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Five Underseen ’90s Horror Movies to Stream This Week

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Cemetery Man - Underseen '90s horror

Thanks to the continued dominance of the home video market and digitization of cable TV, horror’s identity in the ’90s was doomed to be tricky to nail down, thanks to the vast sea of options beyond theatrical releases. For every Candyman or Scream released in theaters, there are dozens more of straight-to-video or made-for-cable horror movies.

This week, we’re diving a little deeper into the ’90s catalog, spotlighting underseen ’90s horror movies that flew under the radar. These streaming picks run the gamut in style and tone, from esoteric extreme French horror to gonzo Hong Kong cinema and beyond.

Here’s where you can stream them this week.

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


Baby Blood – AMC+, Kanopy

Baby Blood

Well before the rise of New French Extremity horror, there was 1990’s bizarre Baby Blood. Yanka is a circus performer stuck in an abusive relationship until a strange snake-like alien parasite finds her and crawls into her uterus. It then demands that she embark on a murder spree, devouring the blood of her victims so that the parasite can be nurtured and grow. Throughout their extraordinarily bloody journey, Yanka finds herself bonding with the creature inside her. Yes, this is essentially pregnancy horror at its most esoteric and revolting, but with a pitch-black comedic undertone. Baby Blood is as thoughtfully touching as it is gory, which is saying a lot.


The Boneyard – Prime Video

The Boneyard

This straight-to-video 1991 proved why having a decent cover box was extremely important. The monstrous poodle with a pink bow meant I passed this up over and over as a child, until finally giving in to discover a surprisingly creepy story at the heart of the film. With a very atypical protagonist, the film follows a depressed psychic as she works with detectives to get to the bottom of the mystery behind a funeral home owner with three corpses of mummified children in his possession. Only, these aren’t dead children, but “kyoshi,” or undead cursed children that must feed on human flesh. They’re very creepy, and yet they still don’t prepare for the wild finale teased on the VHS cover box. Though, it does take its time getting there. The Boneyard was written and directed by James Cummins, the creature designer behind the inventive apparitions in 1986’s House.


The Cat – Criterion Channel

The Cat 1992 - Underseen '90s Horror

For those who know and love the insanity of director Ngai Choi Lam’s Hong Kong Category III gems The Seventh Curse and Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky, do not miss this one. Set in the same universe as The Seventh CurseThe Cat is an adaptation of the novel Old Cat by Ni Kuang, part of the Wisely series. Here, Wisely is now played by Waise Lee, who finds himself teaming with a young girl and her alien cat to stop a grotesque killer from another planet. Ngai Choi Lam delivers another gonzo piece of cinema that blends sci-fi with goopy practical effects-driven horror. Come for the gore, but be prepared to find yourself head over heels for one of the zaniest extended brawls since John Carpenter’s They Live. You’ll know it when you see it.


Cemetery Man – AMC+, Shudder

Cemetery Man

Otherwise known as Dellamorte Dellamore, this quirky horror-comedy follows Rupert Everett as cemetery caretaker Francesco Dellamorte. He and his mute sidekick Gnaghi spend their days ensuring the new revived dead are put back in their graves. All is going well, if a bit mundane, until Francesco falls hard for a young widow (Anna Falchi) and Gnaghi falls for the mayor’s daughter. Things get crazy and very surreal, not least of which is Death incarnate visiting Francesco to demand he stop killing the dead. There’s a wry tongue-in-cheek, dream logic approach in director Michele Soavi’s work. Between the unique plot, characters, and style, there’s nothing like Cemetery Man.


Screamers – freevee, the Roku Channel, Shout TV

Screamers

Based on Phillip K. Dick’s “Second Variety,” Peter Weller stars as Commander Joseph A. Hendricksson. The Alliance officer travels dangerous terrain to secure a truce between long-warring factions. However, peace negotiations don’t stand a chance, thanks to machines created as covert weapons turning sentient. Known as “Screamers,” the devices have evolved and are plotting to destroy both sides. Borrowing a page from The Thing, paranoia becomes the name of the game when the core party discovers that Screamers can look like anything or anyone. In this ’90s sci-fi creature feature that occasionally shows its dated seams, the antagonistic creatures often mimic humans as a lure to painful demises. 

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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Blumhouse Gives New Release Dates to ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,’ ‘M3GAN 2.0’ and ‘The Black Phone 2’

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Five Nights at Freddy's Animatronics

Blumhouse has announced a trio of upcoming horror movie release dates today, the first of which is the official date for the sequel to hit video game movie Five Nights at Freddy’s.

Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 will release in theaters December 5, 2025.

Released in theaters and available for streaming on Peacock on the same day, the Emma Tammi-directed Five Night’s at Freddy’s was Blumhouse’s highest grossing movie of all time. In other words, it’s no surprise that the sequel was quickly greenlit.

In last year’s horror movie, “After accepting a security guard job from Steve (Matthew LillardScream, Scooby Doo), Mike (Josh HutchersonThe Hunger Games Franchise) discovers an abandoned restaurant may actually be haunted by murderous animatronics.”


M3GAN

Two other upcoming Blumhouse sequels have also received new dates, with M3GAN 2.0 now coming to theaters on June 27, 2025, previously announced for May 16, 2025.

Allison Williams and Violet McGraw are back for the sequel, with Akela Cooper (Malignant, M3GAN) once again writing the script and James Wan on board to produce.


the black phone 2

And then there’s The Black Phone 2, which had been set for theatrical release on June 27, 2025. That date taken by M3GAN’s sequel, it’s now releasing October 17, 2025.

Ethan Hawke will be back as The Grabber, with Mason Thames (How to Train Your Dragon, Incoming), Madeleine McGraw (Toy Story 4Secrets of Sulphur Springs), Jeremy Davies (Justified) and Miguel Mora (The Black Phone) also set to return.

Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill will be writing and producing the upcoming sequel.


Additionally, Blumhouse and Universal’s The Woman in the Yard will release on March 28, 2025, with Christopher Landon’s thriller Drop coming to theaters on April 11, 2025.

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