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Before she was Emma Woodhouse or Beth Harmon, Anya Taylor-Joy was Thomasin, a 17th-century New England girl whose family suspects she is a witch. What We Do in the Shadows is Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement's thrilling tale of a group of ancient vampire roommates trying to adapt to life in the 21st century. It's both chilling and delightfully funny. Billed as "Iran's first vampire Western," the film - written and directed by Ana Lily Amirpour - features a protagonist simply called The Girl, an antihero cop who uses her vampire status to roam the streets at night, alone and unmolested. "Vampires are many things: serial killers, romantics, historians, drug addicts - they're all of these things in one," Amirpour has said. This psychological horror film—about a young woman who believes an antique mirror is haunting her family—turns the fear meter up a few notches.

David Lowery's supernatural drama isn't so much a scary movie as it is a moving meditation on grief and the ever-shifting sands of time… but, as its title suggests, it wouldn't be out of place in a Halloween movie marathon. Not for the faint of heart is Julia Ducournau's coming-of-age horror about a young vegetarian veterinary student who begins to crave the taste of meat after trying meat for the first time, but if you have a strong stomach (or are willing to close your eyes at key points), it's definitely worth a watch.
Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga star as real-life paranormal investigators (or “demonologists,” if you prefer that term) Ed and Lorraine Warren in this horror film set in 1970s Rhode Island. This Stephen King adaptation stars Thomas Jane, Marcia Gay Harden, and Andre Braugher, and tells the story of a small group of people in Bridgton, Maine who meet in a supermarket to look for supplies after a thunderstorm and begin to notice a strange mist that hides the presence of monsters among them. Warning: the movie is actually darker than the book.