origin Of Evil (2016)

Directed By Mike Flanagan

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Ouija: Origin of Evil

PG-13

Horror

Thriller

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6/10

7/10

Release Date

October 21, 2016

Runtime

99minutes

Director

Mike Flanagan

Writers

Mike Flanagan, Jeff Howard

Sequel(s)

Ouija

Cast

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One of the most surprising horror hits of the 2010s, Mike Flanagan’s prequel to the almost-completely forgotten 2014 Hasbro-produced horror movie Ouija demonstrates the director’s Stanislavskian approach to maximum effort no matter what the project. Set in the 1960s and focusing on the family drama of a widow and her two young daughters experiencing increased freedoms as women due to their circumstances, Origin of Evil not only improves greatly upon its predecessor but actually enriches the story of that movie too. Flanagan weaves together domestic drama and supernatural horror in a very similar way to James Wan in Insidious, making the pair of films a surprisingly perfect duo.

Don’t let the Ouija brand name fool you – Origin of Evil is a terrifying surprise that brings the goods for Insidious fans. It dials into that same vibe of a loving family torn apart by malevolent supernatural forces. The period setting (1960s Los Angeles) lends it a rich atmosphere, and the use of the Ouija board echoes the séance and spirit-communication elements from Insidious. It’s emotionally resonant, genuinely creepy, and builds toward a terrifying conclusion (all hallmarks of a horror film that hits the Insidious sweet spot). What’s more, Mike Flanagan’s ability to blend heart with horror makes Origin of Evil feel like more than just another ghost story. It’s a haunting, tragic journey that hits many of the same emotional notes as Insidious alongside the pair’s horror parallels.

The Ritual (2017)

Available to stream on Netflix

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The Ritual

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Horror

Thriller

ScreenRant logo

4/10

8/10

Release Date

October 13, 2017

Runtime

94minutes

Director

David Bruckner

Writers

David Bruckner

Cast

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    Sam Troughton

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2017’s The Ritual is the feature-length debut of director David Bruckner after making a name for himself among horror fans with a number of highly-memorable segments in anthology films. Demonstrating a lot of the same visual creativity that James Wan injected into Insidious, the story of The Ritual follows a group of friends who become lost in a Swedish forest and begin to feel a malevolent presence haunting their dreams and stalking them through the trees. The Ritual may trade in haunted houses for haunted forests, but the creeping, otherworldly terror it delivers is right in line with Insidious.

This atmospheric horror includes some incredible supernatural scares thanks to the ancient, malevolent, and deeply psychological. Like Insidious, The Ritual blends emotional trauma with supernatural horror – here, it’s survivor’s guilt and fractured friendships instead of family and astral projection. Both films trap their characters in spaces that feel warped and unreal, with the forest in The Ritual becoming its own nightmarish dimension. Fans of Insidious’s eerie mood and escalating dread will find themselves gripped by this film’s slow, sinister unraveling and a terrifying creature that wouldn’t feel out of place in The Further. It’s moody, mythic, and packs an emotional punch with its scares.

Before I Wake (2016)

Directed By Mike Flanagan

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Before I Wake

PG-13

Horror

Documentary

Fantasy

Thriller

Release Date

April 7, 2016

Director

Mike Flanagan

Writers

Mike Flanagan, Jeff Howard

Cast

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Another Mike Flanagan Netflix movie, Before I Wake is something of an underrated gem that has a lot to offer Insidious fans. The plot of Before I Wake makes the similarities instantly apparent too, as it revolves around a young boy whose dreams and nightmares manifest into reality as he sleeps. Fans of Insidious‘ astral plane of “The Further” will no doubt enjoy this creative chiller for its dreamlike designs and emotional performances. However, the core of the appeal is in that fact that Before I Wake takes the emotional depth of Insidious and adds a heartbreaking fantasy-horror twist.

Like Insidious, Before I Wake explores grief, parental love, and the thin veil between dreams and reality. But where Insidious drags its characters into The Further, Before I Wake creates a dreamy, dangerous reality out of a child’s subconscious. There’s a deep emotional core here that fans of the Lambert family’s journey will connect with, and the film’s creature – The Canker Man – is both terrifying and tragically symbolic. It’s less about pure scares and more about dread and loss, but that same haunting vibe Insidious fans love is alive and well here, especially in the eerie visuals and slow-burn pacing.

