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Is horror creeping toward Oscars recognition?

Los Angeles Times

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December 04, 2025

The academy has long recoiled from scary movies. But after a string of box-office hits from auteur directors, it can't look away anymore

- Story By Bob Strauss

Is horror creeping toward Oscars recognition?

Elizabeth (Mia Goth) and Victor (Oscar Isaac) in a scene from "Frankenstein."

KEN WORONER / NETFLIX

THERE'S A GOOD CHANCE that a horror movie from this year will be nominated for the best picture Oscar.

And if Ryan Coogler's “Sinners” or Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” make the cut, it will be the first time in the Academy Awards’ 97-year history that a fright film has been nominated in consecutive contests.

It’s long overdue. And if you believe part of Oscars’ purpose is to promote the industry and celebrate its achievements, there's no better time for the academy to get over its traditional disdain for cinematic monstrosities.

As most other sectors of Hollywood's film business look precarious — adult dramas, the traditional awards season ponies, are dropping like dead horses at the box office, while attendance for the once-mighty superhero supergenre continues to disappoint — horror has hit its highest annual gross of all time, $1.2 billion, with nearly a month left to go.

“Sinners,” released in April, remains in fifth place on the domestic box office chart with $279 million. Its fellow Warner Bros. offerings “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” “Weapons” and “Final Destination: Bloodlines” occupied slots 12, 13 and 15 as of late November.

“Horror has been, historically, the Rodney Dangerfield of genres,” notes Paul Dergarabedian, head of marketplace trends for global media measurement firm Comscore. “It can’t get no respect.

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