Horror

Why Horror Needs More Weird Little Freak Movies


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Not every horror movie needs a cinematic universe.

Some horror movies should feel like they crawled out from under someone’s porch at 3 a.m., hissed at the moon, and somehow got distribution.

That is a compliment.

What Is a Weird Little Freak Movie?

Why Horror Needs More Weird Little Freak Movies

This is not a technical term. I am not going to cite a paper. But horror fans know exactly what I am talking about the moment I use it, which is its own kind of definition.

A weird little freak movie is not necessarily low budget, although most of them are. It is not automatically bad, although some of them are. It is a horror film that feels too specific, too strange, too sincere, or too unruly to have been assembled by committee. It has a fingerprint. You cannot imagine it existing without a very particular set of people deciding, at some point, to do something that someone in a sensible meeting should have stopped them from doing.

Maybe it is too odd to summarize without losing someone. Maybe it is too funny to be properly scary and too disturbing to be properly funny. Maybe it sits in a genre slot that does not exist yet and the marketing department has to make one up. Maybe the third act does something so genuinely unhinged that you stop the movie and turn to whoever is next to you and just gesture wordlessly at the screen.

Hausu is a weird little freak movie. Possession is a weird little freak movie. Society, which contains one of the most deranged climaxes in the history of horror cinema, is absolutely a weird little freak movie. So are Basket Case and Brain Damage and Frankenhooker and May and Excision and Titane and Skinamarink and Mad God, Phil Tippett’s 35-year stop-motion fever dream that nobody can fully explain but nobody who has seen it can entirely forget.

These films did not ask for permission. That is the whole point.

Horror Gets Boring When It Becomes Too Well-Behaved

I want to be precise here, because “mainstream horror is bad” is not the argument. It is not what I believe and it is not where this is going.

But there is a version of mainstream horror that has learned to be very careful with itself, and that careful version is less interesting than the one that still has teeth. Franchise maintenance will do that. Lore management. Legacy sequels where the primary goal is not to anger anyone who owns a t-shirt. IP horror where the original’s edges have been sanded down into something the licensing department can manage. Movies designed to generate fan theories rather than feelings. Trailers that explain the entire film in two minutes because the studio needed to prove the concept was legible.

I have watched horror films that looked expensive and felt like nothing. Technically correct. Properly lit. Well paced by all observable metrics. And by the end of them I had experienced something roughly equivalent to eating a rice cake. Nutritionally inoffensive. Completely unmemorable.

A genre built on monsters should not be this afraid of being ugly.

This is not a call to abandon polish. Prestige horror and studio horror exist and some of them are excellent and the genre is better for having them. The Conjuring works. Hereditary works. Get Out works. The well made film has its place. The argument is that a diet of exclusively well behaved horror produces a genre with good posture and no personality, and horror without personality is just a liability waiver in movie form.

Weird Horror Expands What the Genre Can Do

Strange films are not just more fun to argue about. They push the form somewhere it would not otherwise go.

Body horror as a mode of filmmaking did not arrive fully formed and safely packaged. It arrived through Tetsuo: The Iron Man and Cronenberg and Society and Titane, through films that wanted to do something physical and uncomfortable and specific with flesh and transformation and the betrayal of the body you thought you knew. Queer horror did not come from careful franchise development. It came from directors who were making something personal and strange and refused to make it palatable first. Folk horror needed filmmakers willing to sit inside ritual and community and dread without rushing toward a monster reveal.

Dream logic. Practical effects that go too far. Horror comedy that does not know when to stop being funny and does not care. Experimental storytelling that trusts the audience to stay with it through confusion because the confusion is part of the experience. All of it comes from films that had no reason to exist except the compulsion of someone who needed to make them.

One Cut of the Dead is a film I recommend to everyone I know and I describe it poorly every time, which is exactly correct. Any description that fully captures it is a spoiler. The movie has to be experienced in real time, confused, then suddenly very glad you stayed. That kind of film does not come from a development process. It comes from a bet.

These movies make room for new fears. They also make room for new kinds of horror fans who did not see themselves in the franchise material and found themselves, surprisingly, in something strange and personal and made on very little money by someone who had a terrible idea and would not let it go.

The Movies That Should Not Work Are Often the Ones We Remember

Competent horror films are forgotten constantly. Nothing wrong happened. It just didn’t stand out.

Malignant was not forgotten. Malignant was argued about for weeks because James Wan committed fully to something so aggressively unhinged that audiences did not know how to process it. Some of them hated it with a passion you usually reserve for personal slights. Others found it genuinely delightful in the way a movie that has completely lost its mind can be delightful when it still knows exactly what it is doing. It is not a perfectly constructed film. It is a memorable one, which is harder to pull off than it sounds.

