---
title: 'Horror Movies That Are ACTUALLY Terrifying'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=Bi07cmPjd3A'
video_id: 'Bi07cmPjd3A'
date: 2026-06-30
duration_sec: 1490
---

# Horror Movies That Are ACTUALLY Terrifying

> Source: [Horror Movies That Are ACTUALLY Terrifying](https://youtube.com/watch?v=Bi07cmPjd3A)

## Summary

The speaker argues that modern horror is not dead, presenting 10 genuinely terrifying films that are often hard to find. Each movie is praised for its unique approach to fear, from slow-burn psychological dread to brutal realism.

### Key Points

- **Modern horror is not dead** [0:00] — The speaker claims most modern horror is trash but lists 10 movies that prove terrifying cinema still exists, though they are hard to find.
- **Lake Mungo – slow-burn grief horror** [0:13] — An Australian mockumentary about a family grieving a drowned daughter. It uses subtle scares and realistic performances to create deep emotional dread.
- **Hell House LLC – haunted attraction gone wrong** [4:10] — A found-footage film about a haunted house set up in a genuinely haunted hotel. Tension builds through small anomalies leading to a deadly opening night.
- **Butterfly Kisses – blinking brings death** [6:27] — An urban legend about Peeping Tom that gets closer every time you blink. The film is structured as a documentary about the cursed footage.
- **Exhibit A – family destruction through home video** [9:52] — A British found-footage film where a seemingly normal dad spirals into violence, captured on a daughter's camcorder.
- **Final Prayer – Vatican investigators meet pagan horror** [11:54] — Miracle investigators discover a church built on an ancient pagan temple, leading to a terrifying underground encounter.
- **The Killing Ground – realistic wilderness terror** [14:10] — A couple camping in Australia encounters two psychopaths who previously murdered another family. Brutal and grounded.
- **Fresh – cannibal romance** [16:44] — A charming man turns out to be a cannibal who sells human meat. The film contrasts a cute romance with horrific violence.
- **Possessor – identity theft via brain implant** [19:32] — An assassin uses technology to possess others and commit murder. The psychological blending of minds becomes the real horror.
- **Satan's Slaves – relentless Indonesian horror** [22:00] — A family is haunted by their deceased mother's ghost, with non-stop scares and deep folklore.
- **Weapons – missing children mystery** [23:22] — 17 kids vanish simultaneously; the film reveals the truth through multiple perspectives, breaking horror conventions.

## Transcript

People keep saying modern horror's
trash. They're not wrong about most of
it, but I've got 10 movies here that
prove genuinely terrifying cinema is
alive and well, assuming you can
actually find them, which is half the
problem. So, starting things off, I'm
going to talk about Lake Mungo. And
likely, it's probably sitting on some
streaming service you've never heard of,
charging you 12 bucks a month for the
privilege of watching three movies from
2003. I spent more time trying to find
this thing legally than I did actually
watching it, which is saying something
because this movie is slow, really slow.
But here's the weird part. I've got
crippling ADHD, bad ADHD. It's hard for
me to sit through most things without
checking my phone every 10 minutes. The
Witch, I couldn't do it. It was just too
boring for me, sue me. But Lake Mungo
had me glued to the screen for the whole
90 minutes. And honestly, I loved every
second of it. It's this Australian movie
that looks exactly like one of those
true crime documentaries your mom
watches. You know, the ones with the
dramatic recreations and talking head
interviews. Except this family isn't
talking about their missing daughter
because she ran away to join a cult. She
drowned. Alice Palmer, 16 years old,
dead in a lake. The movie starts after
the funeral. The parents are doing that
thing where they're trying to hold it
together for the cameras, but you can
tell they're completely broken inside.
The brother's angry. Everyone's just
trying to figure out how to keep living
when this massive thing happened to
their family. Then, weird stuff starts
happening in their house. Now, most
ghost movies would have dishes flying
around and doors slamming. Lake Mungo
gives you a phone ringing at 3:00 in the
morning. Pictures that look a little bit
off. A bell that should not be ringing.
Small things that make you think you're
just going to go crazy. The genius part
is how real this movie feels. These
people talk like actual grieving family
members, not movie actors in a horror
movie. The mom keeps checking Alice's
room. The dad throws himself into his
work. The brother gets protective and
angry at everyone trying to exploit
their tragedy. And this whole time
you're watching this home video footage
that's a mix of what Alice filmed before
she died and her brother documenting
everything else. Just like normal
teenager stuff, hanging out with
friends, being annoying, doing whatever
teenagers do, which makes everything so
much worse because she feels like a real
person, not some horror movie victim.