The Woman In Black (2012)

Directed By James Watkins

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The Woman In Black

PG-13

Horror

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6/10

4/10

Release Date

February 3, 2012

Runtime

95 minutes

Director

James Watkins

Writers

Jane Goldman

Sequel(s)

The Woman in Black: Angel of Death

Cast

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Gothic horror fans who loved the moody, shadowy tension of Insidious will find The Woman in Black a perfect next watch. Daniel Radcliffe leads this classic haunted house fright-fest adapted from Susan Hill’s novel of the same name and Insidious fans will surely notice the shared influence of the ghostly imagery. In The Woman In Black, Radcliffe plays a young lawyer sent to a decaying gothic mansion to put affairs in order for its sale, but quickly finds the local townspeople fear the secluded house for good reason. Though not set in the modern day, The Woman in Black is very much a contemporary thrill ride of a horror movie.

Daniel Radcliffe stars as a widowed lawyer who visits a fog-choked village plagued by the vengeful ghost of a scorned woman. Like Insidious, the film thrives on classic haunted house horror – every creaking floorboard, every fleeting glimpse of a ghost in the corner of the frame is loaded with dread. The oppressive atmosphere and tragic backstory of the entity give the movie emotional weight, much like the tragic figures haunting the Lamberts. There’s also a slow, escalating build that pays off in some nerve-shredding scares. While the Victorian setting gives it a different aesthetic, the underlying themes of grief, loss, and the price of looking into the spirit world will feel very familiar – and chilling – to Insidious fans.

The Others (2001)

Directed By Alejandro Amenábar

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The Others

PG-13

Mystery

Thriller

Horror

9.3/10

Release Date

August 10, 2001

Runtime

104 minutes

Director

Alejandro Amenábar

Writers

Alejandro Amenábar

Cast

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Another very classically influenced ghost story that will resonate with Insidous fans, The Others was written, directed, and scored by Alejandro Amenábar and received significant critical acclaim and box office success for a horror movie back in 2001. Set in the usual type of isolated old English estate, the plot follows Nicole Kidman as a single mother in the 1940s who is beginning to suspect that the house is occupied by more than just her family and the servants. The desperation of Kidman’s character to protect her children from an intangible enemy will remind an Insidious fan very much of the Lambert family’s struggles in Insidious.

If you loved the eerie quiet and slow-burning tension of Insidious, then The Others will absolutely creep under your skin. Like Insidious, it’s steeped in mystery, suspense, and an escalating sense that something is very wrong. What’s more, while The Others relies less on jump scares and more on mood and emotional unease, it builds up to one of horror’s most iconic twist endings and offers plenty of Insidious-like thematic depth. While Insidious plays with astral projection and other dimensions, The Others is rooted in isolation, grief, and faith – all fertile ground for ghostly terror. It’s a more subdued ride, but just as unsettling, and the kind of horror that sticks with you long after the lights go out.

Crimson Peak (2015)

Directed By Guillermo Del Toro

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Crimson Peak

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Horror

Documentary

Fantasy

Mystery

Romance

Thriller

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5/10

6.8/10

Release Date

October 13, 2015

Runtime

119 minutes

Director

Guillermo del Toro

Writers

Matthew Robbins, Lucinda Coxon, Guillermo del Toro

Cast

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An even more opulent take on the archetypal English ghost story than even The Woman in Black or The Others, Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak is a sumptuous and sweeping Gothic drama which, like Insidious, confines its horror to a single setting (in this case, the titular manor). Filled with the director’s unceasing eye for detail and macabre designs, Crimson Peak features a star-studded cast with a standout performance from Jessica Chastain. All in all, Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak is a haunting, visually rich experience that’s tailor-made for fans of Insidious’s stylish and supernatural storytelling.

