All the Horror You Need to Stream in April 2021

April isn't just the cruelest month...if you put your mind to it, it can be one of the spookiest, too.
Horror Streaming April 2021

Welcome to Horrorscope, a monthly column keeping horror nerds and initiates up to date on all the genre content coming to and leaving from your favorite streaming services. Here’s a guide to all the essential horror streaming in April 2021.


Spring has sprung!

Dead foliage has given way to eager flowers, budding shrubbery, and all manner of hideous pastoral displays. Some of you may have noticed that your sense of smell has returned to greet you with olfactory delights such as: grass. Oh look, what’s that? Forgotten trash, emerging like some frozen leviathan out of a melting snowbank. How nice. 

But look: April is only the cruelest month if you want it to be. Screw your head on straight and all those breeding lilacs and stirring dull roots take on a more tantalizing aspect. We’re out of winter, friends. Time to greet a new season with open arms. 

In that spirit, this month’s horror highlights are all-new, from either this year or the last. This is something of a departure for this column, which usually tries (an operative word!) to strike a balance between new fare and ye old spooks. But it’s spring, damn it! So brace yourselves for round two of a record-breaking anthology series, a marital nightmare, an explosive coming-of-age horrorshow, and an insightful documentary about how indie horror gets made.

Be sure to peruse the complete list below, calendar in hand, for a full picture of what horror flicks are coming and going from your favorite streaming services this April.


Pick of the Month: Creepshow Season 2 (2021)

Synopsis: A revamp of the classic George A. Romero and Stephen King horror anthology films of the same name, Creepshow delivers bite-sized spooks of murder, monsters, and cosmic comeuppance. WIth a pulpy, comic-book gait and an episodic zing, the popular series is back for a second season.

We’ve said it once, and we’ll say it again: there can never be enough horror anthologies.

When Shudder’s reboot of Creepshow debuted in 2019, it broke viewership records and quickly carved out a name for itself as one of the streaming service’s big draws. After the first installment’s runaway success, Shudder enthusiastically greenlit two more seasons. I had the pleasure of reviewing Creepshow‘s first go-round with Rob Hunter. We’re both excited to see what Shudder cooks up for Season 2. 

Executive produced by The Walking Dead‘s Greg Nicotero, the series features two ooky-spooky stories in each episode. This is the great boon of horror anthologies: if something doesn’t turn your crank before you know it, you’re on to the next nightmare. 

This new season’s guest stars include Kevin Dillon, Iman Benson, Josh McDermitt, Keith David, Molly Ringwald, Barbara Crampton (!), Justin Long, and D’Arcy Carden, among others.

Arrives on Shudder on April 1st (new episodes every thursday).

Haunted marriage? Haunted marriage.

Synopsis: After moving from Manhattan to a peaceful hamlet in the Hudson Valley, a married couple begins to suspect that their idyllic new home is haunted by its dark past. Soon enough both their house and relationship begin to rot and crack, with one dark secret after another peeling away to reveal generational scars and sinister longings.

Now, look. When it comes to sussing out “what is and isn’t horror,” I’m not above a little semantics here and there. How else am I going to claim historical dramas like The Devils? Or more noir-heavy fare like The Leopard Man? Semantics should be used to enrich a genre, not to gatekeep it. So forgive me for raising a suspicious eyebrow at Things Heard & Seen‘s directors claiming that the film “isn’t a horror film; it’s a supernatural thriller.”

Is “horror” really such a dirty word? In any case, even if this is more of a thrilling spooky experience than an outright gorefest, I’m including this “literary ghost story” on a horror round-up. Fight me in the comments (we don’t have comments, haha!).

Things Heard & Seen is based on Elizabeth Brundage’s novel All Things Cease to Appear. You might remember writer-directors-spouses Robert Pulcini and Shari Springer Berman from their fantastic Harvey Pekar biopic American Splendor. Headlining with Amanda Seyfried and James Norton, Things Heard & Seen‘s cast also includes Natalia Dyer (Stranger Things), Rhea Seehorn (Better Call Saul), Indiana Jones legend Karen Allen, and F. Murray Abraham (Amadeus).

All told: Things Heard & Seen sounds like a compelling portrait of trouble in paradise that promises to be haunting in more ways than one. In any case, we’ll have to wait until the end of the month until we get to…hear and see it for ourselves.

Premieres on Netflix on April 29th.

A coming of age romance about growing up…and blowing up

Synopsis: A teenage dream with an explosive twist, Mara’s senior year was supposed to be full of romance and plans for the future. Then, on an otherwise boring day, one of her classmates explodes, coating the walls with gore and viscera, dashing Mara’s dreams of a totally chill final year. Then, before the authorities can get a grip on what’s happening…another kid goes kaboom. Suddenly small-time annoyances (like that weird kid having a crush on her) are the least of Mara’s troubles.

