SXSW 2026: Get to Know the Biggest Horror Premieres Set to Take the Year by Storm
From huge horror headliners like ‘Hokum’ to gruesome genre gems like ‘Drag,’ here are all the premieres we’re most excited for at SXSW 2026.

From huge horror headliners like ‘Hokum’ to gruesome genre gems like ‘Drag,’ here are all the premieres we’re most excited for at SXSW 2026.

This year’s festival, running from March 12 through March 18, is no different. Hokum, Damien Mc Carthy’s next feature after Oddity is set to have its world premiere. Adam Scott contends with a coven of witches in Ireland, and knowing Mc Carthy’s background, it’s going to be absolutely terrifying.
Also bowing is the world premiere of Radio Silence’s sequel, Ready or Not 2: Here I Come. Samara Weaving returns to battle the rich, with an expanded supporting cast that includes Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kathryn Newton, and Elijah Wood. What’s great is how the sequel looks to double down on the chaos (and gonzo violence) of the original.

Oh, and Uma Thurman kicks ass in Pretty Lethal, Vicky Jewson’s ballerina-themed survival thriller headlining the festival before its arrival on Prime Video later in the month. A group of young ballerinas fights for their lives against Thurman and her team of violent criminals when their bus derails en route to a dance competition. More Thuman is always a treat.
Elsewhere, Samara Weaving again features in Jorma Taccone’s Over Your Dead Body alongside funnyman Jason Segel. The hook? A couple intends to reconnect at a cabin in the woods, each unaware that the other harbors plans to kill them. Weaving and Segel both have remarkable comedic timing, so we might be witnessing a new, deathly romantic classic in the making.

They Will Kill You, Kirill Sokolov’s kinetic and killer headliner, is poised to knock our socks off as a young woman battles her way out of a high-rise full of, you guessed it, wealthy, elite murderers. Is it Ready or Not? Maybe, but Sokolov’s style shouldn’t be dismissed too easily.

Oliver Bernsen’s Bagworm looks like a trippy, psychedelic odyssey into the unknown, posing the ultimate question: Is this dreamscape something profound, or is he just dying from tetanus? We’ve all been there.
Raviv Ullman and Greg Yagolnitzer’s Drag is my personal nightmare. Robbers thwarted when one throws out their back? It’s all too real, especially with a Don’t Breathe-esque race against the clock to escape before the homeowners arrive back home.
Russell Goldman’s paranoid thriller Sender has piqued my interest with its paranoid tale of a young woman receiving suspiciously personal packages linked to her past. Better still, Sender features Scream Queen Jamie Lee Curtis and a supporting performance from David Dastmalchian.

Additionally, John Valley’s American Dollhouse, a haunted-house premiere promising festive blood-soaked perversion. After a woman inherits her childhood home, a strange– possibly psychotic– neighbor becomes obsessed with her and an alleged resemblance to the neighbor’s dead mother. I’m getting We Are Still Here vibes, and anything akin to that is a winner in my book.
Oh, and body horror is back, baby, with Emily Robinson’s Ugly Cry, a feature about a young woman desperate to fix her, well… ugly cry. I can’t wait, especially as someone who’s heard something similar. Crying is always ugly, no? Alex Bendo’s episodic pilot In My Blood takes steroids to their natural, horrifying end with a baseball player desperate for success.

Sundance hit Leviticus is also showing, a must-see for queer horror fans. Two boys in love must contend with an entity, in the vein of It Follows, that takes the form of the person they love most … each other. It’s one of my most-anticipated of the year.
Richard E. Williams’ Dead Eyes looks to be a stunning technical achievement, filmed entirely from a first-person perspective as a man and his wife search for his missing father in the deep, dark woods. Some terrifying scares no doubt await. Matt Black and Ryan Polly’s Monitor similarly plays with form, merging screen-life and dark-web mythos with a classic monster-in-the-machine tale. Content moderation can be deadly.

And we can’t forget about Forbidden Fruits, Meredith Alloway’s ostensible ode to The Craft about a coven of witches hiding out at the local mall. It’s poised to be as riotous a good time as any. We are in desperate need of more witch cinema, especially with a cast that includes Lili Reinhart, Lola Tung, Victoria Pedretti, Alexandra Shipp, Emma Chamberlain, and Gabrielle Union. I need it now.
Peter Warren’s Kill Me might be the antidote to my own aging body, a hilarious looking whodunnit about a man suspicious that he didn’t actually plan a suicide attempt. He works alongside a 9-1-1 dispatcher to identify the possible killer.
For more laughs, check out Brea Grant, Ed Dougherty, and Chelsea Stardust’s Grind. Barbara Crampton and Rob Huebel take down noxious MLMs in the world premiere of this anthology. As a fan of the egregiously canceled Showtime series On Becoming a God in Central Florida, I can’t wait. MLMs are ripe for horror-tinged satire.

Dave Boyle’s Never After Dark is plenty exciting for foreign horror fans. This Japanese shocker follows a medium who battles a grotesque, terrifying apparition that haunts her in an old home.
And finally, Caleb Philips mines every parent’s worst nightmare in Imposters when a missing child is returned, though almost assuredly not the same as he was. Aliens and missing kids? It’s The Fourth Kind (affectionate).
You can check out the full schedule of SXSW Midnighters, Headliners, and premieres here. What are you most excited to check out? What I love most about fests like SXSW is how often they pair the big, mainstream offerings alongside the smaller gems that will no doubt surprise and excite.
Let us know over on socials via @DreadCentral about what you can’t wait to check out, and we’ll see you in Austin.