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Stay Home, Watch Horror: Five Underseen Slasher Gems to Stream This Week

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Charles Martin Smith TRICK OR TREAT on SCREAMBOX
Pictured: 'Trick or Treat'

Horror trends ebb and flow, but slashers never truly go out of style.

Take the recently debuted trailer for the upcoming A24 horror movie MaXXXine, for example. There’s something oddly comforting about the slasher subgenre, beholden to its rules and its commitment to racking up an impressive body count, that we just can’t get enough of. So, this week’s streaming picks belong to one of the most beloved subgenres of horror.

Only this time, because the slasher subgenre is vast and endless with no shortage of hidden gems, we’re highlighting five underseen slashers you may not have watched yet.

Here’s where you can stream them this week.

For more Stay Home, Watch Horror picks, click here.


Death Spa – AMC+, Plex, Shudder, Tubi, Vudu

Death Spa supernatural slasher

Also known as Witch Bitch in Europe, this wacky ‘80s slasher movie takes aim at the decade’s fitness craze in the most entertaining way. Michael Evans (William Bumiller) owns and runs a high-tech health club, but it soon becomes plagued by a series of freak accidents and bizarre deaths. It turns out his deceased wife holds a massive grudge and has taken to possessing the facility and gym equipment to torment Michael from beyond the grave. A ghost that kills out of jealousy through gym equipment is every bit as silly and as entertaining as it sounds.


Dr. Giggles – freevee, Plex, the Roku Channel, Shout TV, Tubi

Dr Giggles

There’s an urban legend feel to writer/director Manny Coto’s slasher comedy. The plot introduces Larry Drake (Dark Night of the Scarecrow, Darkman) as the eponymous character, a murderous madman who escapes from a mental institution and fixates on a teen with a heart condition. It’s the type of slasher that isn’t afraid to let its characters get silly, as evidenced by Dr. Giggles’ penchant for deranged giggle fits when committing murder. It’s matched by fun kills with some great gore. The real reason to check out this zany ’90s slasher, though, is star Larry Drake. The horror stalwart ensures his manic killer stands out among the crowded pantheon of slashers.


Evil Dead Trap – AMC+, Fandor, freevee, Night Flight, Plex, Prime Video, SCREAMBOX, Shudder

Evil Dead Trap

This Japanese giallo-style slasher is for fans that love over-the-top plot reveals and an extra helping of sleazy gore and inventive, gruesome kills. The plot follows a late-night talk show host, Nami (Miyuki Ono), and her crew as they investigate the origins of a snuff film shot at a nearby facility. The atmospheric setup eventually goes off the rails most unpredictably, but director Toshiharu Ikeda wastes no time acclimating viewers with a gnarly burst of ocular trauma straightaway. It signals precisely the type of bloody madness in store. That the killer employs elaborate traps to commit murder means that someone beat Saw to the punch by over a decade. Fans of Malignant will want to check this one out.


Grave Robbers – AMC+, Shudder

Grave Robbers underseen slashers

Filmmaker Rubén Galindo Jr. delivered a trio of solid horror movies in the ’80s worth checking out. The first was the supernatural Halloween gem Cemetery of Terror, followed by Nightmare on Elm Street riff Don’t Panic. Galindo Jr.’s third horror feature, Grave Robbers, offers a Satanic slasher with an imposing Jason Voorhees-like killer. Teens embarking on a camping getaway wind up unleashing the spirit of an evil Inquisition executioner when they come upon his recently robbed tomb. It begins a supernatural induced bloodbath. Grave Robbers closes out Galindo Jr.’s ’80s horror trilogy with a bang, delivering plenty of fun kills and a wild plot to usher in the Antichrist.


Trick or Treat – SCREAMBOX

Trick or Treat

The pinnacle of heavy metal horror, Trick or Treat, is finally available on streaming. Considering it’s halfway-to-Halloween month, that makes now the perfect time to watch. Following the death of his heavy metal idol, a bullied teenage boy inadvertently discovers a way to resurrect the rocker. After hearing the news of his hero’s death, Eddie Weinbauer (Marc Price) finds himself in possession of a one-of-a-kind item, the final recording of Sammi Curr (Tony Fields). When Eddie plays the record backward, unwittingly unleashing his idol’s demonic side. Sammi Curr delivers retribution upon Eddie’s bullies in his unholy bid for heavy metal dominion. With an earworm score and Halloween heavy metal mayhem, throw up some devil horns and enjoy the ride.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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‘Mickey vs. Winnie’ – The Public Domain Horror Trend May Have Just Jumped the Shark

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In case you haven’t noticed, the public domain status of beloved icons like Winnie the Pooh, Cinderella and Mickey Mouse has been wreaking havoc on the horror genre in the past couple years, with filmmakers itching to get their hands on the characters and put them into twisted situations. In the wake of two Winnie the Pooh slashers, well, Pooh is about to battle Mickey.

It’s not from the same team behind the Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey films, to be clear, but Deadline reports that Glen Douglas Packard (Pitchfork) will direct the horror movie Mickey vs. Winnie for Untouchables Entertainment and the website iHorror.

Deadline details, “The film follows two convicts in the 1920s who escape into a cursed forest only to be dragged and consumed into the depths of the dark forest’s muddy heart.

“A century later, a group of thrill-seeking friends unknowingly venture into the same woods. Their Airbnb getaway takes a horrifying turn when the convicts mutate into twisted versions of childhood icons Mickey Mouse & Winnie-The-Pooh, and emerge to terrorize them. A night of violence and gore erupts, as the group of friends battle against their now monstrous beloved childhood characters and fight to break free from the forest’s grip.

“In a horrific spectacle, Mickey and Winnie clash, painting the woods in a gruesome tableau of blood—a chilling testament to the curse’s insidious power.”

Glen Douglas Packard wrote the screenplay that he’ll be directing.

“Horror fans call for the thrill of witnessing icons like the new Aliens and Avengers sharing the screen. While licensing nightmares make such crossovers rare, Mickey vs. Winnie serves as our tribute to that thrilling fantasy,” Packard said in a statement this week.

Producer Anthony Pernicka from iHorror previews, “We’re thrilled to unveil this unique take to horror fans. The Mickey Mouse featured in our film is unlike any iteration audiences have encountered before. Our portrayal doesn’t involve characters donning basic masks. Instead, we present deeply transformed, live-action horror renditions of these iconic figures, weaving together elements of innocence and malevolence. After experiencing the intense scenes we’ve crafted, you’ll never look at Mickey the same way again.”

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