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14 Best Horror Movies to Watch on Prime Video (April 2026): ‘Child’s Play’ and More

Catherine Hicks in Child's Play
Catherine Hicks in Child's Play.United Artists/courtesy Everett Collection

Spring isn’t usually the season for horror movies, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t any available to stream.

Prime Video has plenty of them, so much so that it’s hard to choose which ones are worth watching.

Watch With Us is here to recommend the best new horror movies streaming on Prime Video in April.

At the top of our binge-watch list is the original Child’s Play, featuring a 7th Heaven alum, and the 1985 cult classic Lifeforce.

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All 12-year-old Andy (Alex Vincent) wants for his birthday is a Good Guy doll, which is the hot toy of the moment — and sold out everywhere. His single mom, Karen (Catherine Hicks), manages to snag one on the black market, but she soon realizes something isn’t quite right with the alarmingly lifelike doll. Nicknamed “Chucky” by her son, he seems to have a life of his own — he opens his eyes when he shouldn’t and talks even when he doesn’t have batteries powering him up. It turns out she’s right — Chucky’s been possessed by the soul of serial killer Charles Lee Ray (Brad Dourif) and wants to take over poor Andy to continue his reign of terror.

That’s the twisted setup to Child’s Play, the 1988 sleeper hit that started an enduring franchise that’s now more comical than horrific. (In later films, Chucky gets married to Jennifer Tilly and spawns a gender-confused child.) But the original is surprisingly scary, and Chucky is played for scares rather than laughs. As voiced by Dourif, he’s a twisted little killer whose plastic smile conceals a barely constrained murderous rage. Like all good ’80s horror movies, the movie was later remade, but the just-fine 2019 reboot can’t hold a bloody knife to the original.

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After a spaceship carrying British and American astronauts crashes on Earth, a team of scientists investigates the remains. A lone survivor, Colonel Tom Carlsen (Steve Railsback), reveals that his crew found a bat-like alien species that wants to drain the life force of everyone on the planet. Disguised as two men and a beautiful woman, these aliens suck the energy out of London’s unwitting populace so their mothership has enough energy to travel to Earth and conquer it.

Or something like that. Lifeforce has a bonkers plot that doesn’t make a lot of sense, but it has such a fast pace that you barely notice. It combines the cheesiness of 1950s sci-fi with the gore of 1980s slasher pictures, resulting in a horror movie unlike any other. Director Tobe Hooper opts to take all this hokum seriously, which makes it even more silly — and effective. The climax is satisfyingly insane, with alien conspiracy theories, interspecies psychic connections, Halley’s comet and St. Paul’s Cathedral thrown at you before abruptly ending. Lifeforce is truly one of a kind — but what kind is left up for you to decide.

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Decades ago, Iris Campbell (Brec Bassinger) saved dozens of people before disaster struck in a collapsing building. In Final Destination Bloodlines, the bill for that act of altruism comes due. Iris’ granddaughter, Stefani Reyes (Kaitlyn Santa Juana), is haunted by the same gift that allowed Iris to see death’s design before it happens.

Now, Stefani realizes that death is catching up to her family, many of whom would have never been born if Iris hadn’t changed their fate. Stefani is the only hope her family has of breaking the cycle, assuming she can save herself as well. Horror icon Tony Todd also makes one last appearance in this franchise as William Bludworth, the man who knows more about death than anyone alive.

Final Destination Bloodlines is streaming on Prime Video.

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Before the Hellraiser movies fell to direct-to-video sequels, the original 1987 film was one of the most unsettling horror flicks of the decade. Clive Barker made his directorial debut with this film, and his Cenobites are never more terrifying than when they’re only briefly seen. This movie also marks the first appearance of Doug Bradley as Pinhead, the leader of the Cenobites.