Crimson Peak, just like Insidious, blends family drama with otherworldly terror, featuring ghosts that are as beautiful as they are terrifying. Both films rely heavily on atmosphere and use color, light, and architecture to build dread (The Further and Allerdale Hall could be distant cousins). While Crimson Peak leans more into tragic romance and period drama, its ghosts are just as emotionally charged and horrifying. Del Toro’s emphasis on storytelling through visuals will resonate with Insidious fans, and the film’s sinister mystery unravels in a way that’s both mesmerizing and macabre.

Mama (2013)

Directed By Andres Muschietti

mama

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Mama

r

Horror

Thriller

ScreenRant logo

5/10

Release Date

February 21, 2013

Runtime

100 Minutes

Director

Andres Muschietti

Writers

Andres Muschietti

Cast

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    Jessica Chastain

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    Isabelle Nélisse

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Mama delivers that same haunting, maternal horror vibe that Insidious fans will instantly recognize – and it has plenty of common with Crimson Peak too (including the cast lead). Jessica Chastain steals the show in this oddly ethereal supernatural horror movie as she plays a woman forced into a maternal role after the discovery of her boyfriend’s nieces. The young girls, who had been presumed dead, and were found living feral in an abandoned house in the woods. Mama slips more gracefully between drama and horror as familial bonds begin to form between the characters in the shadow of the children’s imaginary guardian figure, who intrudes into their lives and reveals themselves as not so imaginary after all.

Insidious fans are sure to appreciate each of the little flourishes that go into making the film’s take on a haunted house narrative more unique. Like Insidious, Mama explores the intersection of family and the supernatural, as well as the consequences of meddling with things that should be left alone. The ghost in Mama is both terrifying and deeply tragic, echoing the emotional complexity of the Lipstick-Face Demon and other Insidious entities. Mama’s visuals are creepy and stylized, with dreamlike sequences that feel like slipping into another world( much like The Further). And while it delivers plenty of Insidious-like jump scares, it’s the story’s emotional weight and ghostly mythos that really elevate the experience.

It (2017)

Directed By Andy Muschietii

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It

R

Horror

ScreenRant logo

7/10

31

8.8/10

Release Date

September 8, 2017

Runtime

135 Minutes

Director

Andy Muschietti

Writers

Chase Palmer, Cary Joji Fukunaga, Gary Dauberman, Stephen King

Franchise(s)

IT

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Bill Skarsgård In The New York Premiere Of 'Boy Kills World'

    Bill Skarsgard

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    Jaeden Martell

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Andy Muschietti saw huge success with his massively popular first chapter in his adaptation of Stephen King’s iconicly complicated novel of the same name – 2017’s It. While It is more of a creature feature than a traditional ghost story, the way it plays with fear, trauma, and supernatural horror makes it a great pick for Insidious fans. The movie follows a group kids who in the town of Derry, Maine, as they become menaced by an otherworldly evil that typically manifests as a man-eating clown called Pennywise. Any Insidious fan is sure to love every twist, turn, and drop on this ghoulish rollercoaster experience, and not just because of the equally slick jump-scares and visuals.

Pennywise the Dancing Clown is a shape-shifting entity that thrives on fear – not unlike the demons and spirits that plague the Lambert family. Both It and Insidious also balance supernatural horror with deep emotional undercurrents, especially the bond between the young characters and their struggle to overcome trauma. The visuals are stylish, the scares are intense, and the monster design is iconic, all of which will feel familiar to those who loved the demonic aesthetics of Insidious. While It leans more into adventure-horror with its ensemble cast of kids, it still packs plenty of nightmare fuel and disturbing moments, making it a thrilling, high-energy ride for fans looking to expand their haunted horizons.

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Insidious

PG-13

Mystery

Thriller

Horror

ScreenRant logo

8/10

11

8/10

Release Date

April 1, 2011

Runtime

103 minutes

Director

James Wan

Writers

Leigh Whannell

Sequel(s)

Insidious: Chapter 2, Insidious: Chapter 3, Insidious: The Last Key, Insidious: The Red Door

Cast

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  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Barbara Hershey

  • Headshot Of Lin Shaye

    Lin Shaye

Franchise(s)

Insidious

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