Barbarian works because it keeps swerving when you expect it to behave. Skinamarink divided audiences between people who found it hypnotic and people who found it insufferable, and almost nobody found it forgettable, which for a film about children in a dark house at 4 a.m. with no plot in the conventional sense is an achievement. Society is a film from 1989 that people are still watching and still recommending because no one accidentally makes that third act. There was a decision. Someone looked at the dailies and said yes, more of this.

Basket Case survived thirty years on personality alone. Frankenhooker is technically a bad film and I will defend it until I die. Personality ages. Polish does not always.

A perfectly competent horror movie can be forgotten by Monday. A strange one can haunt someone for twenty years.

Streaming Should Have Made This Easier

And in some ways it did. The number of horror films now accessible through streaming services is genuinely staggering. Films that would have taken years to track down in a video store or a specialty catalog are findable in minutes. The distribution problem got smaller.

The discovery problem got bigger.

Streaming platforms need constant horror content, which has created genuine opportunities for strange films to find distribution. It has also created algorithmic pressure toward recognizable concepts, familiar structures, and titles that read as searchable. The recommendation engine is not optimized for “that film that is hard to describe but you will know it when you see it.” It is optimized for “you watched A, here is B, it is like A.”

Now those films are available everywhere and findable by nobody unless someone who already loves them tells someone who does not know them yet. The recommendation engine did not replace the video store clerk. It replaced the shelf. The clerk part we have to do ourselves.

Weird Little Freak Movies Are How Cult Classics Are Born

No cult film arrived already knowing it was a cult film.

They start as “what the hell was that.” They get strange reviews, or no reviews, or reviews that are not sure whether to be positive or negative and end up just describing what happened in a tone of mild bewilderment. Then the right person sees it and tells another person. Then a small and very specific community of people who did not know they needed exactly this film finds out it exists.

The Greasy Strangler has a following that would, and I say this with genuine affection, go to bat for it in any room. Psycho Goreman found its audience, which is a very particular audience, and that audience adopted it completely. Fried Barry did something similar. These films do not need everyone. They need their people, and their people are loyal in the specific way that people are loyal to things that felt made for them.

A cult classic is just a movie that survived being misunderstood long enough to find its people.

The weird little freak movie does not need a wide release. It needs to exist, and then it needs someone to tell someone else about it, and then it needs time.

Horror Fans Say They Want Originality. This Is What It Looks Like.

The discourse around horror originality is a little dishonest and I think we all know it.

Horror fans will say, sometimes loudly, that they want new ideas. Original stories. Risks. Something they have not seen before. This is genuinely true and I believe them when they say it. It is also true that when genuinely original horror arrives, a portion of those same fans will find it too slow, too strange, too inexplicable, or too committed to something they cannot immediately classify.

Original horror does not always come gift-wrapped. It may not explain itself. It may not be pretty. It may refuse to resolve cleanly. It may have a tone that is three things at once and none of them is the tone you were expecting. It may be a film that takes forty-eight hours to fully land, where the images keep surfacing after the credits and you cannot quite shake them.

Do horror fans want originality, or do we want the feeling of originality inside a shape we already recognize?

I am asking myself too. I have walked out of genuinely strange films and taken a while to come around. Sometimes a weird little freak movie requires a second watch, or a third, or a conversation with someone who understood it differently. That is not a flaw. That is the experience of being made to work for something that turns out to be worth it.

Let Horror Be a Little Gross Again

Here is what the genre needs, and it needs all of it simultaneously.

Studio hits. Prestige slow burns. Legacy franchise entries for people who have been following a series for twenty years and deserve a good one. Streaming discoveries that reach audiences they could not have found otherwise. And strange little mutant films that make everyone ask who allowed this to happen and could we please have more.

Those last ones are not a side dish. They are part of the genre’s immune system.

Horror that only produces safe, legible, well behaved content eventually stops being horror and becomes something closer to a horror adjacent content category. The genre needs the goblin films. It needs the films that go too far and the films that refuse to explain themselves and the films that do something with a concept so specific and personal that you cannot imagine how they got the money. It needs Excision and Censor and Dave Made a Maze and whatever the next completely unclassifiable thing is that someone is making right now in a shed somewhere with a camera and a list of decisions that any sensible advisor would tell them to reconsider.

Horror is supposed to bite. Sometimes it should also drool a little.

Give us the elegant ghost stories and the grief metaphors and the franchise slashers. Also give us the strange ones made by people with one terrible idea and no interest in behaving.

Not because weird equals good automatically. Some of these films are bad.

But they are alive. And a horror genre that stops making alive, strange, ugly, personal, impossible to franchise films is a horror genre that has started forgetting what it is for.

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