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Sundance Preview: 5 Can’t Miss Horror Movies Screening At The Festival

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Saccharine Photo by Narelle Portanier

The 2026 edition of the Sundance Film Festival begins tomorrow, bringing a new slate of buzzy premieres that’ll shape the year to come.

It’s also the end of an era; this year will be the festival’s final year in Park City, Utah, before moving to Boulder, Colorado, in 2027. That means it’s not just emerging filmmakers to keep an eye on this year, but Sundance’s enduring legacy. The festival responsible for debuting features like The Blair Witch Project, American Psycho, Get Out, Hereditary, Talk to Me, and so many more defining staples ensures horror is part of its legacy tribute with a special restoration of a modern favorite from masters James Wan and Leigh Whannell (more on that below).

That’s only the start of what’s ahead this year. Here are five can’t miss horror movies screening at this year’s Sundance.


Buddy

Buddy

A still from Buddy by Casper Kelly, an official selection of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Worry Well Productions.

The mind behind twisted short “Too Many Cooks,” writer/director Casper Kelly (V/H/S/Halloween, Adult Swim Yule Log), takes aim at television once more with a new feature centered around a kids’ television show. Here, a brave girl and her young costars must team up to escape their series and its magical mascot host, Buddy. As if that logline isn’t enough to intrigue, or its filmmaker, then the cast should. Cristin Milioti, Delaney Quinn, Topher Grace, Keegan-Michael Key, Michael Shannon, and Patton Oswalt all star or lend their voices to an absurdly imaginative and dark voyage into a Barney-inspired nightmare.


Mum, I’m Alien Pregnant 

Yvette Parsons, Hannah Lynch and Jonny Brugh appear in Mum, I’m Alien Pregnant by THUNDERLIPS, an official selection of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Frances Carter.

With a title like Mum, I’m Alien Pregnant, from New Zealand writer/director duo Thunderlips, it’s safe to assume that a supernatural pregnancy will lead to comedic antics. Maybe even of the gross-out variety. In this case, a millennial underachiever finds herself dealing with a host of pesky problems, from her loquacious mom to the helpless baby daddy who impregnated her. Practical effects ensue in this body horror comedy that speaks to a generation. It’s based on the filmmakers’ 2024 short.


Saccharine

Midori Francis appears in Saccharine by Natalie Erika James, an official selection of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Shudder.

Relic filmmaker Natalie Erika James is back at Sundance with her latest horror movie, one that seems to inject a new supernatural twist to the current body horror craze. In this case, a medical student decides to try a new weight loss craze: consuming human ashes. Hana discovers the new fad comes with an alarming side effect as she becomes terrorized by a hungry ghost. It’s James’ attachment to this original horror story and the ghostly twist to a body horror concept that has us excited. Even better is that it’s already been acquired by Shudder.


Saw

Jigsaw’s games began in 2004, with its debut at Sundance. The festival saluting its horror history accordingly with a digital restoration of Saw from a 4K scan of the 35mm Interpositive (IP), which was supervised and approved by Wan himself, who will be in attendance for the special screening. A stunning new restoration of a contemporary horror classic feels like the perfect way to close out the festival’s time in Park City, Utah.


undertone

A popular paranormal podcast host gets haunted by mysterious recordings she receives, which sounds like the perfect scenario for genuine frights in A24’s upcoming horror movie. That it screens at Sundance after its festival premiere last summer also suggests a lot of confidence in this release. The most damning evidence that undertone has what it takes to scare us silly, though, comes from the effective trailer in a way that says a midnight screening is the perfect time to experience this terror.


Stay tuned for more on Sundance 2026 as our coverage gets underway.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon, SeriesFest, and Popcorn Frights Film Fest.

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Editorials

Steven Spielberg Just Directed the Scariest Scene of His Career in ‘Disclosure Day’

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Colin Firth in DISCLOSURE DAY, directed by Steven Spielberg.

Steven Spielberg has always been conversant in the cinematic language of the horror genre, despite relatively few credits in the genre. His contributions as a writer and producer on things like Poltergeist are legendary, and films like Duel and Jaws certainly wield the horror genre in remarkable, often chilling ways. He may not be a horror filmmaker, but he knows when he needs to scare us, and he has the tools to make that happen. 

I didn’t go into Disclosure Day, Spielberg’s alien epic, expecting outright horror, and indeed the film leans much more into thrilling than frightening. This is not a horror film, but for a few minutes in the middle, much to my surprise, it became one.

Spielberg has filmed more than his fair share of scary scenes over the years, but with Disclosure Day, he directed a new contender for the scariest scene of his entire career. 

SPOILERS AHEAD for Disclosure Day!

Josh O’Connor in DISCLOSURE DAY, directed by Steven Spielberg.

