We’re now a little ways past the halfway point of 2023 and so far it has been another successful year ofhorror filmseither in theatrical releases or direct to streaming. The admiration of the genre definitely outweighs those who criticize it, as even the films that may not have gotten the respect they deserve so far this year, still are worth checking out.

The underrated horror films on this list may have flown under the radar due to the amount of films and television shows at our fingertips. Or they may have been overlooked due to major franchises in the genre likeInsidiousgetting a lot of attention this summer, or the next bigA24horror film that is in the zeitgeist. Either way, hunt these eleven horror films down that came out this year. They deserve more love.

purdy-unseen-2023-blumhouse

Unseenis a Blumhouse produced horror-thriller about a gas station clerk named Sam (Jolene Purdy) who gets a random face time call from Emily (Midori Francis) from thousands of miles away. The woman is on the run from her murderous ex-boyfriend. With Emily being nearly blind, the two use video chat, so Sam can help navigate Emily through the woods.

The horror-thriller is short and sweet at a run time of seventy-six minutes with two incredibly likable lead characters. It’s a film that isn’t trying to be any more than what it is. It will keep you tense one moment and make you laugh the next, and organically makes you root for the repressed characters at the forefront of the film.

Cassandra Naud as CW in Influencer

Related:Best Blumhouse Horror Movies So Far, Ranked

10Influencer

The movie plot of how annoying some of us seem to find thesocial media influencer personahas shown up for a few years now. Upon seeing the poster for the Shudder original,Influencer,you may make a hard pass on it due to the assumption that it is that recycled plot point. Well, It’s not, it’s a tight 90-minute thriller that twists and turns all the way to the film’s final moments. With the beauty of Thailand as its setting, we follow Madison (Emily Tennant), an influencer who looks like she’s having a great vacation online, but her personal life is in shambles.

She befriends CW (Cassandra Naud), who shows her a good time around the area. Things take a darker turn as CW takes her out to a deserted island.Influencerplays on the idea of what life looks like online, and then there’s real life and all its issues. Don’t go into the film thinking it’s murder and carnage, but more about manipulation and loss of identity.

Dianna Agron in Clock on Hulu

Clockis psychological horror meets body horror, all centered around a woman who takes part in a clinical trial to fix her biological clock. The message is very clear in the Hulu original film, as it explores the result of pressuring women in their 30s to hurry up and procreate before it is too late for them.

Clockisn’t anti-have kids, but it’s very muchcommentating on the struggles women go throughif they have made a firm stance that motherhood isn’t for them. Or, even the struggles they go through if they can’t biologically create life to begin with. There’s a very real issue underlining the horror of the film, watch at your own risk.

Gideon Adlon as Parker with Mimi wearing Covid masks in the Peacock horror movie Sick 2023

Sickis the first COVID pandemic film that truly works in acknowledging the pandemic of 2020. Many shows and even low budget Indies mention and acknowledge COVID upon their late 2020 and early 2021 releases. But since we were all still living through it, it just didn’t really hit yet. Now nearly three years removed,Sick, does a brilliant job as a little slasher film that takes place during the pandemic, as two friends hanging out at a cabin by a lake during the summer of social distancing.

As the night progresses, the two begin to be stalked by a, well, masked killer.Written by Scream screenwriter, Kevin Williamson,Sickfeels simple in its premise but expands on its world in the third act. And mixes in humor that we all can relate too, because for the most part, we all lived parts of this movie.

The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster

Related:Sick Trailer Teases Horror During the Pandemic from Scream Writer

7The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster

Directed by Bomani Story,The Angry Black Girl and Her Monsteris an amazing re-telling of Mary Shelly’sFrankenstein. The film is about a brilliant teenager named Vicaria (Laya DeLeon Hayes) who follows the belief that death is not forever, it is a disease that can be cured. It is with that belief we learn that Vicaria has tried to revive her dead brother’s corpse.

Once she actually is able to bring him back to life, she realizes that isn’t her brother anymore, it’s a monster. Loaded with plenty of social commentary on the black experience in America,The Angry Black Girl and Her Monsteris a must-see for any horror film enthusiast.

6Huesera: The Bone Woman

Pregnancy horror makes its second appearance on this list. The Spanish filmHuesera: The Bone Womanpopped up on Shudder back in early 2023 and is loaded with scares that will keep you up at night. When a woman is cursed by an evil spirit at the time she is expecting her first child, her only hope may be a group of witches.

Huesera, has a well-written lead role Valeria (Natalia Solian), who begins to struggle with the loss of her identity and postpartum depression, as her family constantly attempts to tear her down. The scares of the movie keep you up at night, but the drama of it all is very human.

5Swallowed

Swallowedhad its initial release last year, but it premiered on VOD earlier this year for a wider audience. The film, directed by Carter Smith, tells the story of a drug run that goes completely bad. Two friends spending their final night together before one leaves for Los Angeles get caught up in having to orally smuggle drugs.

The bags that the drugs come in, seem to have something alive in them. You can figure out the rest. This body horror film is slow in its pacing, but executes at a high level with its dread and stomach-turning moments in the film’s third act. It’s also great to see theScream Queen himself, Mark Patton,playing an eccentric villainous role.

Related:Carter Smith Discusses Queer Horror Film Swallowed

4Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey

With a staggering3% on Rotten Tomatoes,Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honeyis a wild ride that turns the sweet innocent child story on its head and makes it a slasher film that you can’t even comprehend how or why it got made.Blood and Honeytakes place as Christopher Robin returns home from college only to learn that Pooh and Piglet are now murderous human-hating beings.

The film wants you to turn your brain off, so be sure to do that. And if you do, enjoy the ride, as the loving animal friends of our childhood commit barbaric acts that should be meant for horror titans like Jason, Freddy and Leatherface.

Related:Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey Sequel is Now in Development

3The Price We Pay

WhenThe Price We Paydropped on places like Peacock and other VOD platforms, you probably just scrolled past it due to its generic plot line. Two criminals who have a robbery go wrong find a secluded place to hide out till the heat that’s on them cools off. Only things turn more menacing for the as they hide out.

The poster for the film alone looks like a straight-to-video action movie with Stephen Dorff and Emile Hirsch in the leads. Rest assured, once the film gets to where it needs to go, in goes from a formulaic robbery movie to a blend ofTexas Chain Saw MassacreandBarbarian. Critics are mixed on this one. Horror fans are happy they discovered it.

2The Outwaters

The trailer forThe Outwatersshowed up atTerrifier 2screenings back in late 2022. It’s a new, haunting look atfound footagein the digital era. The footage is presented over three memory cards from a camera for a music video shoot in the Mojave Desert. It follows four individuals on the shoot who also camp out in the desert when they’re not filming.

Things begin to unravel as we hear grizzly sounds and vibrations. There’s a back and forth between unnerving and strangely calming horror in the atmosphere of the movie. It’s easy to say it’s the nextBlair Witch Project, butThe Outwatersstands on its own as a film, and like Blair Witch, you must hand yourself over to it to get the full experience of its terror.