download.jpg
How does every major horror movie of 2020 rank from worst to best? 2020 has not been a phenomenal year for horror, although the year witnessed a host of promising indie ventures, such as the likes of The Vast of Night and Sea Fever.
Due to a shift to online streaming, movie-viewing experiences, especially that of the horror genre, were imbued with an added sense of unease, owing to the visceral, real-life horrors that plague the world now. Nevertheless, the horror genre has always been an incredibly complex one, offering solace despite its haunting, bone-chilling roots, bringing about catharsis, which is essentially the purging of pity and fear.
While streaming allowed horror offering of diverse themes to shine forth, the most anticipated entries from major studios got pushed back by the pandemic, including A Quiet Place Part II and The Conjuring 3. However, some of the offerings from these studios found homes on prominent streaming platforms and VOD for audiences to enjoy while staying safe at home. Here is every major horror movie of the year, ranked.
15. The Grudge
download (1).jpg
Takashi Shimizu’s original Japanese horror, The Grudge, has been subjected to various Hollywood remakes, ranging from the fairly decent to the sub-par. Nicolas Pesce’s rendition of The Grudge can be understood more along the lines of mainstream horror with arthouse aesthetics, which comes off as an odd combination when executed poorly. While The Grudge works well in terms of combining divergent narrative strands, which is emboldened by Andrea Riseborough’s naturalistic performance as Detective Muldoon, the film falls flat in the genuine scares department. The Grudge follows Muldoon, who investigates the death of a woman that is connected to a string of gruesome murders that seem to have a tie with a house in the woods. The owner Fiona Landers (Tara Westwood) seems to have brought the curse with her, unleashing the wrath of a demon, whose presence is neither scary nor compelling enough for longtime fans of the franchise.
14. Deep Blue Sea 3
download (2).jpg
The third and final installment of the Deep Blue Sea series, Deep Blue Sea 3 banks upon a flimsy narrative of bull sharks causing grisly deaths, pitted against the backdrop of doomed-to-fail romance. Director John Pogue’s Deep Blue Sea 3 is undoubtedly an improvement on the utter vapidity of the second entry in the series but fails to amount to a genuinely thrilling shark movie. The film is helmed by Dr. Emma Collins (Tania Raymonde), who wishes to protect the Great White sharks, just like her father did before her. Chaos ensues when Emma and her team find out that three adult bell sharks are causing murderous mayhem on the island of Little Happy, and what follows is a convoluted plotline, featuring unconvincing performances and narrative contrivances. Nevertheless, fans of the genre might end up having a good time watching the wonky CGI sharks, as they seem to be the only highlight of the movie.
13. Evil Eye
download (3).jpg
This Welcome to the Blumhouse installment stars Sunita Mani as Pallavi, who is constantly reminded by her mother Usha (Sarita Choudhury) that she should get married. Evil Eye positions Pallavi as a cynic in terms of heartfelt romance, at least until she meets the charming Sandeep (Omar Maskati), who gradually exhibits behavior that can only be deemed as toxic and controlling. Things take a murkier turn when Usha tries to convince her daughter that beneath Sandeep’s caring exterior lies something inherently sinister. Despite this promising premise, Evil Eye mainly suffers from the one-dimensional portrayal of Sandeep, who imbibes all the clichés attributed to the abusive male stalker figure in movies. Apart from this, the film manages to build up a frenetic crescendo via Usha and Pallavi’s telephone conversations, which become more tense and urgent with time. All in all, Evil Eye is helmed by strong performances from the leads and chronicles the horrors embedded in abuse, and the infernal way in which it can linger within the mind.
12. The Lie
download (4).jpg
Director Veena Sud’s The Lie is centered on Kayla (Joey King), a teenager who ends up killing her friend Brittany by pushing her into an icy river. This sends her divorced parents, Jay (Peter Sarsgaard) and Rebecca (Mireille Enos) into a spiral of anxiety, and the two end up covering up for their daughter’s heinous crime. This decision cascades into a series of lies concocted by the family, which are soon uprooted from their shaky foundation once Brittany’s father questions her disappearance. Although this premise is as nightmarish as it gets, highlighting the extent to which morality can be a slippery slope for those wishing to protect a loved one, The Lie is not a nerve-wracking watch, although it should be. While it is alarming to see Jay and Rebecca make one questionable decision after the other, the film veers into the territory of the artificial and less believable, as the decisions do not seem to be grounded in reason or emotion.