Thehorror genreas we know it wouldn’t be the same without the spooky classics about ghosts haunting a location. Just as video games have their penchant for featuring ghosts,some more benevolent than others, movies also love to explore ghost stories, even finding new innovative and influential ways of telling them throughout the decades.

More than any other horror subgenre, movies centering around ghosts place an emphasis on sound design, score, atmosphere, emotion, and mystery. The quality of storytelling and plot twists must not fade away into the light but instead, bring you powerful out-of-body experiences, and it’s safe to say that these movies carry that spirit.

Rooney Mara looking ahead as a ghost in a white sheet watches her from behind in A Ghost Story.

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David Lowery

Rooney Mara, Casey Affleck, Kenneisha Thompson, Grover Coulson, Liz Cardenas, Sonia Acevedo, Carlos Bermudez, Yasmina Violeta, Kesha, and Will Oldham

2017

Callina Liang’s character staring ahead in a dark bedroom as the rest of her family watches behind her in Neon’s Presence.

91%

6.8

Rebecca Hall’s character Beth highlighted in red lighting as an invisible hand reaches out to touch her face and her home seen in the background on the main art for The Night House.

Sling TV, VOD

There’s no other ghost story quite like David Lowery’s A Ghost Story,one of the most original takes on griefand hauntings. It follows a married couple played by Casey Affleck and Rooney Mara, where Affleck’s character tragically dies and returns as a ghost wearing a white sheet, precisely like kids would dress up as on Halloween, and starts to silently observe his wife from the other side.

The film presents an intriguing reflection on what the afterlife might look like from the perspective of a ghost. They watch everyone else move on with their life, seeing the world continue to function without them, including their home being inhabited by other families. There are some unforgettable visuals, the mood is very sorrowful and dreary, and Rooney Mara’s performance as a grieving widow is remarkable, especially the pie scene.

The spooky main art for The Changeling with Joseph Carmichael’s ghost and the old old wheelchair outlined in red.

Steven Soderbergh

Lucy Liu, Callina Liang, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, West Mulholland, Julia Fox, Lucas Papaelias, Benny Elledge, and Natalie Woolams-Torres

2025

Finney speaking into the supernatural phone as the ghost of Billy appears in The Black Phone.

88%

6.2

Sophie Wilde in a yellow coat grabbing the hand that allows you to encounter spirits in Talk to Me.

Hulu, Disney+ (After theatrical release)

Presence is a bit similar to Lowery’s A Ghost Story, but it takes the concept even further and uses some out-of-the-box camerawork and filmmaking techniques as it attempts to convey a story toldfrom the first-person POV of a ghost. The movie is about the titular presence moving around and observing the drama between a family who has just moved into their new house.

Patrick Swayze’s ghost kissing Demi Moore in Ghost.

From a storytelling perspective, this is one of the most interesting ghost stories you’ll come across. It’s a different style yet still very suspenseful, keeping you guessing until the very end as to who or what this ghost that’s haunting this house really is. And that’s largely due to the film’s seasoned writer, David Koepp,who wrote Panic Roomand Stir of Echoes, with Presence feeling like a neat blend of the two.

David Bruckner

Rebecca Hall, Evan Jonigkeit, Sarah Goldberg, Vondie Curtis-Hall, Stacy Martin, David Abeles, Christina Jackson, Patrick A. Sova, and Samantha Buck

2021

The ghost of Tomas staring at the camera in The Orphanage.

87%

6.4

Mia Wasikowska’s Edith Cushing holding a large candelabra walking down a dark hallway as a creepy red ghost crawls toward her on the ground in Crimson Peak.

Hulu with Live TV, Fubo TV

If you’re looking for a ghost story with a truly disturbing and unforgettable twist, The Night House is a highly underrated horror film that doesn’t get as much recognition as it should. This film revolves around a grieving widow, Beth, residingin a secluded house in the woodsthat her deceased husband, an architect named Owen, built for them. However, she also finds a second house that’s an odd mirror version of theirs.

Beth soon begins to suspect that her husband took some secrets with him to the grave and that he might now also be haunting her. But is it really her husband or, is there a more sinister presence with Beth inside the house? That’s the central mystery, and she will uncover some deeply sinister answers that will change everything and reveal the ghost’s true motivations.

A close-up of Santi’s creepy ghost in The Devil’s Backbone.

Peter Medak

George C. Scott, Trish Van Devere, Melvyn Douglas, John Colicos, Madeleine Sherwood, Jean Marsh, Helen Burns, Frances Hyland, Eric Christmas, and Voldi Way

1980

85%

7.1

Peacock, AMC+, Tubi, Plex, Pluto TV, Philo, The Roku Channel, Fandango at Home

While the title might suggest the film has something to do with the Irish folklore of changelings, The Changeling is a dark and twisted ghost story through and through. The film isa classic haunted house horror mysterywith iconic and terrifying moments and a slow-burn pace. It’ll also make you scared of wheelchairs, especially in one particular scene toward the end of the movie that never fails to give goosebumps.

The movie starts off tragically with a horrible road accident that kills the wife and daughter of composer John Russell. Going through this loss, John then moves to Seattle to teach music at a college and stays in a large mansion, hiding a dark past connected to a prominent senator.The setting is very atmospheric, especially combined with the cinematography, score, and sound design, making it feel like Insidious meets The Omen.

