There are all sorts of reasons to love movies, but there’s nothing quite like the experience of getting scared with a group of people. The horror genre is deeply subjective and it’s fascinating to see how trends can change across decades and what routinely gets under the audience’s skin.

Movie audiences have become increasingly savvy to genre conventions and tropes, which has given self-aware projects and ambitious parodies new life. The horror genre is such a natural fit for heightened parodies that properly accentuate both terror and humor. A lot of these genre-bending projects find success, but there are some that go above and beyond to become evergreen classics.

Updated October 6, 2023: This list of horror films has been amended to include five more entries so that it’s now a more comprehensive account of the top horror parodies. These new additions have resulted in several entries being rearranged as well as other slight formatting changes.. The list has also been improved to include each film’s release date as well as updated links that reflect CBR’s more recent horror content

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20 Club Dread

Release Date: February 27, 2004

The Broken Lizard comedy collective is arguably best known for Super Troopers, but the team has created many heightened genre comedies. Club Dread is a creative combination of spring break hijinks with a committed slasher villain who runs amok at a tropical vacation resort.

The Broken Lizard team doesn't struggle when it comes to hormonal humor and over the top horror as this fun film celebrates the excess of both of these genres.There’s a lot of lewd behavior and a gratuitous body count, but Club Dread also manages to be more than just that.

19 Zombieland

Release Date: October 2, 2009

Zombies, much like vampires, have been done to death in film and television, and yet they still prove to be one of horror's more popular subgenres. Zombieland finds a lot of comedy in its post-apocalyptic angle where quirky survivors make the most out of a broken world. The gore and gags come fast and often in Zombieland, but an all-star cast of Emma Stone, Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg, and Abigail Breslin help elevate this silly material.

An official Zombieland sequel exists, but there have been multiple attempts to turn this idea into a broader horror franchise. There's likely more Zombieland on the way in some shape or form.

18 The Comedy Of Terrors

Release Date: December 25, 1963

The title Comedy of Terrors alone gives audiences a pretty good idea that this horror film is going to be heavily steeped in parody. The 1960s film is written by Richard Matheson and features an all-star cast that includes Vincent Price and Peter Lorre.

Price's Waldo Trumbull is a vicious undertaker, but his murderous ways stem from the need to be able to afford his drinking habit. The Comedy of Terrors gets into grim territory, but it's consistently undercut with a comedic slant. The central target, for instance, needs to be executed on multiple occasions.

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17 Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein

Release Date: June 15, 1948

Crossovers have become increasingly common over the past decade and horror is a genre that loves to play around in this territory. But a very early gem pairs together the famous comedy duo Abbott and Costello with Universal’s horror icon, Frankenstein’s Monster.

Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein is actually one of the team’s better movies. Their bumbling comedy blends surprisingly well with the grandiose tropes and visual language of horror movies. It’s a fun film that’s able to both laugh at and frighten itself.

16 Freaky

Release Date: November 13, 2020

Christopher Landon initially cut his teeth in the Paranormal Activity franchise, but he’s since comfortably found his niche in horror comedies that show an unabashed love and respect for the horror genre and its many tropes. Freaky is Landon’s follow-up to the Happy Death Day franchise, and it could easily have been subtitled “Freaky Friday the 13th.”

A masked slasher behemoth swaps bodies with a bullied girl in high school and this terrifying experience somehow turns into an opportunity for her to figure out who she truly is. Vince Vaughn and Kathryn Newton elevate Freaky to something special through their nuanced performances, but there are also excessive kills on display.

15 The Final Girls

Release Date: October 9, 2015

Todd Strauss-Schulson's The Final Girls is the ultimate exercise in post-modern self-aware slasher movies. Taissa Farmiga's Max is recently orphaned and finds herself and her friends sucked into the B-horror movie that her mom starred in two decades earlier.

Max gets to reconnect with her mother, albeit a much younger version of her, while she and her friends use their love of horror movies and vast slasher trope knowledge to stay alive from a dangerous killer. Anyone who's interested in Nahnatchka Khan's Totally Killer with Kiernan Shipka, which is a 2023 horror film that involves the exact same premise, owes it to themselves to first check out The Final Girls.

