35 Not-So-Scary Horror Movies for Beginners

It’s no secret that horror movies are not for everyone. Many find horror movies to be too much to handle, especially if they scare easily. And that’s okay! Everyone is different, after all. However, whether it’s through some morbid curiosity or the fear of missing out, some movie-goers with a strictly non-horror watchlist may wish to give the genre and some scary movies a try. But diving straight into the deep end is unwise, as that can turn them off horror for good. Luckily, some mild horror movies are perfect for anyone who wants to start first in the shallow end.




In the midst of the spooky season, even those who are most opposed to scary movies may find themselves suffering from a bit of FOMO as film lovers the world over embrace all the scares horror cinema has to offer. For the cautiously intrigued, this list of horror movies that aren’t too scary presents some relatively light though acclaimed suggestions which are great beginner horror movies to enable new fans to ease into all the thrills the genre has to offer this Halloween.


35 ‘Child’s Play’ (1988)

Directed by Tom Holland

Chucky holds a knife behind a broken window
Image via MGM


While modern horror movies featuring terrifying dolls such as 2014’s Annabelle are often regarded as downright horrifying, Child’s Play is much more bearable for those who are easily scared. For one, it’s riddled with 80s cheese, and the character of Chucky (Brad Dourif) isn’t as frightening anymore. Although, he was considered much scarier when the film was newer.

Chucky is a living, foul-mouthed doll who happens to be an evil killer. While this is a terrifying premise, seeing a child’s doll swearing its little head off is funny to watch, turning it into one of the least scary horror movies. The practical effects also make it very unconvincing in the 21st century, which helps with any potential nightmares.

Release Date
November 8, 1988

Cast
Catherine Hicks , Chris Sarandon , Alex Vincent , Brad Dourif , Dinah Manoff , Tommy Swerdlow

Runtime
87

Rent on Apple TV


34 ‘Ready or Not’ (2019)

Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett

Grace (Samara Weaving) and Alex (Mark O'Brien) hide in 'Ready or Not'
Image via Fox Searchlight Pictures.

In 2019’s Ready or Not, Samara Weaving stars as Grace Le Domas, a seemingly unassuming young bride about to marry into a wealthy and secretive family. When they play a game for the sake of family tradition, Grace learns of the family’s deal with the devil to keep their wealth, and she’s soon being hunted by each member as part of the twisted ritual.

Ready or Not is a darkly comedic horror film that mocks extreme wealth and the habits of out-of-touch people. While there are crossbows, guns, and some uncomfortable scenes showing the injuries and deaths over the course of the evening, the entire film offers a mostly entertaining and often funny viewing experience that will have viewers rooting for its badass protagonist.


Release Date
August 21, 2019

Runtime
95 Minutes

33 ‘Midsommar’ (2019)

Directed by Ari Aster

Dani is crowned as May Queen by the Hargas
Image via A24

Midsommar tells the story of a group of college students who travel to Sweden to research the reclusive Harga cult so that they can write a thesis on them. Despite being critically acclaimed, the movie is more creepy than scary.


The main reason it’s not terrifying is that most of the horror film happens in broad daylight, not in the characteristic darkness of other movies in the genre. Another reason it’s less frightening is that nothing overtly supernatural happens in the movie. The film may be about a cult, but no demons, ghosts, or cryptids exist. There are a few body horror scenes and psychedelic scares, but there is a complete and total lack of jump scares, making it tolerable for even the most easily startled.

32 ‘Crimson Peak’ (2015)

Directed by Guillermo del Toro

Edith searches the gloom of Crimson Peak with a candelabra
Image via Universal Pictures 


Crimson Peak comes from master film director Guillermo del Toro, and features the likes of Tom Hiddleston, and Mia Wasikowska. Wasikowska plays a young American girl who falls in love with a British entrepreneur named Sir Thomas Sharpe, who Hiddleston plays. They marry, and Sharpe brings his new wife to his home, a haunted manor known as Crimson Peak.

This movie centers around ghosts, and while the spirits encountered in the movie are decently frightening, they don’t appear as often as one would expect for a horror film. There are a few jump scares here and there, but it’s not the constant bombardment of terror that can be found in many more intense horror films, making this an easier option for newcomers to the genre.

Release Date
October 13, 2015

Director
Guillermo del Toro

Runtime
119 minutes


31 ‘The Blair Witch Project’ (1999)

Directed by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sanchez

Heather cries as she realizes her terrible predicament
Image via Artisan Entertainment

The Blair Witch Project is considered by many to be one of the scariest movies of all time… or at least, it was. At the time of its release, this found-footage film petrified an entire generation with fear. This was due to a brilliant marketing campaign in which the three main actors played themselves, which was supplemented by the fact that the production company told the public that they had gone missing.

