10 Best Folk Horror Movies, Ranked

The Folk Horror genre has become one of the most popular forms of horror in recent years, with the rise of cult and ancestral narratives pervasive throughout all horror films. Folk horror’s best films are known for using elements of folklore, rituals, and ancient traditions to provide the backdrop for the thrilling and horrifying stories told that reveal the darker sides of our nature and humanity. It has become so popular as it mixes the realistic with the spiritually sinister and creates a crossover that has a feel all too real of ‘this could happen to me’.

The most impactful of the folk genre throughout cinema history and into recent years have focused on cults, voodoo, paganism, and superstition. Films like the critically acclaimed Hereditary with surprise endings, which puts a legitimately terrifying, modern spin on the occult, or Midsommar, that brings violent cults and the psychological forces within to the fore. Every film places the onus on the viewer that what they are watching isn’t something too far outside the realm of possibility, and that realization is what makes this genre one of the most fear-inducing horror themes and why the films themselves are so haunting.

10 The Blair Witch Project (1999)

Starring Heather Donahue And Michael Williams

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19 5.8/10 The Blair Witch Project RHorrorMystery

The Blair Witch Project is a 1999 horror film that follows three film students who venture into the Black Hills near Burkittsville, Maryland. As they document their search for the Blair Witch legend, strange and unsettling events unfold. Presented as found footage, the film is directed by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez, and it pioneered the found footage genre in mainstream cinema.

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*Availability in US Director Eduardo Sánchez , Daniel Myrick Release Date July 30, 1999 Studio(s) Summit Entertainment Distributor(s) Summit Entertainment Writers Daniel Myrick , Eduardo Sánchez Cast Joshua Leonard , Michael C. Williams , Heather Donahue Runtime 81 minutes Expand

This infamous ‘found-footage’ supernatural horror follows three film students who set out to make a documentary about the Blair Witch, a being who supposedly haunts a local forest, with strange occurrences and people going missing routinely. The use of handheld ‘documentary’ style footage and shaky camera work was revolutionary and adds a constant tension as you never know what is going to appear on the screen next and you, as the viewer, are often left in genuine suspense, both through the story and what is being seen.

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It’s easy to fail to note the significance and the impact of a film like The Blair Witch Project. While the technology used was rudimentary by today’s standards, the techniques, plot, storytelling, and marketing were years ahead of their time. The decision not to use special effects was masterful, adding to the realism, and many film-goers thought the footage was legitimately shot and genuinely portrayed their experience. Also, in marketing the film, the production had missing posters for their actors. Everything culminated in one incredible, horrifying, and believable film that became one of the most successful independent films ever created.

9 The Blood On Satan’s Claw (1971)

Starring Patrick Wymark And Linda Hayden

Michele Dotrice, Linda Hayden, and Wendy Padbury in The Blood on Satan's Claw (1971) in a forest, both looking terrified

Directed by Piers Haggard, this film, set in an early 18th-century country village in England tells the story of farmer Ralph Gower uncovering a deformed skull from within his field and with that, an unleashing of a demonic force that takes control of the local youths in the area. The film descends into a series of foul, gruesome, and hideous sequences, with children being murdered, ritualistic cult assaults, and the summoning of evil spirits. A nerve-jolting 93 minutes that starts off grim and only gets more terrifying with each passing moment.

While The Blood On Satan’s Claw (working title, Satan’s Skin) isn’t overly well-known or critically acclaimed, it is an early example of folk horror done correctly and executed well throughout the production. Particular scenes like Angel, the leader of the corrupted children, attempting to seduce the priest before revealing her friend’s murder, and the Black Mass stay with you after you finish watching. The film has an eerie and unsettling atmosphere, the soundtrack by Marc Wilkinson is superb, and it stands the test of time, remaining genuinely frightening even 50 years later.

8 Apostle (2018)

Starring Dan Stevens And Lucy Boynton

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Apostle TV-MAThrillerActionHorror

In the year 1905, a man travels to a remote island to rescue his sister, who’s been kidnapped by a religious cult. Netflix picked up the film in March 2017, about a month before production began. It had its world premiere at the 2018 Fantastic Fest.

