The Daily - Sunday Special: The 10 Best Horror Movie Franchises
Episode Date: October 26, 2025The only thing Gilbert Cruz loves more than celebrating Halloween is watching scary movies. And between the classic horror franchises that span decades and the prestige original films of the current m...oment, he has seen hundreds of them. On today’s episode, Gilbert puts his knowledge to use in conversation with his fellow horror aficionados Jason Zinoman and Erik Piepenburg. They comb through a century of spooks, frights and screams to crown the Top 10 franchises in cinema history. Horror franchises discussed on this episode:“A Nightmare on Elm Street”“A Quiet Place”“Alien”“The Amityville Horror”“Candyman”“Child’s Play”“The Conjuring”“The Exorcist”“The Evil Dead”“Final Destination”“Friday the 13th”“Halloween”The Hannibal Lecter films“Hellraiser”“The Hills Have Eyes”“Insidious”“Jaws”“Night of the Living Dead”“The Omen”“Paranormal Activity”“Phantasm”“Poltergeist”“Psycho”“The Purge”“The Ring”“Saw”“Scream”“Terrifier”“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”The Universal monster films“V/H/S” On Today’s Episode:Jason Zinoman is a critic at large for The Times and the author of “Shock Value: How a Few Eccentric Outsiders Gave Us Nightmares, Conquered Hollywood, and Invented Modern Horror.”Erik Piepenburg covers culture for The Times, and writes a monthly column about horror movies.Additional Reading:25 Jump Scares That Still Make Us JumpFive Horror Movies to Stream Now‘Good Boy’ Review: Sit. Stay. Scream. Photo: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Gilbert Cruz, and this is the Sunday special.
I could not be more excited about today's episode.
Producers, cue the spooky music.
I love Halloween.
I love the spooky vibes.
I love candy.
I specifically love, like, mini heath bars.
But maybe more than all of that, I am obsessed with scary movies.
and that is what we are talking about today.
Here with me is Eric Pippenberg.
He is the horror movie columnist at the Times.
Hi, Eric.
Hello, Gilbert.
And our first returning guest, what an honor, Jason Zineman,
a critic at large, and the author of the book,
Shock Value, How a Few Eccentric Outsiders,
give us nightmares, conquered Hollywood,
and invented modern horror.
Why is this subtitle so long?
It's way too long. I was young.
But I just sold the French rights.
It's coming out in French.
literally today, I sign the rights.
Zoot d'allor.
Welcome, Jason.
Good to be here.
Okay, I brought the two of you on here for a very particular reason.
Today, we're going to come up with the definitive list of the greatest horror franchises in cinema history, according to us three.
we're going to make this list
we're all going to agree
we're going to get along
and then we'll all hug at the end
maybe
maybe we'll say
I've got to keep some suspense
you're right you're right
okay before we jump into this task
and it is a hearty task
I want to know how you all are feeling
about the currency of horror movies
like how are we feeling about where
the genre is
right now in this year
2025
Eric
I'm feeling good about it
I think we are in a sort of prolonged golden age of horror right now.
The period that's sort of started with Get Out, I think, is continuing.
And when I think about just this year alone, weapons as just one of the best horror movies I've seen in quite some time,
we're seeing a lot of new faces, new ways of seeing horror.
Jason, do you think so?
It's a little more optimistic than I would say.
I think we're at the end of the golden age.
I think maybe or maybe the old-nays jesson,
but I have to say if I was to sum up the era right now
in a word, it would be respectable,
which is in both senses of the word.
We're in an era of prestige, Oscar-bate horror,
you know, sinners, weapons, Frankenstein,
all are going to be in the conversation.
This is not in the disreputable era, right?
Yeah.
But if you judge a horror era by its mediocrities,
it's not too bad either.
I mean, I liked dangerous animals, which is like another shark movie.
I just watched this movie drop, which, again, is not like going to last the test of time.
It's a set all in one bad date, but it kind of works as a thriller.
So I think it's been a better year than the last couple, I would say.
Yeah.
It is interesting because both of you talked about these sort of big studio horror movies, sinners, weapons,
the latest in the Final Destination franchise, which we will talk about, bloodlines.
And then the latest conjuring movie, which is one of the most successful horror franchises of all time.
Those are all out.
But at the same time, it feels like there is still a thriving sort of indie horror scene.
You know, this year you had Bring Her Back.
You had a movie together, which was a Dave Franco, Allison Bree movie that was sold.
I think it was one of the first movies sold at this year's Sundance Film Festival for a lot of money.
So it feels like the studios are putting out.
pretty good horror. Indies are putting out pretty good horror. The days of Blumhouse being the
maker of cheap horror movies alone has sort of faded a little bit because horror is a reliable
box office draw. Because whether you're a big studio or a small studio, you know that there's this
very rabid fan base that everyone has sort of gotten into the game. I said the most interesting
podcast I heard about the horror genre now this year was Jason Blum went on Matt Bellany's
podcast, The Town, to talk about why the sequel to Megan, Megan 2, flocked.
Yeah, and this is Jason Blum, who is sort of the man behind Blumhouse, which is produced and
distributed a bunch of horror movies this century.
Yeah, right, exactly.
Paranoma activity, insidious, a bunch of other stuff.
Yeah.
And he said the days when cheap horror was the way to go or gone.
And for Jason Blum to say that is really something, that he said,
that now, with all the competition, you need an event.
And so you actually need to have an expensive horror.
You need to really make a difference.
I know a lot of people who disagree with that,
and that caused a lot of waves.
But the fact that he said it suggested
there were some anxiety among the horror establishment
about, okay, where's the next Blair Witch,
paranormal activity, et cetera?
Yeah, I would say sort of on the flip side
of the big pictures, I would say,
one of the nice things about doing this column
is that I get to discover under the radar indie movie.
I'm thinking of a movie like Bleeding,
which came out early this year
was this vampire story
about told through the eyes of addiction.