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14 Happy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U

Release Date: October 13, 2017 & February 13, 2019

Time loop movies that riff on the Groundhog Day concept have become surprisingly common and Christopher Landon's Happy Death Day and its sequel, Happy Death Day 2U, both do smart, subversive things with the formula. Tree Gelbman's journey to figure out who tries to kill her leads to a legitimately interesting mystery, but she also experiences a rewarding character arc. Happy Death Day finds the right balance for its comedy, horror, and melodrama.

Christopher Landon's dreams to complete the Happy Death Day trilogy have seemingly gone cold. However, the announcement that Landon is directing the seventh Scream movie means that a Happy Death Day 3 could be in the wings if it's a success.

13 Behind The Mask: The Rise Of Leslie Vernon

Release Date: March 16, 2007

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is a fascinating slasher mockumentary that taps into humanity's need to self-mythologize. The movie examines a modern serial killer, Leslie Vernon, who hires a film crew to document his legacy as the next Michael Myers or Jason Voorhees.

Behind the Mask finds a clever construct to justify its lo-fi angle and the idea of a murderer who idolizes horror movie slashers and models his patterns after them is unfortunately quite believable. Behind the Mask presents horror staples as a security blanket to Leslie Vernon, but they’re ironically what become his undoing, too.

12 Piranha 3D

Release Date: August 20, 2010

The original Piranha from 1978 is an entertaining footnote from the decade notable for featuring early directorial efforts from Joe Dante. The remake's director Alexandre Aja has proven himself to be one of the most extreme and subversive horror filmmakers of this generation and he perfectly understands the mission with Piranha 3D.

Piranha 3D finds the perfect balance between heightened humor and genuine carnage. The movie's 3D effects gleefully take advantage of its bloody premise and its surprise ending is still memorable. Its sequel, Piranha 3DD skews a little too far towards the comedy and loses the thread, but Piranha 3D is far better than it has any right to be.

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11 Scary Movie

Release Date: July 7, 2000

Wes Craven’s Scream rejuvenated the slasher genre through its brilliant and satirical deconstruction of horror, but its priorities are to terrify the audience more than they are to make them laugh. Scream was originally written under the working title Scary Movie, which makes it even more fitting that the full-on parody of this series would co-opt the self-aware title.

There are five entries in the Scary Movie parody series. The films are able to tackle a decade’s worth of horror tropes between Scream, The Exorcist, Signs, and more. There are diminishing returns across the Scary Movie films, but they’re an iconic piece of pop culture and the first two movies still have a lot of charm.

10 Killer Klowns From Outer Space

Release Date: May 27, 1988

The Chiodo Brothers are special effects and stop-motion savants who do some of their best work in the subversive horror and sci-fi satire, Killer Klowns from Outer Space. The movie plays out like a standard alien invasion story, only these extraterrestrials oddly resemble circus clowns, right down to their deeply disturbing means of executions.

Killer Klowns from Outer Space goes to genuinely unnerving places, but it's such an exaggerated exercise that's hard not to not laugh at. There's only one Killer Klowns from Outer Space movie, but the film and its creepy characters have left a major influence on the horror genre. Their ongoing relevance speaks to the enduring nature of this unconventional dose of '80s horror.

9 Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil

Release Date: September 30, 2011

Some of the most successful horror movies to come out of the past few decades are the ones that seamlessly blend horror, comedy, and the genres' evolving reputations. The "hillbilly horror" trope has been around for decades, and it's still being used in modern horror movies.

Tucker & Dale vs. Evil works so well because its main characters are two rough-around-the-edges people who the horror genre has conditioned audiences to fear. Clueless college students vilify Tucker and Dale as they get worked up into a bloody misunderstanding. Tucker & Dale vs. Evil is a clever parody of this subgenre of horror, but it makes sure that the titular characters are people who the audience genuinely cares about.

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8 Bride Of Chucky & Seed Of Chucky

Release Date: October 16, 1998 & November 12, 2004

The Child’s Play killer doll horror series has churned out seven films, a reboot, and a connected television series, and it’s still going strong. There was a lengthy break between 1991’s Child’s Play 3 and 1998's Bride Of Chucky, but the quirky series has returned in full force.

Bride Of Chucky softly rebooted the movies to be more comedic in nature. The following Chucky movies are still filled with death and gore, but Bride Of Chucky and its follow-up, Seed Of Chucky, firmly land in parody territory. This tonal pivot turned out to be the right approach for the Child’s Play series, which has found new life.

