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The 10 best Mexican horror movies

Mexico's finest.

Somos Lo Que Hay
Image via Canana Films

There is a rich history of Mexican cinema that spans many different styles. When compared to other horror genres, Mexican films stand out due to the innovative way in which they combine indigenous myths, traditional folklore, and modern filmmaking techniques to create a cinematic world that is both varied and horrifying. Films like El Fantasma del Convento and Dos Monjes by writer-director Juan Bustillo Oro helped launch Mexico’s horror film industry in the 1930s. 

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It took a lot of work for Bustillo Oro to get his films shown in theaters before the 1950s because of the predominance of melodramas and Westerns at the time. Despite this, the success of his movies skyrocketed after U.S. producer K. Gordon Murray popularized Mexican horror films abroad. About thirty horror pictures were among the almost seventy Mexican films that Murray purchased and marketed in the United States – this marked the beginning of the international success of Mexican horror films. 

Despite being eclipsed by their North American and European counterparts, Mexican horror films deserve international notice for their distinct plots, atmospheres, and approaches to the horror genre. Here, we look at the top ten Mexican horror movies that have significantly contributed to the genre.

10. Even the Wind is Afraid (Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo, 1968)

Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo (Even the Wind is Afraid), directed by Carlos Enrique Taboada, is an iconic example of Mexican horror. The film is a tribute to Taboada’s storytelling skill and ability to merge ordinary life with the fantastic. It is an excellent blend of psychological horror, suspense, and the supernatural. The events in Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo take place in a girls’ boarding school, which, under Taboada’s skilled handling, becomes a maze of suppressed fears, anxieties, and an intolerable burden of guilt. 

Claudia, a former student, haunts the school after she commits suicide due to the severe punishments imposed by the inflexible headmistress Bernarda. Taboada expertly creates tension by piling in a palpable sense of foreboding. The ghostly presence isn’t the only thing keeping students up at night; the boarding school’s strict rules contribute, too. This authoritarian regime instills a terror just as absolute as the fear of the otherworldly, creating a multifaceted horror. In 2007, a new film with the same name hit theaters. The critical response to the remake was poor, but audiences responded positively. 

9. Holy Blood (Santa Sangre, 1989)

A standout in the history of Mexican horror films, Santa Sangre (1989) is the work of the eccentric and creative director Alejandro Jodorowsky. To successfully combine dread with its own aesthetic sensibility, Santa Sangre (Holy Blood) stretches the boundaries of the horror genre with its surreal, symbolic, and psychologically driven approach. Fenix is a young man locked away in a mental facility, with a tragic backstory including a deadly love triangle involving his circus performer parents. After a string of killings, Fenix’s armless mother pushes him to become her ‘arms’ so that she can continue her act. 

The horror of Santa Sangre comes from its voyage into Fenix’s tormented mind, not merely from the film’s graphic violence. The story hinges around the titular Santa Sangre, a religious sect that worships a girl whose arms were severed, resulting in a pool of “holy blood.” The story revolves around this unsettling dynamic between Fenix and his mother. Jodorowsky uses stark, terrifying images to explore themes of parental tyranny, religious fanaticism, and mental illness. The brutal murders and the unsettling psychological manipulation and control over Fenix contribute to the tragedy.

8. Macario (1960)

Roberto Gavaldón’s Macario is a profound, allegorical masterwork that deviates from the typical fare of horror films thanks to its weaving of fantasy, the supernatural, and the macabre. The film, based on a short story by B. Traven, takes place in colonial Mexico and tells the narrative of a poor peasant named Macario who longs to eat a meal for himself rather than splitting it with his many hungry family members. The film’s climax occurs when Macario is visited by three ghosts representing God, the Devil, and Death, forcing him to confront difficult questions about his existence.

With Macario, Gavaldón highlights the chilling reality of real-life suffering via a riveting depiction of desperation, poverty, and mortality. The bleakness of Macario’s poverty, the severity of his hunger, and his anguish for a good meal are all depicted with such unrefined realism that they give the viewer the creeps. Macario was the first film from Mexico nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. In 1960, it was also shown at the Cannes Film Festival. Fans and critics agree that Macario is up there as one of the best Mexican movies of all time.

7. The Book of Stone (El Libro de Piedra, 1969)

Written and directed by Carlos Enrique Taboada, El Libro de Piedra (The Book of Stone) is a supernatural horror film driven by the story of a young girl named Silvia, who becomes strangely linked to a stone statue of a girl named “Hugo” in an old home. As Silvia interacts with Hugo, whom she insists is not a statue but a real female, the tension builds, taking the audience on a terrifying trip that blurs the barriers between reality and fiction. Fear in El Libro de Piedra stems primarily from the viewer’s confusion about whether Hugo is an invention of Silvia’s mind or an actual supernatural being. 

Taboada does an excellent job of instilling a sense of dread and suspense throughout the film, prompting viewers to doubt their perceptions. The picture was favorably received by audiences and reviewers alike, earning a reputation as one of the scariest of its time. The film’s writer/director, Carlos Enrique Taboada, won plaudits for making the audience imagine the psychological horror concepts throughout the film, which made the jump scares and ghostly appearances at the end of the film all the more unsettling.