The scary part isn't really the ghost
stuff. It's watching this family try to
process something that doesn't make any
sense. How do you move on when your kid
just dies? How do you sleep in a house
when you keep hearing her voice? How do
you explain to people that you saw her
standing in your backyard? Most horror
movies give you 20 jump scares and call
it a day. Lake Mungo gives you only one,
and it's absolutely brutal because by
that point you care about these people.
You just spent an hour and a half with
them and you want them to be okay, but
they're not okay, and neither will you
after you see what Alice has left
behind. And speaking of disturbing found
footage that is going to give you
nightmares, this next movie was
literally filmed at one. Back in high
school, I dressed up as a clown and
chased people with a chainsaw. Now, you
might think, "Holy you are a
psychopath." But I promise I am not. It
was part of our student government thing
and we put on a haunted house for
charity. So, me being this like awkward
teenager who was like 6'2 and kind of
tall and broad, I was like, "Let me
scare the out of some people." This was
also back in time when everyone kept to
seeing those clowns pop up in like news
articles. So, this is at the peak of the
clown terror. What we did is we built
this whole like haunted house thing. At
the very end of this haunted house,
there was a stairwell all of the people
going through the haunted house would
walk up. I was hiding behind the door
and they would walk out into this
hallway and then at the end of the
hallway was the end of the haunted
house. And so, I would walk very quietly
out of this door behind all of them so
they could not see me. And then I would
rev a chainsaw, start laughing like,
and and chase them down the hallway. The
chainsaw had the blade taken off, so it
was completely safe. I had a lot of fun.
Everyone their pants. It was amazing
experience. Like the tallest guys that
were on my football team, they were
pretty scared. It was fun. It was
amazing. I loved it. Here's a picture
for proof. I thought that whole
situation was hilarious though, until I
watched Hell House LLC and realized how
quickly fun scares can turn into an
actual nightmare. This movie follows a
group of people setting up a haunted
house attraction in an old hotel. Seems
normal enough, right? Buy some fake
blood, set up jump scares, charge 20
bucks admission. Easy money. Except they
picked the worst possible location. The
Abaddon Hotel isn't just old and creepy.
It's legitimately haunted and not in
like a fun way. The movie shows you
their set up footage. They're hanging
decorations, testing sound effects,
placing these really unsettling clown
mannequins around the basement. Standard
haunted house stuff. But then things
start going wrong in small ways. A clown
dummy moves when nobody's near him.
Doors open by themselves. One crew
member quits after seeing something that
made him go completely pale. The smart
move would be pack up and find a
different building. But these people
have already spent their money and
opening night is coming up. 15 people
died that night. Customers and staff.
The brilliant part is how they reveal
what happened. You get pieces of the
story through security cameras,
camcorder footage and interviews with
survivors. Well, the one survivor, who
might not actually be a survivor at all.
The basement scene this movie is
absolutely perfect. They set up strobe
lights down there as part of the
attraction. Customers are walking
through, everything seems normal, and
then the strobing lights reveal one of
those clown mannequins is moving. And
not just moving, but getting closer to
this actress who's chained up as part of
the fake ritual scene. Turns out the
ritual isn't fake anymore. This movie
builds this incredible tension because
you know something terrible is going to
happen, but you're watching all the set
up footage where everyone's just doing
their job. They're joking around,
complaining about the long hours,
arguing about where to put the fog
machine, normal work stuff. Then opening
night arrives and all hell breaks loose,
literally. This movie feels so
realistic. It's another amazing found
footage gem. This is the number one
movie I recommend to any like normie
person that's trying to get into horror
movies because most of them have not
seen this movie and it will genuinely
make you your pants. Such a good movie.
By the end you literally will never want
to go to a haunted house again. But if
moving clowns are going to freak you
out, wait and see me something that
kills you when you blink. So right now
you're probably thinking about blinking
cuz I just said that. Well, sorry about
that. Try not to think about it for the
next few minutes. Why? Let's find out.