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*Availability in US Director Gareth Evans Release Date September 21, 2018 Writers Gareth Evans Cast Dan Stevens , Kristine Froseth , Lucy Boynton , Michael Sheen , Bill Milner , Mark Lewis Jones Runtime 130 Minutes

In one of the more original and thrilling horror narratives in recent years, Thomas Richardson (Dan Stevens) goes to visit a remote Welsh island to rescue his sister, who was kidnapped by a dangerous and mysterious cult. Throughout the film, Thomas attempts to covertly rescue his sister while continually getting thrown into more bizarre and horrifying scenarios, uncovering the island’s true religious nature and the ritualistic sacrifices required to keep the island ‘flourishing.’

While
Apostle
steps over the line and into the paranormal, writer and director
Gareth Evans masterfully builds a foreboding, realistic sense of dread
throughout the film.

The real qualities of a true folk horror classic are often defined by their use of nature, folklore, and finding horror in the plausible. While Apostle steps over the line and into the paranormal, writer and director Gareth Evans masterfully builds a foreboding, realistic sense of dread throughout the film. No cheap jump scares or other-worldly creatures. The film fuels its horror with graphic violence and a deep dive into the cult and pagan rituals that can leave scars figuratively and literally.

7 La Llorona (2019)

Starring María Mercedes Coroy And Margarita Kenéfic

La Llorona - Little child upclose face in the dark lit by blue light looking nervous

Also known as The Weeping Woman, this Guatemalan horror film, written, directed, and edited by Jayro Bustamante, is an elevated adaption of the Mexican folk tale of La Lorena, a ghost of a woman who mourns the murder of her children. The plot revolves around a former Guatemalan dictator, Enrique Monteverde, who, after wriggling out of crimes of orchestrating the native Mayan Genocide, has his house and family become haunted by visions and spirits punishing him for his past wrongdoings.

La Llorona is an exceptional folk horror film filled with beautifully choreographed and shot scenes with iconic imagery and terrifying compositions. Like Apostle, the film is a slow-burner, gradually racking up the tensions with a series of supernatural occurrences and chilling visions. It explores themes of war, justice, class, race, and gender yet doesn’t let the commentary slow down the need for blood-chilling horror. The film currently holds a 96% rating, based on 97 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, and for good reason, making it one of the most popular recent folklore horror films.

6 Kill List (2011)

Starring Neil Maskell And MyAnna Buring

Kill List_Movie_Poster

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Kill List RHorrorCrimeThriller Where to Watch

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*Availability in US Director Ben Wheatley Release Date September 2, 2011 Writers Ben Wheatley , Amy Jump Cast Neil Maskell , MyAnna Buring , Harry Simpson , Michael Smiley , Emma Fryer , Struan Rodger Runtime 95 minutes Main Genre Horror Expand

In Ben Wheatley’s Kill List, two former British soldiers join forces to work as contracted hitmen for a shadowy client who wants three people murdered. As they work their way through the names on the list, the bizarre situations and graphic violence escalate rapidly. The further into the job they go, the further they become embroiled in a plot with a deadly cult that employs rituals and human sacrifices with a narrative that keeps viewers glued to the edge of their seats.

The 10 Best Folk Horror Films On This List:

IMDb Rating:

The Blair Witch Project (1999)

6.5/10

The Blood On Satan’s Claw (1971)

6.4/10

Apostle (2018)

6.3/10

La Llorona (2019)

6.6/10

Kill List (2011)

6.4/10

Midsommar (2019)

7.1/10

The Wailing (2016)

7.4/10

The Wicker Man (1973)

7.5/10

The Witch (2015)

7.0/10

Hereditary (2018)

7.3/10

Wheatley has stated he was influenced by legendary director Stanley Kubrick, by planning the gory imagery of the film first and then revolving the plot around it, with actors often improvising takes and lines. In doing so, the film has a gritty realism and takes real-world scenarios and elevates them to new, horrific heights, employing the cult and satanic themes to great effect. The murder-by-hammer sequence in the killing of their second victim is as shocking as it is brutally violent, creating a sense of palpable tension and producing one of the most genuinely disturbing films of the 2010s.

5 Midsommar (2019)

Starring Florence Pugh And Jack Reynor

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11 6/10 Midsommar RMysteryDramaHorror

Ari Aster’s Midsommar follows a group of American college students who travel to a friend’s isolated rural hometown in Sweden to experience their renowned midsummer festival. What starts out as idyllic quickly becomes a disconcertingly violent pagan ritual, with the friends engaged in a ruthless competition that will test more than just their friendship. Florence Pugh stars alongside Jack Reynor, Will Poulter, and William Jackson Harper.