Among the various alien secrets laced throughout Disclosure Day are a trio of palm-sized rods, the color of pencil graphite. These rods, originating from another planet, can be used for a number of things, but for the purposes of this scene, the most important is “diving,” gripping the rod in one bare hand and using its power to “dive” into the mind of another person. 

The person holding the rod in this scene is Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth), head of shadowy cybersecurity firm Wordex, who is hellbent on keeping human knowledge of extraterrestrials secret from the general public. Scanlon’s trying to find whistleblower Daniel Kellner (Josh O’Connor), who’s got all of those alien secrets tucked in a backpack while he’s on the run, and while Daniel’s more experienced mind is protected from diving, his girlfriend Jane’s (Eve Hewson) is not. So, monitored by medical personnel at Wordex headquarters (diving is dangerous), Scanlon pushes his way into Jane’s mind to find the location of Daniel’s safe house. 

A telepathic invasion is scary enough on its own, but Spielberg doesn’t stop there. When Scanlon dives into Eve’s mind, he appears to her to be sitting across the kitchen table, like he’s in the room. Her bright blue eyes turn Scanlon’s dark brown, and she loses much of her control over her own body, not to mention her mind. Moments before, Daniel finally shared with her the secrets in his backpack, so Jane is shocked, conflicted, deeply vulnerable when Scanlon slips inside her head. This is not just telepathy. This is possession. 

Spielberg underscores this not just through the visual language of the scene, as Jane breaks out in a sweat and struggles to sit upright as Scanlon invades her mind, but through Jane’s background. As she revealed to Daniel earlier in the film, Jane is a former novitiate nun who left her convent when she began to question her calling. She still believes firmly in God and, more importantly, believes that perhaps proof of alien life should be kept secret from the public because, in her eyes, it would upset the entire balance of faith in the world. God is a defining factor for humankind, Jane argues, and showing humanity proof of creatures from the stars would undercut that in dangerous ways. 

This context, combined with the crucifix necklace Jane’s holding in her hand at the time of the dive, makes this scene the closest thing Spielberg will ever shoot to something out of The Exorcist. It’s not just a battle of wills, but a battle of faith. As an amoral technocrat worms his way into her memories, her beliefs, her faith, Jane turns the crucifix into a weapon, squeezing it until her hand bleeds when she discovers that a pain response can momentarily push Scanlon out of her head.

Of course, when you put a crucifix and a bloody hand together, it conjures images of stigmata. Screenwriter David Koepp pushes the allusion further by having Scanlon quote Christ on the cross to Jane by way of convincing her that she must be the one to stop Daniel by any means necessary.

It’s easy to see why this is scary, right?

On a very basic level, you have a powerful, wealthy man subduing and assaulting an innocent young woman, which is frightening enough. Then, the layers of the scene kick in. Scanlon doesn’t just assault Jane, but possesses her, seizes her memories, her knowledge, and finally her own free will, all while Jane literally clings to her faith in an effort to fight back. Disclosure Day is, among other things, a story about who has a right to the truth, and Scanlon believes that he should be the arbiter of that truth. Not just the truth as he sees it, but the truth as Jane sees it as well. If they don’t see eye to eye, he’ll make her. 

But the possession, as it turns out, cuts both ways. Using the rod to dive is, for a normal human being, an intensely strenuous process. Scanlon admits that previous attempts almost killed him, and for some members of his time, so much as touching the rod results in a near-death experience. Even accessing an unprepared mind like Jane’s takes a lot of Scanlon, and when she kicks him out by squeezing the crucifix – again, so much meaning embedded in the details here – his team holds him back and tries to offer medical intervention. But Scanlon persists, pushing them away, and keeps diving back in.

This means that Jane can’t escape him because he just won’t stop pushing back through her defenses, but it also means that each time Scanlon enters her mind, and thus the safe house, he looks more monstrous. By the end, through a combination of lighting and makeup, Firth barely looks human, conjuring up images of the possessed Father Karras at the end of The Exorcist.

Colin Firth (center, standing) in DISCLOSURE DAY, directed by Steven Spielberg.

On a pure, visceral craft level, all of this is quite frightening, but the real trick to making this scene into Spielberg’s most terrifying lies in the more existential horror surrounding all of this. Disclosure Day is a film about the battle for the truth over extraterrestrials, but it’s also about a fight against an impossibly powerful surveillance state, the devaluing of human and alien lives in favor of some nebulous collection of assets, and the value of the individual in a world that increasingly lumps people into demographic boxes and writes them off.

In this scene, the surveillance state becomes supernatural, a human life is worth less than a piece of information, and an extragovernmental technocrat would rather sacrifice his own humanity than see reason. In 2026, few things could be more terrifying than that. Spielberg knows this and wields it mightily, proving once again that, while he’s not a strictly horror filmmaker, he can direct horror with the best of them.

Disclosure Day is in theaters now. 

Eve Hewson (second from left) in DISCLOSURE DAY, directed by Steven Spielberg.

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