This, of course, wasn’t true, and all three actors are still alive and well. Thanks to the internet, the mystery associated with this iconic found footage movie has disappeared, making it far, far less frightening than it used to be. The titular witch is never seen in the movie, not even once, leading some to believe the witch was never real, to begin with. The terror comes from the supernatural events that happen while the cameras aren’t on. It’s more of psychological horror if anything.


Release Date
July 30, 1999

Director
Daniel Myrick , Eduardo Sánchez

Cast
Heather Donahue , Michael C. Williams , Joshua Leonard

Runtime
81 minutes

30 ‘Dracula’ (1931)

Directed by Tod Browning

Count Dracula smiles menacingly from behind a shadowy corner
Image via Universal Pictures 

One of the first horror movies ever made, Dracula is loosely based on the Bram Stoker novel of the same name. Many know the vampire Dracula as a classic horror character, and it was in this movie that he made his first appearance on screen. While the movie may have been incredibly scary for the time, its creepiness doesn’t hold up nearly a century later.


Despite being low on the scare scale, it’s still a classic movie for the ages and sets many standards for the genre, which is why Dracula is an essential watch for any horror newbie looking to dip their toes in.

Dracula (1931)

Release Date
February 14, 1931

Director
Tod Browning

Cast
Béla Lugosi , David Manners , Helen Chandler , Dwight Frye

Runtime
75 minutes

29 ‘Annihilation’ (2018)

Directed by Alex Garland

A group of female soldiers armed with guns standing in line in Annihilation.
Image via Paramount Pictures 

Annihilation is another movie that’s more creepy than scary. Starring Natalie Portman as the protagonist, Lena, it follows a group of biologists and former soldiers investigating a mysterious area known as The Shimmer in search of a missing expedition team.


Based on a sci-fi novel of the same name, much of the horror in the film comes from the mutated wildlife that can be found in The Shimmer. There are a few jump scares, but it’s nothing incredibly terrifying. There are also some psychological horror elements, but for the most part, it serves as a sci-fi movie with a complex and intriguing plot.

Release Date
February 22, 2018

Director
Alex Garland

Runtime
115 minutes

28 ‘Hush’ (2016)

Directed by Mike Flanagan

The Masked Killer standing still in "Hush"
Image via Netflix


Hush is a criminally-underrated slasher masterpiece, plain and simple. This is because it breaks so many conventional horror movie boundaries. For one, much of the movie is silent. This is because it’s told from the perspective of a deaf-mute writer, who can’t hear most of the things happening around her, and can’t speak or scream. The film being silent makes it a nice break from the loud, scream-filled, intense approaches of other horror films, which is why it’s not quite as scary as others.

Another unconventional but brilliant choice is that the killer who traps the writer in her home is not some paranormal entity or malevolent slasher. He’s just a man. Sure he wears a creepy mask, but he wears it for all of five minutes. For the rest of the movie, his face is completely exposed, which makes him much less threatening. The writer doesn’t make many bad decisions, which is more than can be said for many cheesy horror flicks. She cannot call for help, and she tries (unsuccessfully) to run, but it becomes apparent that she is running out of options, so her only choice is to fight back.


Release Date
April 8, 2016

Cast
John Gallagher Jr. , Kate Siegel , Michael Trucco , Samantha Sloyan , Emilia Graves

Runtime
82 minutes

Watch on Shudder

27 ‘Army of Darkness’ (1992)

Directed by Sam Raimi

An injured Ash raises a rifle with his left hand in Army of Darkness
Image via Universal Pictures

Evil Dead (1981) may have started as a horror franchise, but as the films went on, they gradually became more and more ridiculous. Army of Darkness is a perfect example of this. The third film in the Evil Dead franchise functions as a sort of action/comedy/horror hybrid. It is technically a horror film with a few mildly scary parts, but they are easily overshadowed.


While it may scare its viewers, it also has its fair share of comedy and cheesy 90s action, complete with one-liners and outrageous dialogue, ultimately making the scary parts easier to get through.

Army of Darkness

Release Date
February 19, 1993

Runtime
81 minutes

26 ‘The Witch’ (2015)

Directed by Robert Eggers

Thomasin screams in horror
Image via A24

The Witch comes from the now-popular A24 Studios, the same production company behind Midsommar, and features a lot of similarities, despite the two films having different directors. The Witch takes place in 17th-Century New England after a family of settlers is exiled from their village and is forced to establish a new home in the region. Unfortunately for them, the nearby forest is home to a witch.


