The Best Horror Movies About Girlhood

Summary

  • Teen girl horror films like Ginger Snaps challenge patriarchal norms with female-centered storytelling.
  • Teeth takes on purity culture through a unique body horror lens, exploring themes of female empowerment.
  • Raw offers a feminist perspective on coming-of-age through the lens of cannibalism and suppressed desires.

Teen girls are the unsung heroes of horror cinema. Long cast as slasher bait and revenge-seeking victims, their bodies are all too often reduced to bloody spectacles, with little attention paid to their inner lives, making it easier to dismiss their roles as purely exploitative and one-dimensional.

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Films like Ginger Snaps and Raw break this tradition, reframing the horror around distinctly feminine fears and experiences in a world where patriarchy is the true villain. These movies provide a refreshing take on the genre and an insight into the terrors of coming-of-age through the lens of femininity. The following are the best women-led horror films that explore the messy reality of girlhood.

10

The Craft

A 90s Teen Horror About The Occult, Outcasts, And Girl Power


The Craft Movie Poster

The Craft


Release Date

May 3, 1996

Runtime

101 Minutes

Director

Andrew Fleming





An essential entry into the ’90s teen movie canon, The Craft kick-started a trend of movies and TV series centered around teen witchcraft. Set in a Catholic school, it follows the arrival of a troubled new student who joins a coven of magical misfits and triggers their powerful awakening.

We are the weirdos, mister.

In this witchy cult classic, teenage insecurities and sisterly connections converge into a supernatural, gothic portrait of teenage girl rage and rebellion. While its dated elements, especially in the third act, undermine its feminist potential, the moments leading up to the finale perfectly encapsulate the otherness of growing up as a girl.

9

It Follows

A Haunting Allegory Of Teenage Anxiety And Coming-Of-Age


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It Follows


Release Date

March 27, 2015

Runtime

100minutes

Director

David Robert Mitchell





David Robert Mitchell’s It Follows is an arthouse horror film with a remarkably unique premise: an inescapable curse passed on through sex. After a seemingly ordinary sexual encounter, college student Jay finds herself stalked by a shape-shifting entity that only she can see.

Beneath the pastel-colored, slow-burn horror is a story rooted in teenage fears regarding sex, loss of innocence, and the end of youth. With its synth-heavy score and sleepy suburban visuals, It Follows creates a disorienting, hard-to-place world that blends ’70s, ’80s, and modern aesthetics, suggesting the horrors of growing up are as inescapable as they are timeless.

8

Lisa Frankenstein

The Classic Monster Story Reborn As 80s Bubble Gum Horror


Lisa Frankenstein Poster With Kathryn Newton and Cole Sprouse Sitting Atop an Electrified Tanning Bed

Lisa Frankenstein


Release Date

February 9, 2024

Runtime

101 Minutes

Director

Zelda Williams





An absurdist, adolescent spin on the classic horror novel, Lisa Frankenstein has cult classic written all over it. Dubbed a ‘coming of rage,’ it depicts the self-discovery of a teen girl who spends too much time in a cemetery and, one night, resurrects a corpse, gradually shaping him into the perfect boyfriend.

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Mary Shelley penned Frankenstein as a teenager, so it’s fitting that Lisa Frankenstein returns the iconic reanimation story to the control of a young woman. In this version, Lisa isn’t a scientist; she’s a lovesick seamstress, stitching together her undead dream boy with the tools tied to girlhood, from a sewing needle to a faulty tanning bed. Written by Diablo Cody, of Jennifer’s Body fame, the film channels teen angst, rage, and grief into an unapologetically girly and grotesque horror rom-com.

7

Gretel & Hansel

A Bewitching Feminist Folk Horror Film


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Gretel & Hansel


Release Date

January 30, 2020

Runtime

87 minutes

Director

Oz Perkins





Directed by Osgood Perkins, Gretel & Hansel reimagines the familiar Brothers Grimm fairy tale with Gretel’s coming-of-age story at the forefront. The film’s inverted title signals this shift, flipping the narrative on its head to one that centers on girlhood, autonomy, and awakening power.

