11.
The Ninth Gate (HBO)
Going into it knowing it was a movie about the occult directed by the guy who made Chinatown, The Pianist and The Ghost Writer I expected something more like Rosemary's Baby but it's basically a silly genre movie playing it straight like those old Christopher Lee vampire movies, but with a slightly classier, modern presentation...which wasn't bad, actually.
12.
The Blackcoat’s Daughter (Amazon Prime)
Emma Roberts and the daughter from Mad Men are pretty good, but I didn't find a lot here aside from the atmosphere.
13.
Donnie Darko (Netflix)
Yeah, it's kind of embarrassingly emo but it's a bit of a guilty pleasure for me, largely because of the 80s setting?
14.
Raw (Netflix)
Really liked this one. It's another cannibal movie but it has some really great, cringe-worthy body horror and I liked the allegories and undertones too.
15.
An American Werewolf in London (Amazon)
I think that was the first time I had seen it all the way through from beginning to end after seeing extended parts of it on TV like 30 times. Liked the characters, the setup, the effects and it's nice and brisk too.
16.
The Sixth Sense (Netflix)
First time rewatching it since it came out, I think. I've said it before after watching Unbreakable but it's crazy how...mature and understated his earlier movies are.
17.
The Ring (HBO)
I didn't think much of it at the time, but on rewatch it's surprisingly effective and Verbinski's style is pretty impressive. Feels very slick for a movie that's 15 years old by now. Plus Naomi Watts.

18.
The Conjuring 2 (HBO)
I liked the first one a bit but I was still skeptical going into a broad sequel like this. I actually ended up enjoying this quite a bit even though I still get a little incredulous by the "based on a true story" angle, but I don't think jump scares are that bad of a thing.
19.
Hannibal (Showtime)
Yeah, this movie was actually a lot smaller than I remember it being. It's pretty much carried by Hopkins' performance, the material is pretty trashy and it sucks that we get Julianne Moore doing a bit of a Jodie Foster impression but I kind of like it and Red Dragon, despite the silliness.
20.
The Purge: Election Year (HBO)
Yeah, I gave it a chance because I've heard good things about it but it really felt like a huge waste to me. I didn't find it particularly compelling and instead felt like someone trying to adapt a Payday or Left 4 Dead mashup with a $2 budget.