The 10 Coolest, Creepiest and Downright Best Horror Movie Posters of 2020

Horror

The theatrical release slate might have been limited this year, but it didn’t slow down horror in the slightest. Even with our most anticipated titles postponed, 2020 still delivered great genre offerings, and with it, a ton of great movie posters.

A movie trailer has an average of two minutes’ worth of highlight footage to entice audiences to purchase tickets upon release. A movie poster, however, has to do it with only a single image. When done well, a movie poster not only piques audience curiosity, but there’s an excellent chance we’ll want it acquired for our walls, too. As with any form of marketing, the poster doesn’t speak to the quality of the final product, though. No matter the film, these movie posters were creative, enticing, and often downright stunning.

Here are the ten best horror movie posters of 2020.


Archenemy

Superhero tales are often all about duality, of two competing identities. Archenemy’s poster captures that in eye-catching comic book art style. In two contrasting halves, Joe Manganiello’s Max Fist presents his two warring sides; the grimy drunk living on the streets and the superhero from an alternate dimension he claims to be. The alluring, bright-colored imagery invites you to learn more.


Gretel & Hansel

Osgood Perkins’s reimagining of the classic fairy tale injects a whole lot of style, and the poster art exemplifies that. The foreboding dark woods surround a peculiar, sharp-angled house, with the witch standing in the doorway, washed in a warm glow. It doesn’t just signal a vastly different take on the tale, but it elicits the question of what would draw Hansel and Gretel to such an uninviting place. Did you spot the hidden warning in the trees?


After Midnight

“Love will rip your heart out.” This tagline, combined with stunning creature-filled art, immediately piques your curiosity. The bleeding heart is just icing on the cake. Based on this poster alone, After Midnight successfully sells itself as the precise type of romance that the horror fan can get behind.  


The Dark and the Wicked

Evil is synonymous with the color red, so it’s no surprise that one of the most nihilistic films of the year would bathe the eerie farmhouse featured in the movie in a red glow. It’s made even more frightening with the silhouette of a woman hovering midair, just below the title. It’s moody art that conveys evil, and even then, it might not prepare you for the horrors within.


The Wolf of Snow Hollow

We’re always suckers for the visual of blood spilling across pristine white snow. The poster for the horror-comedy thriller The Wolf of Snow Hollow is saturated in red, with the only untouched snow left forming an outline of a howling wolf in the wake of its lead, John Marshall (Jim Cummings). It’s the best kind of welcome mat for a horror fan.


Black Water: Abyss

The marketing for the sequel to Black Water leaned in heavily on its Descent-like premise. The unwitting adventure seekers in the film get trapped in an uncharted cave system with aggressive crocodiles thanks to flooding waters. The poster art plays that up with effective simplicity. Spelunkers unwittingly lowering themselves into the cavernous mouth of a killer croc? Brilliant.


Welcome to the Blumhouse

In October, Blumhouse launched the first half of their planed eight-movie collection “Welcome to the Blumhouse.” This gorgeous poster assembled all four titles in one dollhouse image, with the tagline “four unsettling films under one roof.” Each floor in the house is dedicated to a different movie, with genre imagery to match.


Possessor

Sometimes all it takes is a single still to sell you on a movie, which’s the case here. Just one single, striking image from Possessor is enough to get our horror-loving hearts beating faster in anticipation. The melting face on the poster stands out, even more, thanks to the single color scheme, and “lose control” sets the tone for Brandon Cronenberg’s mind-bending sci-fi horror thriller.


Color Out of Space

Richard Stanley dials up the psychedelics in his adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Colour Out of Space,” both in visuals and narrative. The poster perfectly encapsulates the wild aesthetic, and it’s immediately attention-grabbing. The vivid colors pop.


Unhinged

The film itself plays like a road-rage-fueled slasher, in which Russell Crowe’s “Man” targets and stalks his prey (Caren Pistorius) while violently murdering those that cross his path. These posters capture the film’s slasher style in parody form, putting the two leads in the movie art for A Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th. Its marketing is aimed directly at horror fans, and we appreciate it.

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