When their baby disappears under mysterious circumstances, the family begins to tear itself apart in the wake of the supernatural events that begin to occur. The film is an easy watch for horror newbies as there is a grand total of one jump scare throughout the entire film, and it focuses more on creeping the audience out rather than scaring the pants off of them. What’s more, the witch herself is seldom seen.

Release Date
February 19, 2016

Runtime
92minutes

25 ‘Cloverfield’ (2008)

Directed by Matt Reeves

A headless Statue of Liberty looks out over a destroyed New York City
Image via Paramount Pictures 


Cloverfield is another found-footage film about a giant Toho-esque monster that suddenly appears in New York and begins terrorizing the city. Typically, giant monster flicks aren’t quite classified as horror movies. This one, however, is. There are a few scares scattered here and there through the frantic camera movements, but for the most part, it’s just tension.

Moreover, the monster isn’t seen until the end, so it can’t disturb the audience based on its looks. Regardless, it’s a solid movie and a brilliant modern monster film.

Release Date
January 15, 2008

Director
Matt Reeves

Runtime
90

24 ‘Us’ (2019)

Directed by Jordan Peele

Red with her hands on her cheeks looking surprised in the 2019 movie Us.


Director Jordan Peele‘s Us stars Lupita Nyong’o as Adelaide Wilson, a woman who takes her family to Santa Cruz, California, for a beach holiday, only to be greeted by a group of mystery doppelgängers. The Wilsons’ doppelgängers are revealed to be part of a group of underground beings known as the “Tethered,” who have been living in a parallel universe and have emerged to seek retribution on the surface world. As the Wilsons fight to stay alive against their doppelgängers, they discover a startling link between themselves and the Tethered.

Us was a financial and critical success, with many commending its performances, directing, and social commentary. It’s also among the not-too-scary horror movies for beginners, as the premise is so unique that it’s hard to imagine it happening in real life. The pacing is also not as frantic as more intense horror movies.


Us (2019)

Release Date
March 22, 2019

Runtime
116 minutes

Watch on Hulu

23 ‘It Follows’ (2014)

Directed by David Robert Mitchell

Jay (Maika Monroe) tied to a chair in 'It Follows'
Image via The Weinstein Company

The horror film It Follows revolves around Jay (Maika Monroe), a young woman who is chased by a mysterious entity after having a sexual experience with her lover. The force that assumes the guise of a person can take any shape and can walk at a constant speed, always following its victim. The only way to get rid of it is to transmit it to another person via sexual contact. Jay and her companions are forced to confront their own mortality and the value of their lives as they struggle to flee the force and discover a way to beat it.


Directed by David Robert Mitchell, the film received critical acclaim and was praised for its unique premise and tense atmosphere. The main criticism centered on its “horror” elements being disappointingly underwhelming, which is why it’s perfect for viewers who don’t want anything too frightening.

Release Date
March 15, 2015

Director
David Robert Mitchell

Cast
Bailey Spry , Carollette Phillips , Loren Bass , Keir Gilchrist , Maika Monroe , Lili Sepe

Runtime
100 minutes

22 ‘Triangle’ (2009)

Directed by Christopher Smith

Melissa George as Jess holding a shotgun in Triangle
Image via Icon Film Distribution


Christopher Smith directed the totally underrated horror thrillerTriangle, which revolves around a group of friends who plan to go sailing together, only to get trapped in a bizarre and perilous storm. When they seek shelter aboard a nearby derelict cruise ship, unusual and frightening events begin to replay themselves in a never-ending cycle. They are forced to confront their own demons and secrets as they attempt to leave the ship and unravel the mystery of what is happening to them.

Critics praised Triangle for its creative and complex narrative, outstanding acting, and atmospheric directing. Non-horror fans will appreciate the film’s ability to keep viewers guessing. Audiences will be busy trying to figure out what’s going on – the film is more absorbing rather than terrifying.

Triangle

Release Date
October 16, 2009

Runtime
99 Minutes


Directed by Mark Mylod

Ralph Fiennes in The Menu

Director Mark Mylod‘s The Menu is a dark comedy horror film with a star-studded ensemble cast that includes Ralph Fiennes, Anya Taylor-Joy, Nicholas Hoult, Hong Chau, Janet McTeer, and more. It follows a group of diners who take a boat to reach an exclusive and ridiculously expensive restaurant known for its eccentric celebrity chef (Fiennes), who has prepared a truly unique and horrifying meal for the selected guests.

