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Heebie-Jeebies: The 10 Best Horror Films From The Past Decade

Of all the genres within cinema, few can excite as much as horror can. From the visceral carnage on screen to the emotional underpinnings of a harrowing narrative, horror films provide an avid affective cinema that few other pictures can. In their exploration of the diabolical and disturbing, these movies work tirelessly to entertain their spectators in overtly physiological manners. Whether it's sweaty palms or an ever-increasing heart rate, these unsettling films excite, cajole, disgust, shock and even traumatize their viewers into a gleeful adrenaline-fuelled pleasure.
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6) Rec. (2007)

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Horror

Just barely making the timeline cut is Rec., one of the better zombie films in recent memory.

With so much zombie fandom pouring out during the 2000s, the Romero-original subgenre has become a shadow of its former self thanks to the onslaught of haphazardly made zombie flicks in the past 10-15 years. But thankfully, co-directors Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza are here to save the day with their found footage gore fest, Rec. Much in the same DIY-vein as Paranormal Activity, this Spanish film works tirelessly to establish its experiential fear, providing viewers with a driver’s seat outlook that up until then, few had successfully implemented.

Unfortunately, within a span of a few years, this found footage formula came to be the mainstream of horror movies. Soon enough, these films became dull, unimaginative and lazy examples of filmmaking, rarely exciting its audiences to new levels that had previously been established by efforts like Rec. With its hand-held techniques and adept direction though, Balagueró and Plaza’s work still manages to be one of the best “shaky-cam” horror films to date.


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Author
Image of Riyad Mammadyarov
Riyad Mammadyarov
Contributing Writer || Riyad Mammadyarov is a graduate of New York University and is currently pursuing a master's degree in cinema studies at the same institution. He has written for The Knockturnal and Indiewire. His passion for films knows no bounds. It warms his heart and inspires zeal to talk movies with fellow cinephiles. When not reliving Truffaut's three-films-a-day mantra, he can be found reading cinema journals, eating ramen or explaining to people the pronunciation of his name. Have any questions, comments or just want to chat? Email him at [email protected]