Good Boy, this new movie about this dog
who goes to a haunted house.
These small movies,
look, every month I have,
I would say, from 15 to 20
brand new movies that are streaming to choose from,
and that doesn't include the bigger movies,
but to be able to just see
how many horror movie directors
are just doing this small little movie
that, to me, in some ways,
is far more effective and scary
than a movie like Together,
which I didn't really like.
That, to me, is what's exciting
that you have young faces
who are using some of the horror conventions
but telling them in new,
very disturbing ways.
So I think we need to move
to the meat of this conversation.
So here's what we're going to do.
We have a list here
of a couple dozen or so.
horror franchises that the group of us came up with and listeners, I just want to say here right
at the front, if your favorite franchise isn't on here, I don't know what to say the show can
only be so long. These franchises are arranged chronologically, and the goal here is to eventually
get to a list of what we consider to be the 10 best horror franchises of all time. So I think
we should start by going through this big list. We'll give a quick yes or no to each of these
franchises. Some, I think, are going to move on very quickly because they feel obvious or iconic,
and then some we're probably going to chat about a little bit before we make a decision.
And for the sake of this discussion, I'm defining a franchise as a series of related films.
There's one film that results in multiple sequels that have recurring villains or recurring heroes
or recurring locations.
Does that sound right to two of you?
I think that's a terrible definition.
Okay.
Great.
No, I think.
All right, so this podcast is going to be three hours long.
Well, I guess my, let's start to begin.
I think it's a good, I think it's a good start.
When I, you asked like when, when we was doing this,
when does a horror movie franchise begin?
And to me, among the universal monster movies that started in 1931, which, you know, Frankenstein, Dracula, Jekyll and Hyde, the first one to have a major follow-up is Bride of Frankenstein.
You stay. We belong dead.
As soon as you have Bride of Frankenstein, to me that's the first one.
Yeah.
And I'm not sure that qualifies.
I think it does. I do think it qualifies. I think if you look back at all the Universal Monster movies, it definitely has a feel of a franchise. You have Bright of Frankenstein, as you mentioned, son of Frankenstein. You have Frankenstein meeting the Wolfman eventually. You have this world before we ever thought about interconnected universes in which, you know, there's a house style. Characters are interacting with one another. You have essentially direct sequels to some of these movies.
it feels like this is the beginning.
But what ties it all together in me
is the monster and the character
in a way that I would like to include
like young Frankenstein
in the way I like to include
Sean of the Dead in the Dead series.
I don't want to go by the rules
of Hollywood producer.
Yeah, but you understand that we need to have rules here, right?
I'm horrors about breaking rules, Gilbert.
And that's what I'm here for.
No, I'll go along with whatever definition you have.
Eric, we know who the chaos agent is.
Can we agree Universal Franchise should proceed?
I think it should proceed.
I hear you, Jason.
I also think you make some really good points,
but the answer is yes.
For our purposes here, let's continue on that line.
Okay, we're going to move to the early 1960s, 1960, in fact,
when one of the first slasher movies,
the first slasher movie,
if we consider Psycho Alfred Hitchcock's all-time classic to be a slasher movie.
we all go a little mad sometimes
came out in 1960
no one thought it would be a franchise
but starting in the early 80s
you had Psycho 2, Psycho 3
and then Psycho 4 at the beginning
which was a prequel TV movie
this is very weird we're going to encounter some of these
it's a franchise where the first movie is
one of the greatest movies
of all time
as a franchise as something
that is like all held together
I don't know that I would put it on the list
but I'm looking at Jason, and I know...
Well, no, among horror nerds, Psycho 2
has developed a re-evaluate,
you know, famous Quentin Tarantino prefers it to Psycho,
and he's not the only one.
I watched it again.
It's definitely not better than the first one,
but it's a very good movie.
It really digs into the things
that the original does not.
And I would also argue
Gus Van Sant's equally disliked,
you know, shot-by-shot remake.
I admire the ambition of that.
I'm not saying it's my top ten,
but I think that Psycho and Psycho 2 plus the Gus Van Sand,
three and four are terrible.
Make it a worthy franchise, along with, obviously,
you know, one of the most important horror movies ever.
We're going to put this one on the bubble.
Does that feel right?
That feels fine with me, yeah.
I'm good with that.
The next one, the Knight of the Living Dead series.
Cumberland have concluded that in all cases,
the killers are eating.
the flesh of the people they murdered
repeating this latest
George Romero's extremely low
budget movie that kicked off an entire
subgenre within horror,
the zombie movie. This feels
important and iconic
enough that we can automatically
move this on to the list of films that we're
going to discuss later. Right. Yeah.
Next, the Exorcist
1973.
You killed your mother.
I love, love, love, love, love the
The first time I saw it
was one of the scariest experiences I've ever had.
I've been chasing that experience ever since
for the rest of my life. Are you religious, Gilbert?
I grew up Catholic.
There you go. That makes a difference?
I got it.
It does make a difference, I think.
I think it's worth putting on this list.
I think I don't love the films after the original
so much.
I know, Jason, I think you picked a jump scare
from the Exorcist films
as one of your favorite jump scares recently.
Exodus 3 is one of the best jumps scares ever.
Which, look, watching those few minutes of that scene, I think, are truly one of the scariest things I've ever seen.
So I appreciate that it has one of those scenes.
But I don't love them, but is it in our, in this discussion, thumbs up?
I'm going to give it thumbs up for one reason.
One of the things I like about a franchise is when there's terrible movies in it.
I don't like, like, this is good.
Exorcist 2, all I can say is Jamesville Jones wears a B-suit in X-Suit.
It is a locust suit.
A lucid.
Actually, an exorcist to the heretic, he wears a locust suit.
Oh, God.
Okay.
That alone, right, that image alone, I think, should qualify it to be under consideration as, like, a memorable, it's a memorable movie.
Eric's absolutely right.
The third one has this one scene that's memorable, more memorable than most horror movies.