7 The Return Of The Living Dead

Release Date: August 16, 1985

George A. Romero's Night Of The Living Dead films are absolutely essential pieces of zombie cinema. The Return Of The Living Dead branches off into its own odd series of undead movies, which are considerably sillier than Romero's original movies.

There are some excellent prosthetics and gore effects in Return Of The Living Dead. More than anything else, though, it feels reflective of its 1980s setting with the rise of punk rock zombies. There are some terrifying visuals in this movie, but the punk rock angle is enough to push the film into the comedy genre.

6 Shaun Of The Dead

Release Date: September 24, 2004

Edgar Wright has emerged as one of this generation’s most fascinating and ambitious filmmakers through bold genre experiments like Hot Fuzz, World’s End, Baby Driver, and Last Night In Soho. However, Wright’s feature film directorial debut, Shaun Of The Dead, is a pitch-perfect parody of the zombie invasion.

Wright crafts a moving coming-of-age narrative where Simon Pegg’s slacker protagonist is so upset over a recent breakup that he’s oblivious to the early signs of an undead apocalypse. Wright touches on the major zombie tropes, but Shaun Of The Dead is also a fun and delirious burst of action, comedy, and even romance.

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5 Cabin In The Woods

Release Date: April 13, 2012

Cabin In The Woods is a brave, unrelenting love letter to the horror genre. It never compromises its vision, which culminates into one of the most surreal final acts that a horror film has ever seen. Cabin In The Woods begins in very familiar territory as a group of teenagers escapes to an isolated cabin for the weekend.

The group begins to suspect sinister activity is afoot, but the genre soon folds in on itself after it’s revealed that a government agency pulls the strings on these - and perhaps all - stereotypical horror attacks. This meta take on horror manages to be equally funny and scary at the same time.

4 What We Do In The Shadows

Release Date: February 13, 2015

The silly mockumentary subgenre has become increasingly popular throughout the 2000s, and it’s an effective lens to explore supernatural material. What We Do In The Shadows is structured as a documentary on the lives of a group of Staten Island vampires.

The dry film style and innocuous dialogue make for a playful juxtaposition against all the classic horror tropes. What We Do In The Shadows is a hilarious and brilliant piece of mockumentary filmmaking, but it’s extended this silliness into one of the most popular shows on television, which is still going strong after five seasons.

3 Young Frankenstein

Release Date: December 15, 1974

Mel Brooks is one of the funniest minds of all time and many of his movies are deeply stylized genre parodies. Brooks has lampooned Westerns, science fiction, silent films, and even the filmography of Alfred Hitchcock. However, many consider his ode to Universal’s monster movies Young Frankenstein to be his best work.

Young Frankenstein reinterprets Mary Shelley’s myth of Frankenstein’s Monster, right down to its impressionistic black-and-white cinematography. Young Frankenstein embraces serious visuals and undercuts them with broad nonsense. If the success of the movie wasn't enough, Brooks’ parody masterpiece has also been turned into a popular Broadway musical.

2 Scream

Release Date: December 20, 1996

With five entries out and a sixth on the way, Scream has become one of the biggest modern slasher series, but also one of the most consistent. The Scream movies essentially operate like modern whodunits, albeit ones that are driven by an obsession with the predictable rules of the horror genre.

Scream effortlessly pokes fun at horror’s language while it also gleefully indulges in these grievances, but actually makes them scary. It’s a rare case where scares and laughs are naturally mixed together. Scream has only gotten stronger as it’s progressively deconstructed modern horror and its commentary on topics like social media fame and toxic fandom remains incredibly relevant.

1 Gremlins 2

Release Date: June 15, 1990

There is no shortage of talented filmmakers who know how to properly balance horror and comedy. However, it’s hard to compete with Joe Dante, especially during the 1980s and ‘90s. Gremlins is a formative piece of cinema that combines a cautionary monster outbreak with Christmas.

Gremlins 2 is ostensibly a wilder and weirder remake of the original, but the thoroughly odd experience somehow surpasses the first Gremlins at every turn. There are more Gremlins, bigger setpieces, and self-aware humor is at its finest. The Gremlins even get so out of control that they briefly “break” the movie.