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*Availability in US Director Ari Aster Release Date July 3, 2019 Writers Ari Aster Cast Julia Ragnarsson , Rebecka Johnston , Henrik Norlén , William Jackson Harper , Gunnel Fred , Anna Åström , Will Poulter , Archie Madekwe , Louise Peterhoff , Björn Andrésen , Isabelle Grill , Jack Reynor , Florence Pugh , Liv Mjönes Runtime 147 minutes Main Genre Horror Expand

This is the first film many people will think of when it comes to folk horror in recent years, and rightly so. Midsommar is about a group of American students who travel to a secluded Swedish village to take part in a nine-day midsummer festival at a commune called the Hårga. Florence Pugh stars as Dani, a young woman grieving the death of her family, and the film works through themes of grief, anger, betrayal, and breakups. The festival soon degrades into a terrifying cult ritual, with forced human sacrifices, sexual assaults and disturbing traditions.

With Swedish audiences, rather than eliciting fear, many people reportedly laughed throughout the film, with most Swedish critics praising the movie as a brilliant black comedy rather than a horror.

Almost every scene in Midsommar packs a genuine gut punch, and the film is as unsettling as it is horror in its purest form. From the opening scene where Dani’s mentally ill sister takes her own and her parents lives through carbon monoxide poisoning or the ritualistic sacrifice of two elderly cult members forced to jump off a cliff onto rocks. Midsommar is beautifully vivid and wonderfully shot, which makes the slow-burning dread and graphic depictions of violence that much more impactful to create a masterpiece of horror cinema.

4 The Wailing (2016)

Starring Kwak Do-Won And Hwang Jung-Min

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10/10 The Wailing

The arrival of a mysterious stranger in a quiet village coincides with a wave of vicious murders, causing panic and distrust among the residents. While investigating the suspect, a policeman realizes that his daughter may have been a victim of the attack.

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*Availability in US Director Na Hong-jin Release Date June 3, 2016 Cast Jun Kunimura , Hwang Jung-min , Kwak Do-won Runtime 2h 36m

South Korean cinema as a whole has been known to produce some of the best and most gruesome horror films of all time and The Wailing is absolutely no exception. The film follows the story of a Japanese stranger entering a small, rural village in the mountains of Gokseong, which is soon taken over by a horrifying infection, and what follows is a terrifying combination of shamanistic rituals, hexes, and demonic slayings of locals. A local police officer, Joon-goo (Hwak Do-won) aims to solve the mystery before the whole town turns into a bloodbath.

Scenes involving cults, shrines, and animal mutilations linger with you, and much like the virus in the story, they grow and invade your senses until the emotion and dread build up to unmanageable levels.

Na Hong-jin has directed one of the scariest South Korean folk horror films ever, with a 99% approval score on Rotten Tomatoes. The film is an epic, expansive narrative totaling an impressive 156 minutes, however the story and suspense are paced expertly and are built absolutely perfectly. Scenes involving cults, shrines, and animal mutilations linger with you, and much like the virus in the story, they grow and invade your senses until the emotion and dread build up to unmanageable levels. A true modern classic of the folk horror genre and one to be talked about for years to come.

3 The Wicker Man (1973)

Starring Edward Woodward And Christopher Lee

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The Wicker Man RHorrorMysteryThriller

The Wicker Man is a horror film released in 1973 and follows Police Sergeant Neil Howie, who heads to an island on the coast of Scottland in search of a missing girl. Howie discovers that the disappearance is related to a pagan society that conflicts with his Christian values – but his continued search leads him to the heart of something sinister.

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*Availability in US Director Robin Hardy Release Date December 6, 1973 Studio(s) Warner Bros. Pictures Distributor(s) Warner Bros. Pictures Writers Anthony Shaffer Cast Diane Cilento , Britt Ekland , Edward Woodward , Ingrid Pitt , Christopher Lee Runtime 88 minutes Main Genre Horror Expand

Without a doubt, The Wicker Man has to be the clearest and most popular example of the epitome of the folk horror genre. The iconic story follows Sergeant Howie (Edward Woodward) as he goes to investigate the mysterious disappearance of a young girl on a secluded Scottish island. While conducting his investigation, Howie discovers the terrifying mysteries of the islands and its inhabitants and, rather than saving the young girl, falls into the trap set for himself to be used as a Celtic pagan sacrifice for next year’s harvest.