I don't think it's going to end up being one top ten, but I would say we should consider it.
All right.
I'm just going to say the next one, which is the Texas Chainsell Massacre, Toby Hooper's film from
1974, this should continue.
So we're going to keep this one going to go.
Jaws.
I have a confession.
I have never seen Jaws, and I will never see Jaws.
What the hell?
Sorry.
What are you doing?
Producers' mouths agape.
Look, I have confessed this before, so this is not breaking news, but I have a terrible,
I have a severe shark phobia.
And I remember sitting in Derry Queen in Cleveland, Ohio.
uh looking at the poster of the giant jaws with that tiny little lady up at the top yeah iconic poster
iconic poster it has scarred me for life i don't go swimming i don't go in swimming pools because
there might be a jaws underneath me why would they mean why would a shark be in a swimming pool
toilets they could be anywhere i'm telling you it's a severe failure don't trigger me i'm gonna i'm gonna
make an executive decision here the first movie i would say one of the great horror movies and then
you have three terrible sequels.
This doesn't feel like a horror franchise to me.
It feels like a shark franchise.
The Omen,
1979.
Look at me, Damien.
It's all for you.
You love this,
the first Omen.
I thought the prequel that came out recently,
the first Omen,
directed by Arcasha Stevenson,
was fantastic. Fantastic. I agree.
The original Omen is a good horror movie,
and then you had a bunch of not good stuff.
So I actually don't know.
It's one of the more famous franchises from the 70s.
I actually don't know if I would sort of push it ahead.
Look, I've laid out a few things I think are important.
One that I think we all agree is sort of cultural footprint.
Yeah.
And I'm not sure the Omen has that.
Yeah, it's like the avatar of horror movies.
It's no cultural footprint.
1997s The Hills Have Eyes.
This is the first of several West Craven franchise.
on this list.
You, fan, then, juicy.
I got strong opinions on this.
Okay.
It should be on the list.
It should be in the list.
And I'm going to say there's going to be some West Craven franchises that other people are going to want to put on that.
I'm not.
I'm not happy with where it's going already.
I know. I know.
The Hilllander, here's my case.
The original and the reboot are both great.
The reboot, the Alexandra Aja.
There's a movie about a plan of cannibals that live in the desert.
And, you know, it's sort of building on some Texas chainsaw elements.
But I think it's a great franchise because it has this, you know, a great movie.
It has a crummy sequel.
And the fact that it has a successful reboot, which I don't think we'll be able to say about that many.
Have you seen these?
I haven't.
I think it does not belong in this list.
Like The Omen, I don't consider it a franchise necessarily, I think.
I hear what you're saying, Jason.
I don't think it belongs here for the similar.
Same reasons as...
Let's give it a yellow.
I appreciate Jason's passion.
Yeah, I do too.
How dare you, Eric?
See, here's the thing about Jason.
He's so smart and a very, like,
he's a classy thinker where I'm like,
I like monster movies because heads explode because it's stupid.
That's kind of my sort of take on it.
Here's a thing about Eric.
You might know this, but he's from Cleveland.
And he plays the Cleveland on the Rube
card.
He's smarter than any of us.
His horror column,
I never miss,
must read.
So don't follow for this.
He's just trying to get Hills
out of eyes out of here.
Put Hills on the list.
It's on the bubble.
1970s Halloween.
You know, it's Halloween.
I guess everyone's a title of
one good scare.
In the running
for the most influential
horror movie franchise,
one of the most influential horror movie
franchises,
this is just an automatic
we will discuss this later.
We should move this along.
Correct.
Okay.
Fantasm.
I've been waiting for you.
This is the one with the tall man who's creepy looking and there's these flying balls that have spikes.
I'm going to say Stone Cold Classic, most underrated horror film of the 70s.
Fair.
I second that.
The tall man is one of the great horror movie villains.
It should be if the world, we live in a fair world, Gilbert.
All right.
If we lived in a just world, the tall man would be talked about the way Michael Myers and
Leatherface are Fantasem I great, Fantasem I'm great, just surreal, trippy imagery, maybe the best
mirror scare of all time, which is no small thing.
These have straight to video sequels.
Do we feel like those counts as part of a franchise?
That sweetens the pot.
Absolutely.
It's an even more interesting.
Yeah.
Delicious straight to video.
I'll eat that up.
Absolutely.
I put Fantasm as a franchise, and we can talk with it.
Above Halloween.
I...
I'm fighting words, Jason, but I hear you.
I'm struck.
Mute.
I mean, I got a whole argument for it, but we can wait.
I'm usually fast with a comeback, but I don't know what to say about that.
All right, let's put this on the bubble as well.
The Amityville Horror, 1979.
It's the passage to hell.
Here's the thing about the Amityville horror.
I counted...
There are approximately 70 sequels to the Amityville Horror.
Yeah.
Amityville is the name of a town on Long Island, and you can't copyright the name of a town.
Correct.
Amityville has become this shorthand for just the scary and then plus this other thing.
There's the Amityville Karen.
There's the Amityville Christmas Vacation.
There's the Amityville gas chamber.
I mean, there's just like these ridiculous films made for $2 that you just slap on the word
Amityville, but the town isn't happy about that.
But that's okay.
Some of the movies are great,
most of them are bad.
But as a franchise, yes.
You guys are out of your mind.
I'll say no.
I'll say no.
I'll say no.
I'll say no, because there's...
Oh, so now Eric's not smart.
Now, not a rude.
No, not a room, but he makes a good argument.
He's almost persuaded me with the 70.
That's crazy.
I have no idea.
That is a very strong case for it.
But I'm going to say,
Haunted House, there's several
haunted house franchises that are better
than this one.
Okay.
And I think that's part of why it's cultural currency, which was huge once upon a time, has diminished.
I would say it's not even the most successful horror franchise about a medieval horror.
All right.
Let's put it on the bubble.
When there's wholesale agreement, we'll move it forward.
When there's disagreement, we'll put it on the bubble.