Genuinely horrific horror comedies are hard to come by. And genuinely horrific romantic comedies are harder still. Which makes Brian Duffields debut feature, Spontaneous (2020), all the more of a hat-trick. A darkly sly examination of explosive grief, Spontaneous agrees that all coming-of-age stories should be a little messy. For all the pep in its step, Spontaneous never lets the other (more horrific) shoe drop.

And yet, faced with the reality of gruesome, sudden death, Mara (Katherine Langford) chooses to cherish life and fall in love (with the aforementioned weird kid, played by Charlie Plummer). I’ve been waiting with rocks in my stomach to see how genre film will react to the (ongoing) global pandemic. And while Spontaneous’ allegorical intentions are more geared pointedly towards school shootings, the film still manages to inadvertently answer the question: how do you make a comedy about COVID?

We’ve all had to make our peace with taking things as they come during these weird times. And as Spontaneous astutely notes, even in the face of amorphous trauma, holding on to the people you love is sometimes the only thing that helps. 

Arriving on Amazon Prime and Hulu on April 12th.

A warts-and-all exploration of what it takes to make a movie

Synopsis: Following five years in the life and career of indie filmmaker Justin McConnell (Lifechanger), this documentary features interviews with genre luminaries and industry mainstays to answer the question: how do you make and release a movie?

Are you a freak for behind-the-scenes content? Love the nitty-gritty of movie-making? Well, have I got the documentary for you. 

These days, anyone can make a film. The hard part is making a living while doing it. Clapboard Jungle: Surviving the Independent Film Business (2020) surveys the crags and crannies of the low-budget movie business. The doc includes interviews with the likes of Guillermo Del Toro (Crimson Peak), Tom Holland (Fright Night), George A. Romero (The Crazies), Barbara Crampton (Re-Animator), and a veritable rogues gallery of horror royalty.

There’s something compelling about the contrast between such accomplished talking heads versus McConnell, the film’s largely unfamiliar subject-director. There’s an endearing implication: that even the biggest names in the low-budget biz were, at some point, aspiring unknowns. 

Clapboard Jungle also comes with a tsunami of ephemera. ARROW subscribers will be treated to commentaries, nearly thirty extended interviews, and a collection of eight short stories by McConnell. So whether you’re an aspiring director or an arms-length fan of the industry, this is well-worth checking out!

Arrives on ARROW on April 19th.

