Top 13 Horror Movies That Made Audiences Walk Out of Theatres

These movies have frightened viewers out of the room for many reasons, whether they are horrifying, heart-pounding, or just downright nasty. Here are our top picks for the spookiest, nastiest, goriest, and most unforgettable films for you to lose your sleep on.

Top 13 Horror Movies That Made Audiences Walk Out of Theatres

Top 13 Horror Movies That Made

Audiences Walk Out of Theatres

It doesn't happen very frequently that a horror film will be so intense that it can't be seen in its entirety. One such movie that stands out as having caused audiences to flee in terror is The Exorcist. There are even reports of persons experiencing convulsions prompting calls for paramedics. The scariest movies are the ones that stick with you for days, maybe even years, after the lamps have been turned back on and the heartbeat has subsided. It can be a well-timed jump scare which gets you shouting, or it might be a genuinely unsettling scene that sticks in your mind. Perhaps the eerie soundtrack or a protagonist's unsettling remarks are what stirs the deepest part of your soul. Over through the years, movies have brought us numerous outstanding horror movies. Among the most powerful horror movies to appear on a big screen, these flicks are on this list. These movies have frightened viewers out of the room for many reasons, whether they are horrifying, heart-pounding, or just downright nasty. Here are our top picks for the spookiest, nastiest, gorediest, and most unforgettable films for you to lose your sleep on.

 

1. Titane

It doesn't happen very frequently that a horror film will be so intense that it can't be seen in its entirety. One such movie that stands out as having caused audiences to flee in terror is The Exorcist. There are even reports of persons experiencing convulsions prompting calls for paramedics. Among the most powerful horror movies to appear on a big screen, these flicks are on this list. These movies have frightened audiences out of the room for many reasons, ranging from being horrifying, heart-pounding, or just downright nasty. This season, everyone is trying to stretch their limits, and these films are sure to do both.

It makes sense why some people couldn't sit through the entire movie. Despite the fact that the abortion took place off-screen, the squelching and thumping sounds and Alexia's anguished expression are unsettling. There is plenty of gore and unsettling imagery to keep fans awake at night regardless of these specific instances. The film is still available on Hulu, but it isn't for the weak of the heart.

2. The Devil's Rejects

Rob Zombie's gory sequel to House of 1000 Corpses, The Devil's Rejects, was every bit as graphic to behold as its precursor. A enraged sheriff determined to stop the homicidal group by any way possible tracked down the Firefly family as they went on another bloody rampage. The Devil's Rejects uses the same blood and brutality as the original movie, but Zombie changed the formula this time. So rather than depending on gory shock factor, he emphasised more distressing situations, including the one where a lady was made to wear her husband's severed face.

While experts applauded Zombie for this turn, several spectators were horrified by the family's unrelenting decadence and fled the theatre even before film's closing moments. Gross brutality is something that Zombie is well-versed in, and this is probably some of his finest work.

3. The House That Jack Built

The House That Jack Built is a film that should only be watched by individuals with strong constitutions because director Lars Von Trier has built a reputation for making difficult-to-sit-through films throughout his career. In this movie, Matt Dillon portrays an especially cruel serial killer who mainly targets women for brutal executions. If they're able to watch it to the conclusion, everyone who believed Netflix's Dahmer was horrible would be horrified by this movie. Over 100 people are believed to have left the screening of the film at the Cannes Film Festival, many of whom expressed their displeasure for it. From that, word rapidly spread, bringing the title of this film to the attention of many fans of the genre.

Several people have presumably only watched the theatrical version, although IFC Films faced criticism for releasing the uncensored version just before the movie's broad distribution, greatly enhancing Jack's reputation.

4. Raw

With her notorious directorial debut, Raw, Ducournau rejoins the chart. During a hazing rite when she is made to consume raw meat, a vegetarian college student receives more than she bargained for during this nauseating film. The young girl's life then starts to be consumed by a bloodthirsty yearning for meat. She quickly learns, though, that she is certainly not the only individual of her sort. The director's terrifying make-up technique and distinctive artistic vision pleased critics in her major film debut. Therefore for movie to have amassed the fame it has received since its premiere, they needed to be quite exceptional.Those who can endure this movie might be able to comprehend Ducournau's distinct aesthetic and style of narration, but she made it no easy process.

5. Audition

Shigeharu, a widower, arranges audition for a new girlfriend instead of heading out to socialise when he believes it's time to start dating again. As a consequence, he meets Asami, a depressed girl who could understand his suffering to some extent. The fact that the two originally got along quite well was due to Shigeharu's grave error in failing to see her resume's warning signs. He quickly compensates for his error after discovering the hard lesson what occurred with every other individual in her life. The term "audition" is well-known in Japanese horror, and it helped director Takashi Miike win the top honour at the Rotterdam Film Festival.

6. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

Undoubtedly, the 1974 film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre by Tobe Hooper popularised slashers. Sally Hardesty and her pals are travelling through Texas in this movie when they run out of gas. They quickly arrive at the home of the Sawyer family, a man - eating tribe that kills visitors for eating, when the neighbourhood pumps run dry. Leatherface, the family's chainsaw-wielding butcher, does the hard job and quickly dispatches Sally's companions. The blatant slaughter of this movie proved to be too much for viewers everywhere, and it was outlawed in several nations. It first received an X-rating from the MPAA, and it is simple to understand why.

The crime scenes were incredibly creative for their era. However, not prior to being made to witness the notorious murderer,  one of her pals is butchered with his trusty chainsaw, one specific kill lives in infamy and sees the burly Leatherface immolate one of the protagonists onto a meat hook to be later murdered.

7. Grindhouse

Grindhouse is a brutal dual feature filled with blood, guts, and guns from the creative minds of Quinton Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez, offering all that a thriller lover could desire. In the first movie of this combination pack, a dancer and her ex-boyfriend are shown leading a group of victims as they attempt to escape a fatal infection that transforms people into senseless psychopaths. In the sequel, ladies battle the insane stuntman who chases them in his murderous automobiles. Both movies were every inch as gory thrill trip one may anticipate from their merciless directors, but regrettably, audiences were unprepared.It wasn't blood or graphic imagery that made people leave cinemas; rather, they were unaware that they were intended to remain after the first movie. When the directors realised their error, they had their individual films sold individually, but the harm had been done. Grindhouse was a huge box office flop as audiences didn't comprehend exactly what they were viewing.

8. The Exorcist

The film that was actually sending viewers to the hospital.  In The Exorcist, a mother whose daughter has been taken over by an evil spirit battles to save her. For weeks, the devil torments young Regan mercilessly, twisting and abusing her body. Father Damian Karras must do his best to protect the young girl's soul. Is that succesful?  This movie still terrifies viewers over 50 years after it was released. Because violence against kids was and continues to be frowned upon in horror, the film preyed on viewers' sympathies for a young girl to terrify them. It also made extensive use of religious principles to add to the terror.

9. The Shining 

In 1980, numerous critics were unimpressed with Stanley Kubrick's film adaptation of Stephen King's book. The supernatural tale, even by supernatural standards, "knows painfully little rhyme or explanation," according to Janet Maslin, who reviewed the movie for The New York Times, and "the film's most shocking terrible visuals seem overwhelming and possibly even unnecessary." However, horror fans differ, and the film is recognised as a legend. Among the most memorable horror movie moments ever include the bloody elevator, Jack Nicholson's crazed protagonist Jack Torrance smashing his axe, "Redrum," and the spectral twins.

10. Get Out 

By successfully fusing humour, horror, and racial issues into one enjoyable package, Jordan Peele's 2017 film, which he also wrote and directed, instantly became a classic. Fans liked the smart allusions to numerous classic scary movies, while critics applauded the movie's wit and capacity for terror. The movie set multiple more records at the box office and ended up being the highest-earning original launch ever. Peele became the first African-American to get the award when Get Out won the Oscar for best original screenplay.

11. The Conjuring 

Movies about haunted houses are really nothing groundbreaking, but the 2013 film The Conjuring managed to increase the suspense surrounding objects that go bumping in the night. The film, which stars Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga, is based on the records of actual paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. It portrays the pair as they try to assist a family whose home is haunted by a dangerous entity. The movie stands out for its mastery at maintaining intensity throughout the whole running time. The overriding sense of fear makes it a truly chilling experience, even though there isn't much blood or mayhem in the traditional horror film context.

12. Saw 

Despite the fact that Saw, the 2004 torturing movie directed by James Wan, is indeed not discreet, it has a few interesting and compelling elements. Jigsaw Killer, the antagonist, targets people he thinks seem to be either culpable or complacent and have taken their life casually. Jigsaw, who is expertly portrayed by Tobin Bell and frequently shown in film as a spooky puppet, is an intelligent, but sadistic, gamer, and his motivations and tactics are fascinating. The original movie also features the thrilling turns that moviegoers enjoy but usually predict well in advance. Spiral: From the Book of Saw, the final instalment in the Saw franchise, was released in theatres in 2021.

13. The Blair Witch Project 

In 1999, when The Blair Witch Project first opened in theatres, found-footage movies may have seemed tame by contemporary standards, but the groundbreaking terror was so convincing at the time. The movie's opening line, "In October 1994, three student filmmakers disappeared in the woods outside Burkittsville, Maryland while shooting a documentary, enhanced the film's rough camera work, eerie forests, and compelling acting. The video was discovered a year later. The movie still holds up even now, 20 years after the "genuine" element of the story was disproved, as it capitalises on the frightening concept of becoming stranded in the shadowy forests.

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