Alien 1979, first movie, Skunk Cold Classic.
We'll move it forward.
We're in the 80s now, the height of the slasher film, and we are going to come upon a couple of the all-time franchises, although I think Jason might disagree with one or two.
Friday the 13th.
Move it forward.
Okay.
Poltergeist.
I don't know about this one.
It doesn't feel like it's a franchise worth talking about.
I'm kind of on the same page with you on that.
Okay.
The Evil Dead.
Why have you disturbed our sleep?
For sure.
Definitely qualifies.
Okay.
1984, A Nightmare in Elm Street.
Please, God.
This is God.
I am a fan of the first one, which I think is tremendous.
I know, Eric, you are fan of the second one.
I am a fan of the Second One.
I'm a second.
Yeah, I got to gay it up for a second.
The second Nightmare in Elm Street is considered the gay one.
It is not subtext.
is text, and that is what I really enjoy about it.
So I think, for sure, Nightmare and Alm Street,
especially the second one,
which I think is influential in a lot of ways
that I'm not sure people fully appreciate.
And I would add that for me,
I think a sign of great franchise,
we can all point to ones we love.
To me, it's the only franchise
where the last one is my favorite.
This is New Nightmare.
New Nightmare, which I think
all the credit that goes to scream
should go to Nightmare on Elm Street.
New Nightmare was doing meta,
winking horror
before Scream
and Freddie
was a comic character
before it was basically
turned into a comedy
and you know
I sort of like
the zigs and zags of it
the next one
it's a bit of an odd one
but I'm going to throw it in here
1986's Manhunter
which is a Michael Man movie
that's really a crime movie
but it starts
what will become
a horror franchise
five years later
with the Silence of the Lams
which is one of the only horror movies to ever win Best Picture.
The thing that connects all of these, of course, is Hannibal Lecter,
played by Brian Cox in Manhunter,
and then Anthony Hopkins for the rest of the movies.
You fly back to school now, little, darling.
Fly, fly, fly.
Is this a franchise that feels like it belongs in the all-time conversation?
I'm going to say no,
but I would highly recommend people watch the Brian Cox scene
where the detective comes in to visit him in the prison.
You are very tan, well.
Your hands are rough.
They don't look like cop's hands anymore.
And then watch the same, the Jody Foster coming in to see Hannibal Lecter in Sounsel Lambs.
Do you know what you look like to me with your good bag and your cheap shoes?
You look like a robe, a well-scrubbed, hustling robe with a little tin.
to see two genius actors doing the same thing in different ways.
I don't think of it as horror.
It's almost like too classy for horror.
Yeah, that's true.
Does this classiness get in the way a bit?
Yeah, for me, part of the appeal of horror is to be disreputable.
And if something is trying to be too classy, I just don't find that enjoyable.
Speaking of disreputable, I think the next movie would fall in that category.
It's 1987's Hellraiser, of course, about an...
evil puzzle box that when you manipulate it, it calls a bunch of demons.
Explorers in the further regions I experience, demons to some, angels to others.
I think that's right.
I'm not a big fan of the Hellraiser.
I think those sort of fancy production design, it all looks a little two-party city for me.
I don't know.
It's just not my, it's not my kink.
So, yeah, I think I'm going to pass on it.
You don't like the leather?
No.
You don't like the chains?
No, I don't like the leather and the chains and the drapey, like moo-moo stuff.
and the head gear and the makeup.
No, it just looks like cabaret
plus party city plus busted,
so no.
We're not going to move Hellraiser, love.
1988's child's play.
Hi, I'm Jackie.
Wanna play?
Yeah, this is so great.
Again, I'm going to gay it up here.
I mean, like, where this franchise goes
in terms of queer representation,
in terms of non-binary,
and I think they really set the tone
for what queer horror can be today.
And I think with that,
about the entire Child's Play franchise,
I think queer horror would be sort of missing something.
So for me, I think for those reasons alone,
and because it's Chuckies,
kids love dressing up as Chuckies.
So for those reasons,
like to see a little kid with a plastic knife
waddling down the street with that wig
and the overalls,
I mean, stuff of my nightmares.
Childs play is in some ways,
it feels such a franchise.
Yeah.
It is, because to me,
a franchise is also not just the movies.
It's the dolls. It's the
posters. It's the appearances.
You know, I don't even know
all the things that Chuckie has
his hand in, but he feels
bigger than what's on the screen.
We're going
into the 90s now. Sorry to leave the 80s.
Just the best decade.
Candyman.
Be my victim.
I think the original Candyman
is really fantastic, but I'm not sure
if the subsequent films were really
stand up to the original
so much. And I just
don't see it as something canonical
that we would want to put as part
of the, that we'd want to include in part of this
list. Okay,
we'll move it along. Scream.
There are certain rules
that one must abide by in order to successfully
survive a horror movie.
For instance, this
this modern slasher franchise
is the
one that most
reminds people of the
tropes of a horror movie. You watch horror movies in part because particularly with franchises,
you know they're predictable. And this franchise wears all of that on its sleeve. And there's
something that is entertaining, uh, and enjoyable about that. The characters that have lasted
across six movies now, I think people have great affection for Neff Campbell and Courtney Cox.
I don't dislike the screenbook. The Arquette, who's first name I cannot recall.
Yeah. No, uh, David Arquette. The, uh, no, I think actually, and if you were to, if
the measure was the best movies,
Scream would be among,
I think that the quality control
is not bad for Scream.
I just think it's a bit basic.
I think it's not,
I don't, I,
the, uh,
taking that personally.
The, uh,
I think to a certain kind of horror person,
scream gets on our nerves
because there's this idea
that horror never had humor.
And it's preponderable,
let's listen to this conversation.
So many of these movies are hilarious.
If it's,
if it's calling card,
is it added this humor?
and it's not that funny,
you know,
then it's,
then what is it?
Eric?
I don't find them funny.
I find the wink-wink stuff too much.