Butterfly Kisses takes this automatic
thing your eyes do and turns it into a
death sentence. Some film students in
Maryland heard this local urban legend
about a tunnel where you can summon
something called Peeping Tom. This is
what Peeping Tom looks like and he tells
you you need to like and subscribe to
the channel, right? Right? Right?
Anyways, Peeping Tom. The rules are
simple. Stand at the entrance of a
tunnel at midnight. Stare down the dark
tunnel for exactly 1 hour without
blinking and this thing will appear at
the far end. But every time you blink
afterwards,
it gets closer. The students figured
they found a loophole though. Cameras
don't blink, right? So they set up
equipment and started filming. Terrible
idea, but great for us because we get to
watch the footage they left behind and
there's a lot of footage. This whole
movie is structured as a documentary
about the documentary. Some guy named
Gavin finds these tapes years later and
becomes obsessed with proving they're
real. Nobody believes him though. His
wife thinks he's losing it. Film experts
call it fake. Even the Blair Witch
Project director shows up to basically
say it's obviously staged, which makes
everything way more convincing. The
original footage shows these two
students getting way too deep into
something they should have left alone.
They actually managed to summon this
Peeping Tom thing. You can see it in
their video. This tall figure standing
at the end of the tunnel, perfectly
still. Then the camera cuts away for a
second, and when it comes back, the
thing has moved closer. The whole movie
becomes a slow countdown. Every blink
brings death closer, and you literally
cannot stop yourself from blinking
because your body won't let you. One of
the students completely loses it and
starts seeing Peeping Tom everywhere, in
windows, behind trees, standing in his
bedroom. The other one gets so desperate
that she does something that is so
unbelievably disturbing. I'm not going
to spoil it for you, but you just got to
watch the movie. This movie shows you
the aftermath of that decision. The girl
who did the crazy thing is in a mental
hospital, still insisting that she can
see Peeping Tom coming for her. She
can't escape, and she can't unsee what's
hunting her. Meanwhile, Gavin in the
present day is going through the exact
same spiral. He's so determined to prove
the footage is real that he starts
experiencing the same things. Seeing
figures in dark places, feeling watched,
getting more and more paranoid. Then
Gavin disappears, too. They find his
body later, and suddenly the documentary
team realizes that they might be dealing
with something actually dangerous. Not
just old footage, but an active threat
that spreads through the tapes
themselves. Again, this is another found
footage movie. Call me a found footage,
but I think it's one of the best formats
of horror movies. I also think it could
be one of the worst because there's a
lot of found footage movies out there
because of how easy it is to make. But I
think when it's done well, best type of
horror movie. Unfortunately, there's a
lot of in that pile. You know what?
People got to try though. You got to
make movies or you're going to make good
movies. Have you seen some of the first
YouTube videos I made? They are
horrible. The only way I got to this
place is by being so
that I got good. It's literally how you
do everything. Ultimately though, this
movie is terrifying. But at least
Peeping Tom let you choose the horror
you went through. This next family had
no choice about their destruction. Every
family has those home videos where dad's
way too excited about the new camcorder.
You know the ones, Christmas morning,
1997. Everyone's in pajamas looking dead
inside while dad zooms in on people's
faces asking how they slept. Exhibit A
starts exactly the same way. The King
family seems perfectly normal in their
home footage. The daughter Judith got
the camera as a gift, so now she's
documenting everything. Dad Andy's
planning to move them into a bigger
house. Mom Sheila's dinner and little
brother Joe's being annoying. Standard
British family stuff. Yeah, they're
British. Andy's the star of these early
videos. He's one of those dads who
thinks they're funnier than they are,
making jokes behind the camera, talking
about his big promotion at work. Classic
dad behavior. You have seen this dad
before. He's the guy at barbecues. I
don't have to point out which guy he is.
He's just the guy at barbecues. You will
understand exactly what I mean. But then
things start getting weird in small
ways. Andy starts getting a little too
interested in everyone's business,
asking too many questions, getting upset
about stuff that shouldn't matter. The
camera catches these moments where his
smile drops for just a second before
snapping back into place. Turns out Andy
hasn't been very truthful about a lot of
things. I'm not going to spoil exactly
what those things are, but let's just
say Andy is not a very good person. And
the family doesn't know any of this yet,
but they're still making their normal
home videos while Andy is slowly
spiraling. And then one night the
unthinkable happens. Now, I'm not going
to spoil the ending of this movie, but
basically it is extremely terrifying 15
to 20 minutes. It's just genuinely
unsettling because this could happen in
real life. Again, found footage comes
in, makes it so much more real and you
are forced to watch this movie through
the perspective of a child. It's this
beautiful use of pacing to this big
snapping point and then it's just a
cluster. It's amazing though. So we
learned that families can be destroyed
by certain things. But what happens when
there's an evil out there that's older
than humans themselves? Because
apparently the Vatican has a whole
department for checking if miracles are
real. Imagine that job interview. So,
what do you do for work? Oh, I verify
whether or not God is personally
intervening in people's lives. You know,
pretty standard stuff at the office.
