delivered one of the decade’s most terrifying films with The Babadook (2014)—a film that brilliantly weaponizes grief as the real monster. Unlike many horror films that use trauma as backstory, Kent makes it the antagonist. The Babadook isn’t real, but it is inevitable. Her follow-up, The Nightingale , trades supernatural chills for colonial brutality, proving her range as a chronicler of historical horror.
Then there’s , who exploded onto the scene with Raw (2016) and topped it with the Palme d’Or-winning Titane (2021). Ducournau’s genius lies in merging viscera with vulnerability. Her films ask: what if the monstrous transformation isn’t a curse, but a liberation? In Titane , a serial killer with a metal plate in her skull becomes pregnant with a car and finds surrogate fatherhood. It’s absurd, beautiful, and profoundly human. female horror directors
And we cannot ignore , whose Candyman (2021) sequel is a rare legacy sequel that surpasses its predecessor in thematic ambition. DaCosta uses the slasher icon not as a ghost but as a mirror, reflecting systemic violence and gentrification. Her frames are gorgeous, deliberate, and furious. delivered one of the decade’s most terrifying films