Ghost-faced,
again,
looks like something you'd buy it,
like Walgreens.
I just don't.
You can buy it at Walgreens.
That's true.
So I am not going to advocate for that.
Wow.
Okay.
I predict this will be controversial
with some of our listeners,
but we set a set of rules
and we are going to abide by them.
I'm surprised Scream is not moving forward.
What about the next one?
Final Destination, which debuted in 2000.
But what if it was our time?
What if we were not meant to get off that plane?
It was sort of in the gutter for a while,
and then this year's movie,
Bloodlines really sort of brought it back.
And I think that's why I would save it for me.
Final Destination Bloodlines
is really one of the funniest horror movies
I've seen in a while.
That first scene atop that building
and just where, to the very end
where there's this train that comes out of nowhere.
I mean, it's so funny and so accomplished in the way that it marries horror and comedy.
So if I think four bloodlines alone, I would say absolutely.
These are the movies in which I regularly find myself, even while watching them alone,
screaming out loud at something ridiculous that just happened in like a wonderful way.
So we'll move it ahead.
Next one.
Oh, God, these saw.
I want to play a game.
Here's what happens.
I mean, it's the most franchisee of franchise.
is that at least unless you count some of those in the 80s.
So I would say you have to have saw on the list.
Yeah, and in some way it feels like a sister or a cousin to final destination.
So I would say, yeah.
Okay.
Paranormal activity, 2007.
I feel it.
I feel it breathing on me.
I feel good about paranormal activity.
I think for me, that's top 10 material, I think.
I agree.
Especially because we didn't put Blair Witch on here.
We got to have one of those two.
Insidious, the next series that James,
wants or dealt with.
I can still hear that voice.
Just because we can't have both insidious
and the conjuring, I would say
I would err on the side of the conjuring.
You got the very wise. It's very wise of you.
Oh, thank you. I think that's right. And I really want
Patrick Wilson to come back to Broadway. I'm sorry. I saw him in
Oklahoma and he needs to come back and sing for us.
You guys are the perfect.
Perfect parent.
Talk about both of those things.
The VHS series.
Emily.
I like this as a franchise.
I'm a big fan of the anthology film.
Twilight Zone Outer Limits, that whole world.
And so I think to include an anthology franchise in here, I think, would be cool.
2013's The Conjuring.
You know what she did?
She possessed the mother to kill the child.
She visits Carolyn every night.
That's what the bruise marks are.
She's feeding off of her.
I'm just for the sake of time going to say this one has to be on there.
Okay.
The third series that James Wan has worked on.
2013's The Purge.
Any and all crime, including murder, will be legal for 12 continuous.
I'm just going to say no.
Great.
A quiet place?
The last one bored me.
I would say no.
I'm going to say not yet.
Guys, I love how we're getting really, really vicious here right at the end.
And then 2018's Terrifier.
He thinks what he's doing is funny because he's laughing.
But I know it's not funny because they're all dead.
The hell away from me.
One of the most out of nowhere surprising horror success stories in the past many years.
These are extremely low-budget movies, extremely violent and gory.
And Terrifier 2 and Terrifier 3 have made a ton of money at the American box office.
I love the idea of Damien Leone, the director of these films being
on this list, because I do think Art the Clown has become a villain, and I think he's the newest
villain that I think you could put somewhere in the lineage of Freddie and Jason. I don't think
it, for our purposes, I wouldn't put it on the list, but I cannot wait for more terrifier
films to come out. They, I have a strong stomach, but for these movies, I get a little
queasy when I watch these. I agree with everything, Eric's on.
all right so jason eric we just went through so many franchises but somehow we've narrowed it down to
15 that we've agreed we're going to move forward to the debate that we're about to have
about what the 10 greatest horror movie franchises of all time are and i'm going to read those 15
very quickly the universal monsters franchise the night
of the Living Dead series, The Exorcist, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Halloween, Alien, Friday the 13th,
the Evil Dead series, Nightmare on Elm Street, Child's Play, Final Destination, Saw,
paranormal activity, VHS, and The Conjuring Films.
This is a slightly perverse list, but gather your thoughts.
We are going to take a break, and when we come back, the three of us are going to pick our definitive list that no one will
argue with of top 10 horror movie franchises.
Jason and Eric, we've just gone through every single important horror movie franchise,
at least according to me and the two of you and the producers of the show.
And we've narrowed it down to a slim list of 15.
And we're going to make some cuts so that at the end,
of this we have a nice, clean, perfect, respectable list of the 10 best horror movie franchises
ever, parentheses according to us. How are we going to pair this down? We are going to go around
the room and each of us is going to stump for one franchise that they believe absolutely
needs to be on here. And you're also going to have your vote for what you think should be
removed. You should make a convincing argument. Jason will start with you.
So, one that I think needs to be on is Friday of 13th.
The counselors weren't paying any attention.
They were making love while that young boy drowned.
His name was Jason.
What I think franchises, I think Friday 13th,
that has all the qualities.
It has the classic villain.
Who happens to share my name?
So I'm a little biased.
Okay.
And also, I like franchises.
that are silly and go to a lot of crazy places.
Jason went to space.
Jason went to hell.
Jason met Freddie.
He went to Manhattan.
He went to Manhattan of all places.
I think you can't have a list of franchises being taken seriously and not have Friday the 13th.
So I would vote for that one.
Okay.
And do you want to say now which one you think should go?
Yeah, I'll say, I'll say The Exorcist.
Sorry, Gilbert.
It's a great movie.
not a great franchise.
You know what?
I'm a peacemaker.
Let's get rid of the Exorcist.
All right.
We can do this.
We can do this.
A little tense here.
Got a little tense in here.
Eric.
Yes, I would say we need to keep
child's play.
I think you have a villain
that is hilarious
and also creepy.
I think there's a through line
through the films.
I think it does touch
on some queer aspects,
which I personally like.
And so I think for those reasons,
I think it needs to stay.
