7 New Movies That Will Make You Fall In Love With International Horror

Februaryโ€™s release slate includes a haunted South Korean subway station, one sinister Spanish senior, a very British folk horror docโ€”and more!
new horror movies to make you fall in love with international horror

Did your heart rate just pick up? Itโ€™s not the sight of your crushโ€”itโ€™s the thought of all the new horror movies releasing this month! From the final chapter in Renny Harlinโ€™s The Strangers trilogy to Emerald Fennellโ€™s Wuthering Heights (you canโ€™t convince me thatโ€™s not going to be terrifying), Februaryโ€™s release schedule is packed with scary sights. And when you look beyond Hollywood, things only get more exciting.
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This monthโ€™s international horror titles include a buzzy French take on Dracula, unsettling Aussie religious horror, a doc about the real-life murder that influenced The Wicker Manโ€”and thatโ€™s just scratching the surface. Here are seven new releases that are making me swoon this February.

  • The Morrigan (United Kingdom/Ireland)

    new Irish horror movie THE MORRIGAN
    THE MORRIGAN (Credit: Cineverse)

    Celtic folklore is full of eerie entities and creepy creatures, but writer-director Colum Eastwood is taking it right to the top, tackling a bona fide deity in his folk-horror film The Morrigan.
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    Expanding on Eastwoodโ€™s 2015 short of the same name, The Morrigan follows an archaeologist specializing in Gaelic mythology who travels to a remote region of Ireland with her rebellious teenage daughter in tow. But far from marvelling at the gorgeous landscapes and perhaps bonding over a cheeky pint of Guinness, the pair find themselves fighting for their lives after a vengeful pagan war goddess is released from her tomb.

    Saffron Burrows (Deep Blue Sea), Emily Flain, and Toby Stephens (The Severed Sun) star in the flick, which hit digital platforms on February 3.

  • Dracula (France)

    DRACULA (Credit: Vertical Entertainment)

    Also titled Dracula: A Love Tale, French filmmaker Luc Bessonโ€™s Dracula is, you guessed it, an adaptation of Bram Stokerโ€™s Dracula that leans into the novelโ€™s sumptuous streak of Gothic romance. And since it hits theaters on February 6, itโ€™s the perfect movie for a Valentineโ€™s Day pregame with your favorite blood bag.
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    In the English-language French film, Caleb Landry Jones (Get Out) plays the titular Dracula, a 15th-century prince who denounces God and is subsequently cursed with vampirism following the death of his wife (Zoรซ Bleu). Condemned to wander the earth for lonely centuries, he is guided by a single hope: to be reunited with his lost love. Christoph Waltz (Frankenstein) also stars in Dracula, which features music by Danny Elfman.

  • The Last Sacrifice (United Kingdom)

    THE LAST SACRIFICE (Credit: Anti-Worlds Releasing)

    If you enjoy peeling back the skin of a horror movie to peer at the dark heart beating within, then director Rupert Russellโ€™s The Last Sacrifice is for you. The documentary explores the still-unsolved murder of farm worker Charles Walton, whose body was discovered in the sleepy English parish of Lower Quinton on Valentine's Day 1945, and the whisperings of witchcraft that surrounded the caseโ€”whispers that would feed into the British folk horror boom of the following decades, particularly 1973โ€™s The Wicker Man.
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    I caught The Last Sacrifice at Brooklyn Horror Film Festival a few years back and was impressed with the care it took not to demonize the Wicca practitioners of the day. Itโ€™s also got a killer epilogue that takes on new meaning in the wake of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (youโ€™ll see). Check it out when the doc hits Shudder on February 16.

  • Ghost Train (South Korea)

    South Korean horror movie GHOST TRAIN
    GHOST TRAIN (Credit: Well Go USA)

    All aboard! Director Tak Se-woongโ€™s Ghost Train is speeding out of South Korea and onto VOD platforms in North America on February 17.
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    The supernatural anthology horror film stars Joo Hyun-young, who rose to prominence on Korea's version of Saturday Night Live. She plays Da-kyung, a horror YouTuber who, desperate to get her views up, begins investigating the strange disappearances plaguing a supposedly haunted subway station. But when she interviews the station master (The Wailingโ€™s Jeon Bae-soo), the tales he tells her are each more chilling than the last. Fair warning: if you suffer from trypophobia, the trailer for this one may not be for youโ€ฆ

  • Diabolic (Australia)

    Australian horror movie DIABOLIC
    DIABOLIC (Credit: Monster Pictures)

    As a former Sunday School teacher (hard to believe, I know), Iโ€™ve always got my eye out for some hot new religious horror, and Diabolic looks set to scratch that itch this month. Director Daniel J. Phillipsโ€™ film is slated to release on demand and in limited theaters on February 20.
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    Elizabeth Cullen stars in Diabolic as Elise, a woman who returns to the fundamentalist Mormon compound where she was raised after experiencing unsettling blackouts. Once there, she learns that sheโ€™s being haunted by the vengeful spirit of a witch.

  • The Dreadful (United Kingdom)

    Sophie Turner and Kit Harrington horror movie THE DREADFUL
    THE DREADFUL (Credit: Lionsgate)

    Game of Thrones stars Sophie Turner and Kit Harrington reunite in The Dreadful, an R-rated Gothic horror film written and directed by Natasha Kermani.
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    Inspired by the same Shin Buddhist parable that the 1964 Japanese classic Onibaba was based on, The Dreadful is set in 15th-century England and follows Anne (Turner) and Morwen (Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden), her domineering mother-in-law, as they struggle to survive on the outskirts of society. But when a man from Anneโ€™s past (Harrington) returns from war, a curse begins to take shape that threatens to destroy them all.

    Soak up the deliciously violent medieval vibes in the trailer, and seek out The Dreadful on VOD platforms and in limited theaters from February 20.

  • Crazy Old Lady (Spain)

    Carmen Maura horror movie CRAZY OLD LADY Vieja Loca
    CRAZY OLD LADY (Credit: Shudder)

    If your ex asked you to temporarily care for their senile mother, would you do it? You might think twice after seeing Crazy Old Lady (Vieja loca), the feature directorial debut of Martรญn Mauregui, which takes up residence on Shudder on February 27.
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    In the Spanish-language film, Pedro (Daniel Hendler) is the unfortunate soul who receives the desperate request. But what starts as a simple favor turns into a nightmare when the aforementioned mother, Alicia (Spanish screen legend Carmen Maura), refuses to let him leave.
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    Those are just a few of the international treasures you can look forward to this February! Check back next month for more horror highlights from around the worldโ€”and in the meantime, take a peek at some of the movies weโ€™re most excited for this year!