The Wicker Man has been dubbed “The Citizen Kane of horror movies,” and upon watching, you can understand why it’s been given such a high honor. Directed by Robin Hardy and with stand-out performances from Edward Norton, Christopher Lee, and the entire cast, the film dissolves in horror before erupting into a gruesome, agonizing climax. The iconic final scene as Howie burns to death inside ‘The Wicker Man‘ statue with the setting sun in the background is one of the most compelling in all of cinema and a true classic British folk horror film in every sense of the word.

2 The Witch (2015)

Starring Anya Taylor-Joy And Ralph Ineson

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9/10 The Witch RHorror

Distributed by A24, The Witch marks the feature directorial debut of Robert Eggers and the first film appearance of Anya Taylor-Joy. Written by Eggers, The Witch follows a puritanical family in New England in the 1630s who are forced to leave their community after a religious dispute. Attempting to set up a farm in the New England countryside, the family soon find themselves beset by malevolent and supernatural forces beyond their comprehension.

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*Availability in US Director Robert Eggers Release Date February 19, 2016 Studio(s) A24 Distributor(s) A24 , Universal Pictures Writers Robert Eggers Cast Kate Dickie , Wahab Chaudhry , Ellie Grainger , Ralph Ineson , Sarah Stephens , Lucas Dawson , Anya Taylor-Joy , Bathsheba Garnett , Harvey Scrimshaw , Julian Richings Runtime 92minutes Expand

Written and directed by Robert Eggers (The Lighthouse) in his first feature film debut, The Witch recounts the story of a family banished from a Puritan settlement who built a farm near a large, mysterious forest. After the death of their young baby, paranoia meets the paranormal as a Witch infiltrates and terrorizes the young family through a variety of means, and the film grows in terror as it plays on themes such as witchcraft, murder, and isolation. From start to finish, the film feels like a horrific rollercoaster with minimal pauses in the palpable horror.

Even though it’s Eggers’s first full-length film, it has the polish and style of someone at the pinnacle of their career, joined by a breakout performance from Anya Taylor-Joy, who is mesmerizing throughout the entire film. The cinematography, acting, and setting are all perfectly executed and often times what you don’t see on screen is more unsettling than what you do. The dedication to an uncompromising, factual look at religious family dynamics and early American folktales, combined with the paranormal Witches coven, makes this one of the most genuinely scary folk horror movies ever made.

1 Hereditary (2018)

Starring Toni Collette And Alex Wolff

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7.9/10 Hereditary RHorrorDocumentaryMysteryThriller

The feature film debut of writer-director Ari Aster, Hereditary tells the story of the unwittingly cursed Graham family. Annie Graham (Toni Collette) lives with her husband Steve (Gabriel Byrne) and their children Peter (Alex Wolff) and Charlie (Milly Shapiro). After the death of Annie’s mother, the family is beset by disaster and stalked by a supernatural entity that dredges up a past that Annie had spent her life trying to overlook.

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*Availability in US Director Ari Aster Release Date June 8, 2018 Studio(s) A24 Distributor(s) A24 Writers Ari Aster Cast Toni Collette , Milly Shapiro , Zachary Arthur , Gabriel Byrne , Mallory Bechtel , Alex Wolff , Ann Dowd Runtime 2h 7m Expand

After the death of her secretive mother, the strange family matriarch, Annie (Toni Collette), and her family’s life descends into hell after discovering horrifying facts about their family, lineage, and their links with the supernatural and occult. Hereditary is completely hair-raising from the opening scene to the final credits. The story is perfectly paced and follows the family’s destruction as they try to contact their daughter after her gruesome death and supernatural forces cause demonic possessions alongside countless terrifying occurrences.

Milly Shapiro, Toni Collette, and Alex Wolff as the Grahams in in Hereditary Related Hail Paimon!: Hereditary Ending Explained

Ari Aster’s Hereditary is as horrific as it is perplexing, and deciphering its layered ending and “Hail, Paimon” scene isn’t a simple feat.

Many of the indoor shots took place in a custom-built set to give the film a dollhouse look and feel, and you can really feel the unnatural unease throughout the film as the characters literally and figuratively become puppets to their occult roots. Toni Collette gives the performance of her career, and her breakdown and range throughout is impeccable. Scenes like the horrific decapitation of daughter Charlie are now iconic moments in cinema, and the whole film is bleak, grotesque, and genuinely terrifying, a gritty look into early folklore, combining to create the best folk horror film of all time.

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