And if you know what's good for you, you are going to love, honor, and obey.
I wouldn't marry you if you had the buddy of Chi-I. Cho.
Hey, Raggedy Ann, you looked in the mirror lately?
Now's not the time to get picky.
I vouched for this, or I advocated for this, but I would actually take off the VHS films.
I love an anthology series, but I think maybe that is one that could go.
Also, we have at least one other found footage.
uh franchise here so i would take uh v hs off jason i agree okay let's take it off so much agreement
here i am going to advocate for a nightmare on elm street what's wrong joey feeling tongue tie
the first movie one of my all-time favorite horror movies i think of the major slasher's uh as we think
about them. Jason
Voorhees from the Friday of 13th movies,
Michael Myers from the Halloween movies,
maybe even Leatherface from the Texas
Chainsaw Masker movies.
Freddie Krueger is the only one of personality.
He is the only one that has
a little verb, a little pop.
And that's important,
I think, if you are going to be
a character that holds a franchise
over multiple movies.
You were right, Jason. He gets
silly. He becomes a comedic character.
I think that comedy
and horror
coexist very easily,
and I know you agree.
Oh, I mean, I agree
that comedy and horror
are two sides of the same coin.
The structure of a suspense sequence
that builds tension
and leads to a scream
is analogous to the structure
of a joke
which builds tension
and it leads to a laugh.
And I think you see that
in Nightmare and Elm Street,
which, you know,
it melds them very well.
And then I think you also
just have the visual
palette
is for a big
you know
blockbuster
franchise
it's quite
like surreal
and I
yeah I agree
I think your point
about personality
is a good one
that you didn't see
that before
I also think
there's something
about these movies
you use the right
word surreal
particularly in the first
movie
the fact that you
are operating
with dream logic
for much of
these movies
just gives it a different
flavor than
all of these other ones
which
ostensibly
other than
the supernatural ones exist in the real world, and you just have a bunch of people getting
murdered in, you know, very ornate ways.
No, it means you can do things visually.
You can't otherwise.
I mean, I think you see, like, the arms through the walls.
A lot of the vocabulary, cinematic vocabulary of horror comes from nightmare, which comes
from Polanski, which, you know, has all the look.
You can watch it with a sound out, and it's great.
So I think it's tremendously influential, too.
Okay.
So that is the one that I absolutely think should say.
stay on and I would remove saw uh I recently rewatched the first one which is fine but I think
the conceits of these films over 10 movies is is just a bit more than I care to experience
I don't think they iterates on the original idea in particularly interesting ways uh I think
the final destination franchise does this better although they're two very different things I
say take out saw i'm fine with that jason is rubbing his lips it feels wrong yeah why well because
we're not here talking about a horror movie is we're here talking about horror movie franchises uh-huh and as
you point out before every year you could expect a saw movie like you could expect Halloween what
what's around the saw movie uh was as significant as the saw movies so that you're right there is a
And a lot of this podcast I've been going on about how much I admire movies that Zag, right?
Yeah.
But if we're honest, the reason that most of these horror franchises, you know, have sequel after sequel, is to give people more of the same.
Yeah.
And the Saw movies did that more effectively than anything past the 80s classic slasher movies.
You know what?
Jason, you're right.
Let's add Sawback on my favorite three words.
And we are going to take Alien off.
Oh.
I'm fine with that.
Okay?
I'm fine with that.
You want to argue?
This is what happens.
Aliens God.
Also, I think alien is more science fiction,
and if we're going to be sticklers about definitions,
to me, it's a little more of the alien
creature-type movie.
And so to me, yes, there are horror elements.
Yes, there are crossovers of the two.
But to me, that's the maybe top-10 science fiction franchise.
Yeah, everyone says the original alien is a haunted house story in space.
Sure.
But it's still in space.
It's still in space.
Okay.
Okay, so we're going to go back to you, Eric, and you are going to suggest one franchise that absolutely needs to stay on and one that should fall off.
I'm going to advocate for paranormal activity to stay on the list.
Oh, okay.
Scratch myself.
Did you hear that?
Yeah.
It's okay.
It's okay. It's all right.
It's okay.
It is a found footage film.
The first one is really, really good.
I also love that it came out of nowhere
to become this really big hit
and has spawned subsequent films.
And now, a stage show,
which is...
Is that true?
It's at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater right now.
It's coming to D.C. later on, they have...
I haven't seen it, so I don't know if it's good or not,
but they have managed to transfer this found footage story,
which I don't know how you do that on stage,
but I'm very curious to see that.
Theater keeps coming up, Jason.
I don't know what's going on here,
but, like, anything that has a show
attached to it.
I sort of say,
you know what?
Let's keep that on the list.
And these are the films
that popularized,
in my mind, at least,
someone getting dragged off
by an off-screen presence.
Whenever I think about that happening,
these are the movies
I think of that.
Yeah, agreed.
I guess I'm struggling with this
because I love the Universal Monsters,
but I almost wonder if that's not
quite a franchise.
I used to stay up.
This is ageism.
I was just about to say, I used to stay up for the 11.30 p.m. late-night movie with my grandmother who loved the Universal Monsters. Channel 43, back when they showed movies.
Where was this?
This was in Cleveland, Ohio.
Cleveland, right, got it.
And I have such warm memories of being with my grandmother and watching these films, so it pains me to take that off.
But I'm not sure if it's a franchise. I get the spirit of it. They're great movies. But is it a franchise for our purposes? I say no.
okay let's strike it off jason we're coming back to you one for one against um one for uh evil dead
groovy the first movie is a great horror movie the second movie you were talking about
horror and comedy there's no movie period that's captured a lot in live action the loony
tunes better than the evil dead uh sequel there's a sequence people can look it up on
YouTube of the main character, Ash, played by Bruce Campbell, who is a brilliant actor in these
movies, where his hand gets possessed, and he fights with his hand. And it's just a tremendous
bit of physical comedy that's still wrapped up. It's a possessed hand, and it still is a horror
movie. And then, you know, it keeps going. It shifted again into, like, kind of an evil
adventure. And then you've got the reboots, the two which I think are more kind of gnarly
horror films. I don't think
there's a bad
Evil Dead movie. Also a musical.