Frank Cotton (Sean Chapman) found the puzzle box that opens a door to the Cenobites’ corner of Hell before losing his life in the process. But even death can’t keep Frank from targeting his brother, Larry Cotton (Andrew Robinson), and resuming his affair with Larry’s wife, Julia (Clare Higgins). Larry’s daughter, Kirsty Cotton (Ashley Laurence), may be the only one who can send Frank back to Hell if the Cenobites don’t get her first.

Hellraiser is streaming on Prime Video.

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WWI vets Smoke and Stack Moore (both played by Michael B. Jordan) are twin brothers who are about to open their own nightclub in 1930s Mississippi. But on the club’s opening night, the patrons’ laughter and loud music attract the Irish vampire Remmick (Jack O’Connell), who has been converting some of the town’s citizens into creatures of the night. What was once a night of celebration turns into chaos as the Moore brothers defend their club — and everyone inside it — from Remmick and his growing legion of the undead.

One of 2025’s most critically acclaimed and Oscar-nominated movies, Sinners is also a massively entertaining horror film. Inspired by the movies of John Carpenter, the film has elements similar to the director’s 1982 classic, The Thing, and 1998’s Vampires, but with its own distinct style, feel and message. Led by Jordan, the cast is top-notch, with O’Connell superbly portraying a vampire so charming, you’ll catch yourself contemplating his tempting offer of immortality.

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Josh (Jack Quaid) believes Iris (Sophie Thatcher) is the perfect girlfriend —  she’s smart, pretty and hangs on every word he says. It turns out that Iris is too good to be true — she’s an android that’s been programmed to love Josh no matter what. But when he decides to use her to kill someone else, Iris manages to break free of programming. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, especially when that woman is a robot who can download a million ways to kill its scumbag ex and his murderous pals.

While it contains some elements of sci-fi and comedy, Companion is largely an effective horror movie that’s kinda like I Spit on Your Grave for the AI era. It’s fun to see Iris get her revenge on the largely unsympathetic cast, and the movie’s kills make inventive use of cattle prods, self-driving cars and an electric corkscrew. Thatcher is terrific as the lovelorn android who can throw down with The Terminator if she needs to. 

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When their friend Tommy (Bill Cone) is mysteriously murdered at a cemetery, Reggie (Reggie Bannister), Jody (Bill Thornbury) and Jody’s 13-year-old brother, Mike (A. Michael Baldwin), decide to investigate. They get more than they bargained for when they encounter The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm), an imposing figure who possesses unnatural strength and vague psychic abilities. The Tall Man knows why Tommy was killed, but he’s not telling, so it’s up to the three men to find out what he’s up to, why his mortuary might be a portal to another dimension and how the hell he can control two silver flying spheres that can kill people in an instant.

It’s a compliment to say that watching Phantasm feels like a bad dream you want to wake up from, but can’t. While it has its share of blood, the film is less of a slasher and more of a horror movie about the unknown. Nothing really makes sense or is explained, which makes Phantasm even scarier — you’re not given the comfort of an explanation. And for a movie made in 1979, the special effects still hold up — those flying spheres look real and deadly. 

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Ramona (Danielle Deadwyler) is a single mother of two who is still mourning the death of her husband. One day, she’s troubled by the sudden appearance of a mysterious woman (Okwui Okpokwasili), dressed entirely in black and sitting calmly in her front yard. The woman never speaks, and, as time goes on, she keeps moving closer to the house with each passing day. What does she want? And why is Ramona so terrified of her?

The Woman in the Yard is a trauma horror movie that’s not unlike Hereditary, starring Toni Collette, or Midsommar. The movie takes its time to reveal what exactly is going on and what the mute woman’s intentions are toward Ramona and her family. But it’s worth the wait, and a big reason why The Woman in the Yard works is that its third-act explanations make sense. There’s logic behind this movie’s horror, which is perhaps the best way you can scare people.

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Horror maestro Robert Eggers returns with this epic, updated take on the classic silent German film, Nosferatu, from 1922. Led by Lily-Rose Depp in a stunning turn as Ellen Hutter, a woman who finds herself plagued by nightly visions of a dark stranger who desires her body and soul. The supporting cast is terrific, and includes Nicholas Hoult, Willem Dafoe and Bill Skarsgård as the titular nosferatu.