With its biting satire, smart parody of foodie documentaries, and surprising laugh-out-loud moments, The Menu is the perfect choice for viewers interested in the way horror and comedy collide in films. It’s also among the latest entries in the recent trend of “eat the rich” cinema, which often relies heavily on the horror and thriller genres.


Release Date
November 18, 2022

Director
Mark Mylod

Runtime
107 minutes

20 ​’Alien’ (1979)

Directed by Ridley Scott

Several people gathered around a man lying on a table in the film Alien
Image via 20th Century Studios

Alien is a genre-defining sci-fi horror film that needs no introduction. Directed by Ridley Scott, the movie follows the crew of the commercial space tug Nostromo as they return to Earth after receiving a distress call from an alien planet. When they investigate the signal, they come across a violent extraterrestrial species that starts picking them out one by one. They are forced to confront their own fears and the boundaries of their humanity as they fight to survive against the creature.


Alien became one of the most influential science fiction films of all time after becoming a massive critical and financial success. The film received critical acclaim for its breathtaking cinematography, tense atmosphere, and great performances, notably by Sigourney Weaver as the protagonist, Ellen Ripley. It’s an essential horror movie to watch for beginners, keeping in mind that it relies mostly on atmosphere, with the titular Alien having minimal screentime.

Release Date
June 22, 1979

Runtime
117 minutes

Watch on Hulu

19 ‘The Black Phone’ (2022)

Directed by Scott Derrickson

Ethan Hawke as The Grabber doing jazz hands in The Black Phone
Image via Universal Pictures


If the popularity of Stranger Things and It are anything to go by, audiences love a good dose of nostalgia with their scares. The Black Phone follows this trend, set in the late 1970s and telling the story of a thirteen-year-old boy who is abducted by a sadistic child killer and locked in his basement where he learns he can communicate with past victims through a disconnected telephone on the wall.

While the film is obviously grim and has some supernatural undertones, it tends to feel more like a thriller than an all out-horror, and is balanced out by its retro backdrop and child characters. It’s an effective introduction to the unnerving fun that can be had with horror and the tension it provides.

Release Date
June 24, 2022

Director
Scott Derrickson

Runtime
113 minutes


18 ‘The Ring’ (2002)

Directed by Gore Verbinski

Daveigh Chase as Samara emerges from a well and walks towards the camera in 'The Ring' (2002)
Image via DreamWorks

A breakout success of early 2000s horror, The Ring may be jarringly a product of its time now, but it still manages to provide a creepy and thrilling viewing experience if not a terrifying one. It follows an investigative journalist who starts looking into the mystery behind a cursed videotape after four teenagers – her niece among them – die exactly one week after watching it.

Part supernatural horror, part mystery thriller, The Ring is elevated by Gore Verbinski’s razor-sharp direction and Naomi Watts’ grounded yet powerful lead performance as an intrigued reporter and a desperate mother. While the horror movie does feature a couple of jumpy moments and some intense and unsettling sequences, it doesn’t rely on blood and gore to provide an experience and works just as well as an eerie mystery film as it does as a supernatural horror.


Release Date
October 18, 2002

Runtime
115 minutes

17 ‘The Sixth Sense’ (1999)

Directed by M. Night Shyamalan

A child psychiatrist stands with a young boy looking down at something which scares the child.
Image via Buena Vista Pictures Distribution

Undoubtedly M. Night Shyamalan’s best film, The Sixth Sense works as both a spooky ghost story and a powerful drama. The film follows child psychologist Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis), who, after an encounter with an ex-patient, starts treating a young boy (Haley Joel Osment) who can see dead people.


While the film features a few ghostly encounters, with some more intense than others, it finds dread in the quieter character-driven moments. While its shocking twist ending likely proceeds it for most viewers nowadays, The Sixth Sense is still a fantastic film that indulges just enough in its horror elements to provide a thrilling viewing experience without being nightmarish or ghastly.

Release Date
August 6, 1999

Runtime
107 minutes

16 ‘A Quiet Place’ (2018)

Directed by John Krasinski

Frank covers his son's mouth in 'A Quiet Place' (2018)
Image via Paramount Pictures


Best known as Jim Halpert in The Office, John Krasinski surprised everyone with his directorial smash hit A Quiet Place. Co-starring wife Emily Blunt, the film follows the survival of a family in a world where most of humanity has been wiped out by noise-sensitive creatures. The only way to survive is not to make a sound.

The film makes incredible use of its clever concept through masterful sound design and heart-pounding tension, but has elements of sci-fi that draw it away from conventional horror. The monsters themselves are unsettling, but are more alien-like than supernatural.

A Quiet Place

Release Date
April 3, 2018

Runtime
95 minutes


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