Also a musical. Also a musical. Also
musical. And a TV show. And a TV show.
That's the last time I invite theater people on this
podcast. Evil Dead
Evil Dead has to be
on the list. Okay. And to
take off the list
hmm, God, this is getting
very hard.
Oh, no, it's not. I would
say, all right, Texas Chancel Masker,
which is one of my favorite movies of all time.
But I have a theory that Texas Chainsaw and Halloween,
they're both, the originals are so great
and they're so distinct
that they kind of haunt the rest of the franchise.
And Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
all the rest of them pale in comparison.
I would say the only,
the most interesting thing about Texas Chainsaw Massacre
is it's the movie that's beloved by filmmakers
that they've had the hardest time
trying to capture what makes it great.
The first movie that I saw that got close
is another franchise that I would have put on this list,
but we didn't get there, which is Ty West's trilogy.
X really is an homage to Texas Chainsaw
and captures the gnarly, gritty, gross,
you know, backwoods element of it.
So anyways...
And that's, those are...
That's X, Pearl, and Maxine.
Correct.
Yeah.
I would say, like, if you want to get to a slightly artier kind of franchise,
that would make it.
But I'd say take off Texas Chainsaw.
Okay, that was unexpected.
But I respect your decision.
Okay, so I think we're officially at 10 on the list now,
but I'm going to use my pick anyway to stump for The Conjuring movie.
The crooked man stepped forth and rang the crooked bell,
and thus his crooked soul.
This just seems like for people of a certain generation,
maybe no one of that generation is in this room,
these are their franchise, it is the sort of modern,
ghost demon franchise
and it just feels like it would be
it's sort of undeniable
it would be sick and perverse
to leave them off which would be fine
given the topic that we were discussing here
maybe appropriate I know
maybe we're being too responsible
the first two movies
the conjuring and conjuring two I think are
quite good the first one in particular
but when we're talking about franchises
this is you have these characters
they're sort of moving out in and out
of all of these movies
You have four Conjuring films, all starring Patrick Wilson and Vera Farminga as just the cutest little spirit exercising couple.
You have two films in the Nuns series.
There are three Annabelle films.
There are some people that consider the curse of La Yarona to be part of the series.
It has become sort of this universe in and of itself.
It just feels like the modern definition of a franchisee to me.
We haven't hit the Conjuring TV series.
yet. I don't know anyone dressing up
as Ed and Lorraine Warren for Halloween.
Maybe I'll do that this year, but this is the one that
I would keep on. For sure. Okay.
Guys, we have our 10,
but obviously we cannot end
this show without talking about our last two
franchises, and
it is insane that we have
saved Halloween until the very end
here. What's the other one?
Halloween and the Night of the Living Dead series.
So the Halloween series,
I think when most people think of
horror movie franchises is one of the ones that
automatically comes to mind.
The first is, again, a hard classic,
and then you go in some weird directions
with some weird sequels.
Halloween, I think, is such a perfect movie,
but I also would make the case for Halloween three,
Season of the Witch,
which has nothing to do with the Michael Myers world at all.
It's about basically these jackalanor
masks, hoods that you put on,
and there's mind control,
and I think it is really one of the underrated films
in the Halloween series,
at least by non-nerds.
Jason, I think you made the point
that a franchise that can sort of go outside of its world
and be something else, shape-shift.
I think this is the perfect example of that,
and I think that's why, for me,
Halloween, I think, is maybe one of my favorite franchises.
I'm so glad Eric brought up this movie
because when I heard that you guys wanted me
to find out of our franchise,
I rewatch season of the witch
because I think it's the key turning point
in the whole history of the franchise.
Because, you know, John Carbner didn't want to make a sequel.
They twisted it on.
He made this sequel, right?
Which was basically Halloween 2 was kind of very, took up right where Halloween 1 ended,
made kind of the same movie, right?
And he said, I'll come back for Halloween 3.
But only if we don't have Michael Myers.
This has never been done before, and here's the key part, and after.
Because people came to see this.
They go to see Michael Myers.
And the only time you see Michael Myers in this movie is when,
one of the characters turns the TV set on
and they're playing Halloween
and everyone was like,
that's the movie I want to see.
Now, I agree with everything Eric said.
I think Season of The Witch is a tremendously underrated movie
really interesting on many counts
and really trippy imagery in it.
But the lesson that the industry took
from the failure of Seasoner of The Witch
is we're never going to let them do this again.
We've got to have the music.
We've got to have the Michael Myers ask.
And we'll let you mess around a little bit at the edges.
But it kind of ruined the franchise.
So I agree with all of Eric's premise,
but I come to the opposite conclusion,
which is because of the season of The Witch,
the rest of the Halloween franchise
became less interesting to me,
where let's compare it to Night of Living Dead.
When there's no more room in hell,
the dead will walk here.
This is the rare movie
where the sequel is better than the,
or more ambitious, certainly,
than the original, Dawn of the Dead,
is a tremendous movie
and I think you know
the movie is varied in quality
but I think they really set
a high bar in terms of ambition
and created not just one character
but a whole new character
that was taken off
you know in a million other directions
so I would say
if I had to choose
the Night of Living Dead franchise
I would pick over
Halloween which seems
it seems crazy but the one other thing
we're not picking they're both on the list
oh they're both on the list okay so let's review
the final list. There have been a lot of lists. This is the final list. I'm going to read it out
and you can tell me how you feel about all these together. Night of the Living Dead,
Halloween, Friday the 13th, the Evil Dead, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Child's Play,
Final Destination, Saw, paranormal activity, and The Conjuring. These are R10. Are these R10?
Yeah, good list. I feel good about it. Yeah. Do you think everyone's going to get angry about this list?