Final Prayer follows three of these
miracle investigators as they head to
some tiny English church where weird is
going on. Deacon's a skeptical priest
who thinks everything has a logical
explanation. Father Mark's the by the
book Vatican guy with forms to fill out.
Raise the tech expert who sets up the
cameras everywhere because apparently
God needs to be caught on film to count.
I thought the whole point of God was
like believing, but apparently the
Catholic Church, they need their
evidence. They're investigating reports
of supernatural activity. Candles
lighting themselves, objects moving
around the altar, mysterious voices.
Standard church haunting stuff that
could easily be explained by old
building noises and overactive
imaginations. The local priest is
absolutely losing his mind over what's
happening. The poor guy is so disturbed
that he jumps off the bell tower before
the investigators even finished setting
up everything. They probably should have
taken that as a warning sign though to
leave. They didn't because these are
professional miracle verifiers, so they
keep investigating. And they discover
the church was built on top of an
ancient pagan temple where people used
to sacrifice humans to some unnamed god,
which explains why this miracle doesn't
feel particularly holy. The movie spends
most of its time building up this
mystery about what's really causing all
these strange things. Then Father Mark
disappears during what was supposed to
be a routine blessing ceremony. Deacon
and Gray hear his voice calling for help
somewhere underground. So naturally,
they decide to go looking for him in the
tunnels beneath the church. This is
where this movie takes the hard left
turn into absolute nightmare territory.
I cannot spoil this movie, but this is
genuinely one of the coolest concepts
ever in a horror movie. And it is so
deeply disturbing, you just got to watch
it. I can't tell you. You just got to
watch it. I cannot spoil this for you.
You just got to watch the movie. As this
horrible thing is going on though, you
can like see these people just getting
roasted alive. That's the most Broadway
I'm going to put it. Roasted alive and
you can feel their terror through the
camera they brought with them. They're
never getting out of this. I think
religious horror is disturbing, but
human monsters in the wilderness are
somehow sometimes worse. Nothing says
romantic getaway like driving 3 hours to
a place with no cell service to sleep on
the ground and poop in the woods. That's
exactly what Ian and Sam decide to do
for New Year's Eve because apparently
hotels are for people who hate
adventure. They arrive at this beautiful
isolated campground in the Australian
bush, immediately notice another
family's tent already set up. Except
there is no family anywhere around, just
their stuff sitting there. Camping
chairs still out, food still on the
table, like everyone just vanished
mid-dinner. Normal people would probably
leave at that point. Ian and Sam decide
to stay and wait for the missing campers
to come back. Excellent decision-making
there, buddy. While they're setting up
their own tent, the movie starts showing
you what actually happened to that other
family. Not all at once though, just
through little pieces. A mom, a dad,
teenage daughter, and a baby boy who
were just trying to have a nice camping
trip until they met two local guys named
German and Shook. These are not the kind
of locals who give you directions to the
best fishing spots. These are the type
of locals you'll wish you'll never met.
German and Shook saw this family camping
alone, decided they looked like easy
targets. What follows is some of the
most realistic and horrible violence you
will see in any movie. They assault and
just do horrible things to the entire
family, but somehow the baby survives by
being left in the bush. The movie cuts
between this nightmare and Ian and Sam's
pleasant camping experience. They're
making coffee and talking about their
relationship while you're watching
footage of a family being brutally
mauled at the exact same spot. When
German and Shook realize there are new
campers, they see another opportunity.
Shook approaches Ian pretending to be
helpful and offers to guide him in
searching for the missing family.
Meanwhile, German goes after Sam. Ian
gets led straight to where the bodies
are hidden. Shook reveals everything,
basically taunting him with what he's
about to do to Sam. Ian manages to
escape into the brush and gets hurt in
the process. Sam fights back against
German and actually does some damage
before running to the woods and finding
the surviving baby. Now, everyone is
scattered through the wilderness with
two psychopaths hunting them down. The
final confrontation is absolutely brutal
and again, I am not going to spoil it.