Streamable Horror Incoming This Month

Fresh blood: A list of all the horror content coming to streaming services in April 2021.
Streaming ServiceMovieDate
Amazon PrimeCaptain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974)April 1
Amazon PrimeLady in A Cage (1951)April 1
Amazon PrimeMad Max (1980)April 1
Amazon PrimeMotel Hell (1980)April 1
Amazon PrimeSmiley Face Killers (2020)April 1
Amazon PrimeSo I Married An Axe Murderer (1993)April 1
Amazon PrimeThe Dead Zone (1983)April 1
Amazon PrimeThe Gift (2001)April 1
Amazon PrimeThe Happening (2008)April 1
Amazon PrimeThe Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959)April 1
Amazon PrimeThe Skull (1965)April 1
Amazon PrimeBlair Witch (2016)April 3
Amazon PrimePulse (2005)April 7
Amazon PrimeTrollhunter (2011)April 7
Amazon PrimeTHEM (2021)April 9
Amazon PrimeParanormal Activity 4 (2012)April 12
Amazon PrimeSpontaneous (2020)April 12
Amazon PrimeMerantau (2010)April 21
ARROWBad Meat (2011)April 12
ARROWSlaughterhouse (1987)April 12
ARROWMirror Mirror (1990)April 16
ARROWSoul Contact (2020)April 16
ARROWDo You See What I See? (2016)April 16
ARROWClapboard Jungle (2021)April 19
ARROWBattle Royale (2002) - Director’s and Theatrical cutsApril 26
ARROWBattle Royale II (2003) - Requiem and Revenge cutsApril 26
ARROWVideo Nasties: Moral Panic, Censorship and Videotape and Video Tape Nasties: Draconian Days (2014)April TBA
The Criterion ChannelNight Train Murders (1975)
April 1
The Criterion ChannelThe Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970)April 1
The Criterion ChannelHair Wolf (2018)April 6
HBO MaxBlindness (2008)April 1
HBO MaxThe Collection (2012)April 1
HBO MaxDark Shadows (2012)April 1
HBO MaxDead Silence (2007)April 1
HBO MaxGhost Rider (2007)April 1
HBO MaxLeatherface Texas Chainsaw Massacre III (1990)April 1
HBO MaxThe Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006) - Extended Version April 1
HBO MaxWhite Noise (2005)April 1
HBO MaxWithin (2016)April 1
HBO MaxWolves At The Door (2017)April 1
HBO MaxThe New Mutants (2020)April 10
Hulu28 Days Later (2003)April 1
HuluBug (2007)April 1
HuluCaptain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974)April 1
HuluThe Dead Zone (1983)April 1
HuluThe Gift (2000)April 1
HuluLady in a Cage (1964)April 1
HuluMad Max (1980)April 1
HuluThe Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959)April 1
HuluMotel Hell (1980)April 1
HuluScary Movie 4 (2006)April 1
HuluThe Skull (1965)April 1
HuluSo I Married an Axe Murderer (1993)April 1
HuluBlair Witch (2016)April 3
HuluParanormal Activity 4 (2012)April 12
HuluSpontaneous (2020)April 12
IMDb TVAnaconda (1997)April 1
IMDb TVCirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant (2009)April 16
NetflixInsidious (2010)April 1
NetflixLeprechaun (1993)April 1
NetflixThe Possession (2012) April 1
NetflixWhat Lies Below (2020)Apri4
NetflixCrimson Peak (2015) April 16
NetflixThings Heard and Seen (2021)April 29
ShudderCreepshow - Season 2, Premiere (2021)April 1
ShudderTrain to Busan Presents: Peninsula (2020)April 1
ShudderThe Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)April 1
ShudderDon’t Panic (1988)April 5
ShudderZombie for Sale (2019)April 5
ShudderThe Power (2021)April 8
ShudderThe McPherson Tape (1989)April 12
ShudderThe Day of the Beast (1995)April 12
ShudderDance with the Devil (1997)April 12
ShudderThe Banishing (2020)April 15
ShudderThe Last Drive-in with Joe Bob Briggs, season premiereApril 16
Shudder2021 FANGORIA Chainsaw Awards (2021)April 18 - 8pm ET / 5pm PT
ShudderThe Stepfather (1987)April 19
ShudderThale (2012)April 19
ShudderThe Conspiracy (2012)April 19
ShudderHousebound (2014)April 19
ShudderBoys from County Hell (2020)April 22
ShudderThe Similiars (2015)April 26
ShudderAttack of the Demons (2019)April 26
ShudderIn Search of Darkness: Part II (2021)April 26
ShudderHorror Express (1972)April 29
ShudderDeadhouse Dark (2020)April 29
TubiScary Movie 4 (2006)April 1
TubiMoon (2009)April 1
Tubi30 Days of Night (2007)April 1
Tubi30 Days of Night: Dark Days (2010)April 1
TubiCry Wolf (2005)April 1
TubiDominion: Prequel to the Exorcist (2005)April 1
TubiHome Invasion (2015)April 1
TubiNight of the Living Dead (1990)April 1
TubiPsycho IV: The Beginning (1990)April 1
TubiRaw (2016)April 1
TubiThe Intruders (2015)April 1
TubiThe Unborn (2009)April 1
TubiWer (2013)April 1
TubiFlatliners (2017)April 1
TubiResident Evil (2002)April 1
TubiResident Evil: Extinct (2007)April 1
TubiSlumber (2017)April 15

Horror Titles Expiring from Streaming Soon

Streaming ServiceMovieDate
HBO MaxAn American Werewolf In London (1981)April 30
HBO MaxCritters 2 (1988)April 30
HBO MaxCritters 4 (1992)April 30
HBO MaxThe Exorcist (1973)April 30
HBO MaxGodzilla: King Of The Monsters (2019)April 30
HBO MaxGodzilla Vs. Kong (2021)April 30
HBO MaxThe Hills Have Eyes II (2007) - Extended VersionApril 30
HBO MaxThe Hills Have Eyes (2006) - Extended VersionApril 30
HBO MaxThe Invisible Man (2020)April 30
HBO MaxMa (2019)April 30
HBO MaxOpen Water (2004)April 30
HBO MaxOpen Water 2: Adrift (2006)April 30
HBO MaxTim Burton’s Corpse Bride (2005)April 30
HBO MaxWhat Ever Happened To Baby Jane? (1962)April 30
HuluBeloved (1998)April 30
HuluDamien - Omen II (1978)April 30
HuluFrankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974)April 30
HuluFrom Hell (2001)April 30
HuluGargoyles: Wings of Darkness (2004)April 30
HuluThe Haunting In Connecticut (2009)April 30
HuluThe Haunting In Connecticut 2: Ghosts Of Georgia (2013)
April 30
HuluMad Max (1980)April 30
HuluMotel Hell (1980)
April 30
HuluThe Omen (1976)April 30
NetflixAntidote (2018)April 14
NetflixCirque du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant (2009)April 16
NetflixThe Vatican Tapes (2015)April 20
NetflixDoom (2005)April 28
NetflixI Am Legend (2007)April 30
Meg Shields: Based in the Pacific North West, Meg enjoys long scrambles on cliff faces and cozying up with a good piece of 1960s eurotrash. As a senior contributor at FSR, Meg's objective is to spread the good word about the best of sleaze, genre, and practical effects.