Oh, yeah. Absolutely.
I should hope so.
Okay.
The producers are, look, look, angry.
All right.
We have come up with a definitive.
Look up the definition of the word,
definitive list of the top 10 horror movie franchises of all time.
Tweet it, Jason Zidman.
Okay.
Or threads.
Listeners, those of you who are not mad at the movies we left off,
you can find both our master list and our top 10 in the show notes.
So you can,
basically recreate this debate with your friends.
We're going to take another break.
And when we return, as we do every week,
we're going to play a little game.
Welcome back.
Welcome to our hollow scream,
Spook, hack, boo scare.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
It's a regular Elvira over here.
Here you go, D.I.
I've got Eric Pippenberg and Jason Ziniman here.
They both look slightly uncomfortable because we're about to play a game.
I've got three rounds for you, gentlemen.
Please put your hands on your buzzers and let us begin.
Round one, which we are calling a nightmare on Film Street.
Let's see how much you know about the films on our list.
What fictional Illinois town is the main setting of the Halloween franchise?
Jason.
Haddonfield.
That is correct.
Haddonfield.
Next question.
Chuckie, the murderous doll at the center of the Child's Play franchise, is a possessed version of what doll, manufactured by the Play Pals Toy Factory?
Eric.
Good guy, doll.
Good guy.
That is correct.
The first paranormal activity movies, 194.
million dollar worldwide box office
made it the most profitable
movie of all time, displacing
what other found footage horror movie?
Eric.
Blair Witch Project? The Blair Witch Project.
This guy's quick on the draw.
I know, I know. How many principal shooting
locations from Friday the 13th
Part 8, Jason takes Manhattan,
or actually in Manhattan?
Jason.
It's got to be at least one.
Because he comes... One.
One. That is correct. The time.
square sequence.
The subway sequence.
Yeah, right, exactly.
Okay.
That was the end of round one.
Round two is called
The Kills Have Eyes.
You guys should be ashamed of yourself.
You really should.
I mean, you know, this is...
Jimmy Fallon's looking down his nose out of this.
It was a mistake to have a comedy person on this episode.
I'm going to give you three ways that characters meet their ends in a franchise,
and you tell me the name of the franchise.
So, again, we'll be three ways.
said people die, tell me the name of the franchise.
Stabbed through the throat with an arrow, head frozen with liquor, nitrogen, and then shattered,
swung around in a sleeping bag, and smashed into a tree.
Jason.
That is Friday the 13th.
That is correct.
All of those kills happened in the Friday of the 13th franchise.
Next, turned into a cockroach and squished inside a roosterone.
Motel, drowned in a waterbed, sliced by an animatronic claw hand.
Eric.
Nightmare on Elm Street?
Correct.
Nightmare on Elm Street.
This is close.
Next, strangled with a yo-yo.
Beaten to death with a yardstick, choked on a doll arm.
Jason.
Child's play?
Child's play.
Absolutely right.
The final question in this round.
Burned alive inside a tanning bed, flattened by a huge pain of.
of glass, crushed by logs
falling off the back of a truck on the highway.
Eric.
Final destination.
This is really close.
You guys are neck and neck here.
We're at our final round.
It's called Childs Play.
Some of these horror franchises
contain some iconic,
extremely creepy lines of dialogue.
And as we all know,
there's nothing scarier than a creepy little kid.
So we found a little kid
to creepily read some
iconic horror movie dialogue
for us. Please listen to the quote. Wait until the quote is over and then tell me what movie
it's from.
I ate his liver with some father beans and a nice candy.
Jason. Silence of the lamps. The silence of the lambs. Correct. Next. Quotes.
They're coming to get you, Barbara.
Jason.
Neither living dead.
Neither living dead.
That is correct.
Next quote.
All right, you primitive screw heads, listen up.
You see this?
This is my boomstick.
Really good line reading.
You guys, you're both stumped.
That is from Army of Darkness, the third evil dead film.
Yeah, boomstick was the, should have tipped you off.
I was distracted by how good a performance that was.
Okay, next clue
A boy's best friend is his mother
Jason
Unless this is like a trick
I'm going to say psycho
Psycho, that is correct
That is a quote
From Norman Bates
And our final clue
In this category
And in the game overall
It's alive
Jason
Frankenstein
That is correct
Frankenstein
Also it's alive
the movie great Larry Conn movie
that's not the one about the killer yogurt is it
no that's about the killer baby oh right
right right okay my mistake
okay our producers are telling us that we have a
winner and that winner is
Jason
congratulations
you hold that out right at the end
amazing amazing
Jason I have something to give you
Okay.
It's a prize.
This is the ninth one of these that we have awarded.
It is a cheap, tiny plastic trophy with my face on it.
We call it the Gilby.
Oh, my God.
And it is now yours.
I'm so honored.
I'm flattered.
I'm humbled.
Thank you.
Thank you, Gilbert.
That is, those are all the emotions that that cheap trophy are supposed to listen.
It really feels like you get her from like a gunball machine.
Yeah.
And then throw it away.
It's a secret where we get it from.
Jason.
Eric, thank you both for joining this fantastic conversation about great horror movie franchises.
Great to be here. My pleasure.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun. Thank you.
Wait, before we go, if you had to pick a number one, what would it be?
I'm going to go with Evil Dead.
Eric?
I'm going to say Child's Play.
For me, Nightmare at Elm Street all the way.
One, two, Freddy's coming through.
This episode was produced by Alex Barron,
who's also our Quizmaster,
with help from Kate LaPresti,
Luke Vanderplug, and Tina Antalini.
We had production assistance from Dahlia Haddad.
It was edited by Wendy Doer and engineered by Daniel Ramirez.
Rosalie Barron read all those scary lines from horror movies in our game.
Original music by Dan Powell,
Marion Lazzano,
Etup and Diane Wong. Special thanks to Paula Schumann. Thanks for listening. See you next week.
