15 Top Horror Films of 2012

Article by Charlie Dunlap

Cheers, my dark and demented kiddies… Looks like we’ve survived another apocalyptic year in no small thanks to a fresh batch of impressively morbid goodies, many of which would have collectively stained your silver screens black and red if theaters could even find the testicular fortitude to show them!

Although most film critics don’t have the balls required to plumb these newfound depths of depravity, those with enough courage will emerge on the other side (albeit after many hot and soapy baths), triumphantly hearkening 2012 as a banner year for the horror genre. While other media publications swamp you with pretentious, so-called “best of 2012” lists destined to put you into a permanent slumber, your loyal media daemon and macabre sin eater has collected the delectably worst offenders spawned by the film industry’s – very alive and kicking – bastard children.

Rip apart your deceitful newspapers, spit in the face of your hegemonic media transmissions, turn off your whitewashed crap and surrender to the glorious exorcism of your restless demons. These cathartic fiends will disturb your comfortable perspective on reality, fuel your wimpy nightmares and permanently traumatize any unwitting observers you can sucker into your living rooms…

This year’s dark crop was too abundant to squeeze into some puny top ten list; it contains both wide releases, as well as more hidden underground gems, and features a wide-ranging, international cast of both veteran and promising neophyte directors. It includes the first official Israeli horror film of all time (Rabies), two of the best features (Mother’s Day, The Barrens) from one of the field’s greatest emerging contemporary directors (Darren Lynn Bousman, continually improving auteur of the Saw films, Repo, the Genetic Opera and 11-11-11), flicks banned in their native country (A Serbian Film), the new film from Pascal Laugier (director of Martyrs, possibly the most disturbing film of all time), the first true horror offering (Cabin in the Woods) from the producer of our summer’s biggest blockbuster, The Avengers. Other undiscovered treats include several of the best found-footage scenes ever committed to film (Apartment 143, V/H/S), top Asian imports (Guilty by Romance, Bedevilled), impressive sequels (The Collection), stylistic diversity that ranges from postmodern zaniness (Detention) to old fashioned, vomit-worthy grindhouse (Rogue River), and many other wicked surprises waiting to sear themselves into your visual cortex. Enjoy, devour and maintain for your fortuitous reference the most comprehensive, diverse and thorough “best horror of 2012” list you will find…ANYWHERE.

Just remember kiddies – when you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back into you…

The Best Horror Films of 2012: (in no particular order)

THE CABIN IN THE WOODS – Directed by Drew Goddard

THE DIVIDE – Directed by Xavier Gens

APARTMENT 143 – Directed by Carles Torrens

ROGUE RIVER – Directed by Jourdan McClure

V/H/S – Directed by Adam Wingard, Ti West, et al.

THE BARRENS – Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman

BEDEVILLED – Directed by Chul-soo Jang

THE TALL MAN – Directed by Pascal Laugier

RED LIGHTS – Directed by Rodrigo Cortes

THE COLLECTION – Directed by Marcus Dunstan

KILL LIST – Directed by Ben Wheatley

DETENTION – Directed by Joseph Kahn

THE AGGRESSION SCALE – Directed by Steven C. Miller

MOTHER’S DAY (remake) – Directed by Darren Lyn Bousman

RABIES -Directed by Sebastian Cordero

Honorable Mentions: A Serbian Film, Julia’s Eyes, The Caller, The Theatre Bizarre, The Tortured, Woman in Black, 388 Arletta Ave., Entrance, Guilty of Romance, Sinister

Charlie Dunlap is a passionate, life-long writer and student of film, who recently returned to Denver, CO after obtaining his masters degree in communication at Saint Louis University.

APARTMENT 143 – On Demand April 27th & In Theaters June 1


Photo courtesy of Magnet Releasing.

From director Rodrigo Cortés (RED LIGHTS starring Sigourney Weaver, Cillian Murphy and Robert De Niro and currently in post-production), watch the trailer for APARTMENT 143.

Featuring Kai Lennox, Michael O’Keefee, and Gia Mantegna, APARTMENT 143 is the story where a team of parapsychologists set out to investigate a series of anomalous phenomena taking place in a newly occupied apartment. Telephone calls with no caller, mysterious shadows, extraordinary light emissions, flying objects, and exploding light bulbs, are some of the events they will face while recording their every step with state-of-the-art technology. Using infra-red filming, digital photography, psychophonic recordings, movement detectors, and magnetic field alteration meters, the group’s attempts to contact the “other side” will grow increasingly dangerous as they near a point of no return…

The dramatic conflict is approached almost in the manner of a generic code; a family going through difficult times is forced to deal with a number of violent and inexplicable threats which puts their physical well-being in jeopardy and reveals hidden conflicts. A metapsychic investigation team sets about collecting the phenomenological data in a scientific way, and with them the mysteries concealed in the family home. Cortés designed the project as an exploration of formal language, a narrative and emotional study of point of view in order to distance it from the conventional and ensure a unique, formal perspective: a raw, scientific document, a rigorous exposition of the bare facts, the perspective of a research team in the house over three days and nights and its record of the events which took place there, the data collected. At the time (the beginning of 2009) PARANORMAL ACTIVITY had still not gone on release and found footage films were still few and far between in mainstream cinema.

Magnet Releasing & Nostromo Pictures presents a Magnet Release of APARTMENT 143. The film will be On Demand April 27th and in theaters June 1.