6. Under the Salt (Bajo la Sal, 2008)

Directed by Mario Muñoz, Bajo la Sal (Under the Salt) is a newbie to the realm of Mexican horror films. Still, its compelling story, excellent acting, and moody camerawork leave quite an impact. The film follows Humberto Zurita’s determined police officer, Victor Zepeda, as he investigates a string of brutal killings in a sleepy seaside village that survives on salt production. 

Victor must uncover a complex network of lies, corruption, and hidden terror after the bodies of young girls are discovered buried in the salt fields. While many horror movies rely on ghosts and bloodshed, Bajo la Sal injects dread through its unflinching look at real-world evils. The film’s terror resides in what lurks behind the tranquil surface of the coastal community. As a classic horror trope, the stark contrast between the idyllic landscape and the concealed murders shows how appearances may be deceiving. 

5. Poison for the Fairies (Veneno para las Hadas, 1984)

The 1984 Mexican horror film Veneno para las Hadas (Poison for the Fairies) by Carlos Enrique Taboada is a rare jewel that expertly probes the borders between a child’s innocence, imagination, and grim realities. Verónica and Flavia, both ten years old, are the story’s protagonists. Verónica, an orphan who lives with her great-aunt and a maid, frequently makes up stories about her witchy abilities because she is captivated by them. She befriends the wealthy but gullible Flavia, then uses stories of witches and black magic to control her. 

The darkening of their shared fantasy world parallels the development of their bond. Taboada goes deeply into these young girls’ psyches, examining the intersection of their dreams and reality. The viewer is left wondering where the line between fantasy and reality lies as he expertly captures the spirit of childhood terrors and the might of the imagination. The film’s real scare comes from its in-depth psychological examination, not from any otherworldly creatures but from the horrific potential of a child’s imagination.

4. Cronos (1993)

Guillermo del Toro wrote and directed the Mexican independent horror movie Cronos in 1992. The film stars Federico Luppi and Ron Perlman. Cronos is the debut feature film by del Toro and the first of many collaborations with Luppi and Perlman. The film is an original take on the vampire mythos that blends horror, fantasy, and a dark fairy tale into a moving examination of immortality, desire, and the human condition. 

The plot follows antiquarian Jesús Gris as he investigates the mysterious Cronos, a scarab-shaped gadget from the 16th century. When turned on, the Cronos device bestows eternal life and gives the user a vampire’s insatiable craving for blood. At the same time as Jesús is trying to come to terms with the unsettling implications of his newfound immortality, a dying businessman is on his tail, determined to get his hands on the Cronos device. The Cronos device in Cronos offers a fresh take on the classic vampire mythos. 

3. The Similars (Los Parecidos, 2015)

The 2015 film Los Parecidos, directed by Isaac Ezban, takes place in a deserted bus stop on a stormy night in October. The eight strangers spending the night in the station begin to encounter a peculiar phenomenon: they begin to look increasingly alike as the night goes on. The tension, suspicion, and fear increase as their distinct identities become less clear. 

The protagonists’ existential anxiety stems from their identity loss and fear of the unknown, converting their predicament into a metaphysical nightmare. A hallmark of the picture is its unique visual style. The film’s bizarre story is emphasized by the use of vivid hues that evoke the technicolor of the 1960s and give the movie a dreamlike air. 

2. We Are What We Are (Somos Lo Que Hay, 2010)

The horror film We Are What We Are (Somos lo que hay) was directed by Jorge Michel Grau and released in 2010. Injecting societal commentary into the horror genre, this standalone sequel to Cronos (1993) follows a family of cannibals living in the center of Mexico City as they struggle to carry on with their horrific ritual after their father’s unexpected death. Grau’s use of the cannibal family as a metaphor for urban society’s class divisions and survival issues is ingenious. 

The violence depicted in the film is unrelenting, highlighting the protagonists’ baser, animalistic tendencies as they engage in cannibalistic rites. Yet, the proceedings are given an uncanny feeling of normalcy by intercutting shots of domesticity, showing the characters going about their daily lives, with the more violent ones. This contrast adds to the film’s eerie atmosphere by muddying the distinctions between humans and monsters.

1. Kilometer 31 (Kilómetro 31, 2006)

A disturbing tale of otherworldly powers and familial devotion, Kilómetro 31, directed by Rigoberto Castañeda, is one of Mexican horror films’ most commercially successful films. The main characters of this tale are identical twins named Catalina and Ágata. After a vehicle accident on Kilometer 31 leaves Ágata in a coma, Catalina has paranormal experiences and hears her sister’s cries for help. 

Catalina, intent on rescuing her sister, investigates the sinister mystery of Kilometer 31, where she finds a tragic story of forbidden love and the vengeful spirit of La Llorona. The film’s ingenious use of La Llorona, a figure from Mexican folklore, gives it a solid cultural foundation. In Mexican folklore, La Llorona is one of the most well-known creatures; she is the ghost of a lady who drowned her children and is cursed to spend eternity looking for them.