Young English clerk Thomas Hutter (Hoult) is summoned to the Carpathians in Transylvania from his home in Germany to close a deal with a man named Count Orlock, who wishes to buy the decrepit Grünewald Manor. But Orlock’s desires in the business of real estate bear more nefarious ends — he has a psychic connection with Hutter’s wife, Ellen (Depp), and he needs her to reciprocate his love — or else.

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Directed by Midnight Mass’ Mike FlanaganOculus stars Karen Gillan (Guardians of the Galaxy) as a woman attempting to rebuild the fractured relationship with her brother, a task that goes awry when she suspects an antique mirror is behind a tragedy they experienced. The film received positive reviews upon release, with critics praising it for its intense atmosphere of dread, exceptional pacing, and impressive cinematography.

Kaylie (Gillan) and her brother Tim (Brenton Thwaites) are still haunted by the deaths of their parents from a decade prior. However, Kaylie begins to suspect that their demise was somehow caused by an antique mirror in their childhood home, which seems to hold a supernatural force that looks malevolently back at those who gaze into its reflection.

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A string of brutal killings connected to a bizarre disease begins to ravage a South Korean village, all seemingly connected to the arrival of a strange Japanese man. The investigating police officer, Jong-goo (Kwak Do-won), soon realizes something horrifying: his daughter has caught the disease, which turns ordinary citizens into bloodthirsty killing machines.

Desperate to cure her from an illness that seems born from the supernatural, the police officer turns to a shaman to free his daughter from what might actually be a malignant possession. The Wailing is not just an excellent and gruesome horror film — it also delivers a hooky mystery full of twists and misdirection. While a lengthy film at over two and a half hours, the absorbing nature of the narrative and skillful pacing will never have you checking your watch.

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A disgraced puppeteer (Sean Harris) returns to his childhood home, where he is forced to contend with his horrific stepfather. He carries with him a disturbing puppet named “Possum,” which features an array of spider legs underneath a replica of a man’s head. As the puppeteer must confront trauma that has followed him since childhood, he also experiences visions in which Possum is coming terrifyingly to life.

Possum was directed and written by Matthew Holness, who created and starred in the cult classic horror parody series, Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace. Here, Holness trades horror comedy for something far more grave, flexing his arthouse chops in this steely, minimalist take on a psychological horror film. The film received positive reviews from critics, who praised in particular the unnerving performance by Harris, the chilling atmosphere and striking cinematography.

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The iconic Universal horror film received an update from director Leigh Whannell, who delivered a fantastic reworking of The Invisible Man back in 2020. Here, he brings Wolf Man to the present day, starring Julia Garner and Christopher Abbott as a married couple who experience the worst night of their lives. When husband Blake is attacked by a werewolf and slowly begins turning into one, Charlotte must protect the lives of her and their daughter.

The film adds more of a complex, psychological bent to an originally more simplistic story, but it is by no means at the expense of the film. Rather, it adds some necessary depth in addition to being an extremely freaky and entertaining bit of body horror. Additionally, Garner and Abbott display excellent chemistry in a film that also shines in its kinetic pacing and claustrophobic set pieces.

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Before you ask, no — you really don’t need to watch Terrifier before you watch Terrifier 2. All you have to know is that Art the Clown (David Howard Thornton) has come back to life and is intent on continuing the blood-soaked Halloween night killing spree that he started. With an all-new set of victims for Art to terrorize, Terrifier 2 more or less stands on its own as a rollicking good and gory time. The film was a surprise hit back in 2022, taking in over $10 million against a budget of only $250,000.

One year following Art The Clown’s Miles County massacre, the face-painted villain has been mysteriously resurrected and arrives on the doorstep of All Hallow’s Eve, trailing another group of unsuspecting victims. Unfortunately for him, one of his targets, teenager Sienna Shaw (Lauren LaVera), isn’t going to go down without a proper fight.

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