Scott Derrickson

Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw, Jeremy Davies, E. Roger Mitchell, Troy Rudeseal, James Ransone, Miguel Mora, Jacob Moran, Tristen Pravong, Brady Hepner, Brady M. Ryan, Banks Repeta, Spencer Fitzgerald, and Jordan Isaiah White

81%

6.9

Peacock

The Black Phone falls amongthe best horror films produced by Blumhouseand is based on the short story of the same name by Joe Hill, the horror extraordinaire son of Stephen King. It’s another highly unusual and very unique ghost story that also hybridizes itself as a serial killer thriller with its main antagonist, The Grabber (played by Ethan Hawke), kidnapping and murdering children.

Where the ghosts come into the story is via the titular object itself. The Grabber has a mysterious supernatural black phone in his basement which acts as a gateway for his past victims to communicate with whoever he’s holding captive next, their grotesque apparition manifesting in the room as well. The Grabber’s latest victim is Finney Blake, who will work together with the spirits of the murdered children to escape.

Danny and Michael Philippou

Sophie Wilde, Miranda Otto, Otis Dhanji, Zoe Terakes, Joe Bird, Alexandra Jensen, Marcus Johnson, James Oliver, and Chris Alosio

2023

94%

Paramount+ with Showtime

Ditching the traditional Ouija board as a way of communicating with spirits from the other side, Australian filmmaking brothers Danny and Michael Philippou (aka RackaRacka) create their own unique spin on a supernatural party game that comes with deadly consequences. The result is Talk To Me, and it’s truly one of the most unsettling, relatable,and well-executed pieces of horror from A24.

The spirit device here is instead an embalmed hand from a psychic, where touching the hand while saying the titular phrase will allow a ghost to appear across from you and briefly possess you. If you don’t pull away in time, the spirit might not let go and things won’t end well for you. The main character, Mia, grieving her deceased mother, will discover the dangers of messing around with the hand in an all-too-clever ending.

Jerry Zucker

Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore, Whoopi Goldberg, Tony Goldwyn, Rick Aviles, Gail Boggs, Armelia McQueen, Vincent Schiavelli, and Stephen Root

1990

75%

Paramount+

Ghost is an iconic film that blends many different genres into its ghost story, with the screenplay by Bruce Joel Rubin even winning an Oscar. The sound design makes for an eerie atmosphere and intense moments, including a jumpscare in the opening title sequence, but then there are also sprinkles of romance, tragedy, crime thriller, and even comedy.

After a robbery gone wrong, the main protagonist, Sam Wheat, indeed becomes a ghost, so you also get to experience what that’s like along with Patrick Swayze’s character. From the other side, he tries to adapt to his new form and also protect the love of his life, all with the help of a medium who can communicate with him, played by the iconic Whoopi Goldberg in her first Oscar-winning role as Oda Mae Brown.

J.A. Bayona

Belén Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Príncep, Mabel Rivera, Montserrat Carulla, Geraldine Chaplin, Andrés Gertrúdix, Edgar Vivar, and Óscar Casas

2007

7.4

VOD

The Orphanage is a collaboration between director J.A. Bayona and co-producer Guillermo del Toro, and it’s one of the most devastating ghost stories you’ll ever experience. The setting is an orphanage hiding dark and disturbing secrets that will be unearthed by a woman named Laura, who was once a child adopted from the same orphanage. She chooses to re-open it with her husband and son, Simón, and then the horrors ensue.

A ghost of a boy wearing a bag over his head starts haunting Laura and her family and then her son suddenly goes missing, adding to their anguish. It then becomes a quest for the sinister truth behind the young boy’s death and Simón’s disappearance. The ending to The Orphanage has one of those amazing twists that’s just utterly depressing and unforgettable once you see it, and just so masterfully written.

Guillermo del Toro

Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston, Jessica Chastain, Charlie Hunnam, Jim Beaver, Burn Gorman, Doug Jones, Leslie Hope, and Jonathan Hyde

2015

72%

6.5

In his long and fruitful career as a horror-fantasy filmmaker, Guillermo del Toro made some of the finest Gothic ghost stories in cinema. Crimson Peak is set against the backdrop of Victorian-era England, and it follows a romance between a young girl being visited by ghastly spirits, including that of her own mother, and an inventor who steals her away to a mansion known as Allerdale Hall, where dark secrets, unexpected twists, and more ghosts await.

Crimson Peak’s costuming and production design, particularly for Allerdale Hall, are Oscar-worthy, and the design of the ghosts is a grotesque mix of practical and VFX work that’s unlike any phantoms you’ve ever encountered before, once more portrayed by the great contortionist and creature actor Doug Jones. There’s Gothic romance, horror, sibling drama, and a pretty twisted and dark resolution to the story.

Fernando Tielve, Eduardo Noriega, Federico Luppi, Íñigo Garcés, Marisa Paredes, Irene Visedo, Junio Valverde, José Manuel Lorenzo, and Francisco Maestre

2001

93%

Another del Toro masterpiece, The Devil’s Backbone is set against the backdrop of the Spanish Civil War and takes place in an all-boys orphanage where the spirit of a young boy haunts the grounds. This movie has the best storytelling of Guillermo del Toro’s career, featuring compelling characters, well-defined villains, and ghosts that drive the story in two very different ways, especially given the ending.

The Devil’s Backbone starts with a bomb being dropped in the middle of the orphanage, a reminder of the war that’s taking place, and a young boy, Santi, is also seen dying and being drowned. Soon, Carlos, a boy orphaned after losing his father in the war, is taken in, where he’ll uncover a conspiracy tied to gold that’s stored in the orphanage and the mystery surrounding Santi’s death.