Everything I mentioned so far right now
is just little baby teacups. Andy's just
insane. Watch the damn movie. It is
genuinely terrifying and it shows you
how horrible human beings can actually
be. But, it does it in such a clever way
and the tension just makes this such a
good horror movie. It is a completely
realistic movie that could happen to
anybody that goes camping. So, make sure
you lock your tent if you go camping.
The next movie we're going to talk about
is incredibly disturbing for other
reasons though, because it is a romance
movie. Dating apps have trained us to
expect the worst from every human
interaction. So, when a girl meets a guy
organically at the grocery store, it
feels revolutionary. Oh, wow, he was
approaching me in person while I was
buying spinach instead of asking me for
my Snapchat. He's basically Prince
Charming. Well, that's exactly how Noah
feels when she meets Steve in the
produce section. He's charming, funny,
not immediately asking for creepy stuff
or talking about cryptocurrency, and
most importantly, he's Sebastian Stan.
He's very hot. We'll just get get point
across. I can acknowledge, man to man,
that is a very attractive man. That is
like very important part of the movie
though, him being attractive and like a
kind gentleman. He's a handsome guy with
actual conversation skills who doesn't
live in his mom's basement. He's
basically everything I'm not. So, when
Steve invites her on a weekend getaway
after just a couple dates, Noah ignores
every true crime podcast she's ever
listened to and says, "Yes." Because
he's cute and he makes her laugh and
sometimes you just want to believe
people aren't terrible. Big mistake.
People suck. Steve drugs her wine on the
first night. Noah wakes up chained to a
basement and Steve's personality has
done a complete 180. Turns out the
charming guy from the grocery store is
actually Brendan, a cannibal who runs a
very specialized business selling human
meat to wealthy clients. And by human
meat, I mean the women he dates. Noah
isn't just kidnapped, she's literally
turned into livestock. Steve keeps
multiple women locked up in his basement
surgically removing pieces of them while
keeping them alive. Fresh meat, as he
cheerfully explains while dancing around
his kitchen like he's hosting a cooking
show. The movie shows you exactly how
this whole operation works. So, he
packages human flesh in vacuum-sealed
bags labeled with cuts like you'd see at
a butcher shop. Takes orders from rich
clients who want to try the most exotic
meat available. He's got like a whole
damn business model out of this damn
hobby. The worst part is how casual
Steve is about everything. He's still
the same charming guy just explaining
how he's going to harvest parts of her
body for dinner parties. He even takes a
chunk of her butt as a sample for
potential customers, which is exactly as
horrible as it sounds. That is the most
I can say about this movie without
spoiling the crazy ending, but it is so
genuinely disturbing and also wholesome.
And because it's wholesome, it makes it
more disturbing, if that makes any
sense. Like literally, you're so
romantically cute in the first 30
minutes and it's like, "Oh god, what the
[ __ ] is going on?" It takes you for a
ride and that's why it's an amazing
movie. So yeah, if you're looking to
date anybody, don't date a cannibal. It
won't end well. What about identity
theft? You ever talked about identity
theft? Well, I'm going to talk about
identity theft because remote work has
really evolved since the pandemic. You
know, it used to be you'd work from your
kitchen table pajamas. Well, now you can
just work inside someone else's brain
while they commit murder for you.
Technology is amazing. The Zesser takes
the gig economy to its logical extreme.
Tasya Vos works as an assassin. She
doesn't actually do the killing herself.
She uses brain implant technology to
possess other people and make them pull
the trigger. Then she forces them to
themselves erasing all evidence of her
involvement. It's the perfect crime
except for the part where it completely
destroys your sense of self. Tasya's
latest job involves possessing Colin,
some regular dude whose girlfriend
happens to be the daughter of a wealthy
CEO. The plan is simple. Make Colin kill
the target, then Colin
clean, efficient, untraceable. Colin's
mind fights back harder than expected.
What starts as a routine possession
turns into a psychological war inside
one body. Colin's consciousness refuses
to disappear quietly and Tasya starts
losing control of the situation. Their
thoughts begin blending together in ways
that aren't supposed to happen. The
technology starts glitching. Colin
experiences flashes of Tasya's memories
while she's stuck experiencing his.
Neither of them know who's actually in
control at any given moment. Colin might
think he's making a decision, but it's
actually Tasya pulling the strings or
vice versa. Things get really messy when
Colin stabs the implant out of his own
head trying to regain control of his
body. This damages the equipment and
tangles their minds together even more.
Now they're trapped in some kind of
psychological feedback loop. Reality and
hallucination blur completely. The movie
does not hold back on showing you
exactly how violent this process
becomes. When someone gets stabbed in
the face with a fireplace poker, you see
every puncture wound in detail. When
skulls get split with meat cleavers, the
camera does not look away. It's brutal
and realistic and absolutely nauseating.
The real horror isn't the gore. It's
watching two people lose themselves
completely as their identities dissolve
into each other. Colin starts acting
like Tajia. Tajia starts experiencing
Colin's emotions. Neither of them knows
where one person ends and the other
begins. And the ending is just plain
disturbing. It's a giant 180 that I did
not see coming. It's a disturbing movie,
but it's really damn good and that's why
I'm suggesting it. Somehow it even mixes
in body horror and that's one of my
favorite horror genres. So, if you like
that, too, you got to watch it. But,
let's move on to a different part of the
world. Let's talk about Indonesia. Why
are we talking about Indonesia? Well,
most horror movies give you breaks
between the scary parts. Little moments
to catch your breath, make jokes, check
your phone. Maybe the characters sit
around discussing their next move or
they're having relationship drama, you
know, standard pacing stuff. Well,
Satan's Slaves said no, thanks to all
that. This Indonesian horror movie
starts with a mother dying after a long
illness. From that moment until the
credits roll, something terrible is
always happening. There's no downtime,
no comic relief, just 90 minutes of
supernatural assault on this poor
family. The Suwono family thinks their
problems are over when the mom finally
passes away. She's been sick for months,
bedridden and ringing this little bell
whenever she needed help. Death was
almost a relief at that point. But, then
the bell starts ringing by itself. Mom's
ghost isn't resting peacefully. She's
wandering around the house at night,
appearing in doorways, standing outside
windows, classic haunting behavior.
Except, she's not trying to comfort her
family or deliver some important
message. She's being really freaking
creepy. The movie hits you with scare
after scare. Rocking chairs moving on
their own, faces in mirrors, hands
reaching out of dark corners. It's
relentless in the best way possible.
Just when you think you can relax,
something else jumps out at you. The
ghost mom is just the opening act. And
I'm not going to explain what that pact
is, but you will not see it coming. And
once you see it, it will all start to
make sense. What really makes this movie
scary is how in-depth they go into
building up this folklore. It makes it
even more scary in the sequel, which is
just as good. If you like foreign horror
movies, you have got to watch this movie
because it's so damn good. It's just bat
crazy. And now we finally get to the
most recent horror movie in this video,
Weapons. Horror movies have this
unspoken rule about what you're not
supposed to show. Don't hurt kids on
screen. Don't make violence too
realistic. Don't leave audiences
completely hopeless at the end. Well,
Weapons doesn't really follow those
rules. Weapons takes every parent's
worst nightmare and makes it worse. 17
kids from the same classroom vanish in
one night. All of them leave their homes
at exactly 2:17 a.m. and Naruto run into
the darkness. Only one student in their
class doesn't disappear, and everyone
immediately assumes he's involved. The
movie reveals the truth slowly through
different perspectives. Because this
movie just came out, I'm not going to
spoil it, but it is genuinely one of the
best horror movies of this year. I don't
think it's the number one horror movie.
I think Bring Her Back was a little bit
better, but it is up there. And the
scares here are so damn good. This is
the only thing I'm going to say, old
people are
scary. These are 10 horror movies I
think are actually scary. What do you
think? Do you think I'm stupid? Do you
think I'm dumb for thinking this? Let me
know down in the comments and let me
know if you think there's any movies
that are more scary out there. And for
the love of God, please do not just say
Hereditary. That is like overdone point.
I get it, Hereditary is good, but every
other person on Earth has talked about
it. So, it's almost like overblown at
this point. We get it, Hereditary is
good. Anyways, like this video if you
want more videos just like this.
Subscribe to the channel, and if you
don't want to go to bed yet, there's
more nightmares in this video on screen
now, which you should watch. Bye-bye.