He’ll soon come to fear you, as all men should if they’re smart. And fear so easily turns to hatred.

The film follows sixteen-year-old Gretel, who is thrust into the role of caretaker after she and her younger brother flee their parents in search of food and safety. Their descent into the woods marks Gretel’s first steps into womanhood and into her growing power, as they encounter a reclusive witch with whom Gretel forms a strange bond. Framed by dreamlike cinematography and laced with feminist dialogue, Gretel & Hansel is a slow-burning, horrifying tale about feminine agency and the patriarchal culture that fears and suppresses it.

6

Teeth

A Comedic Body Horror That Takes A Bite Out Of Purity Culture


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Teeth


Release Date

January 18, 2008

Runtime

94 Minutes

Director

Mitchell Lichtenstein





Deserving of the second life that Jennifer’s Body eventually received, Teeth is a criminally overlooked coming-of-age horror story. Plagued by its taboo premise, it was quickly dismissed as shock cinema rather than recognized for the sharp satire of purity culture it is. The film follows Dawn, a teenage abstinence advocate who, after a non-consensual sexual encounter, learns that she has vagina dentata, aka a ‘toothed vagina.’

Dawn must then learn to navigate life with her unique anatomy as she is repeatedly taken advantage of. Unfolding like an offbeat, darkly comedic revenge movie peppered with gorey castration scenes, Teeth unpacks sexual trauma, male entitlement, and the repression of female sexuality.

5

Raw

A Feminist Cannibal Coming-Of-Age


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Raw


Release Date

March 15, 2017

Runtime

99 Minutes

Director

Julia Ducournau





Prioritizing emotional rather than objective realism, Julia Duocurnau’s Raw depicts a teenage girl’s coming-of-age through the language of body horror. The French film tells the story of Justine, a lifelong vegetarian newly enrolled in a veterinary school attended by her older sister, who shares her newfound desire for human flesh.

The film draws clear parallels between Justine’s appetite and her sexual awakening, both of which emerge as an expression of her suppressed desires. The film is bursting with hard-to-watch, nauseating gore and packed with feminist subversion, as cannibalism comes to be a horrific stand-in for the nightmare of growing up in a world hostile to feminine autonomy.

4

The Witch

A Horrific Folktale Of Feminine Sexuality And Witchcraft


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The Witch


Release Date

February 19, 2016

Runtime

92minutes

Director

Robert Eggers





The Witch follows Thomasin, a teenage girl in seventeenth-century New England who is blamed for her family’s misfortunes after they are banished to the wilderness and are soon overcome by paranoia and dark forces, namely that of the titular witch.

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With its foreboding and discordant score, Robert Eggers’ feature-length debut transforms the anxieties of a teenage girl amid religious repression into a dread-filled folk horror nightmare. Thomasin’s family objectifies, mystifies, and demonizes her budding womanhood, equating it with an evil that she eventually embraces as a means of escape. The Witch explores the perceived sin of feminine independence in a patriarchal world, where the horror is simply being a teenage girl.

3

Carrie

A Tragic Tale Of Blood And Bullies


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Carrie


Release Date

November 3, 1976

Runtime

98 minutes

Director

Brian De Palma





Brian De Palma’s Carrie is the film that first established girlhood as a horror movie. It follows the titular Carrie White, a lonely teenager who experiences the nightmarish arrival of her first period in a high school locker room.

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The traumatic moment triggers a slow-burning storm of pent-up telekinetic rage, fueled by years of bullying and the oppressive control of her fanatically religious mother. The pressure eventually builds to a fiery and bloody climax of paranormal payback at prom. Sissy Spacek’s haunting performance as Carrie captures the fragile terror of girlhood and her now-iconic prom night bloodbath is burned into horror history.

2

Jennifer’s Body

A Satirical Horror About Boy-Eating Teenage Girls


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Jennifer’s Body


Release Date

September 18, 2009

Runtime

102 minutes

Director

Karyn Kusama





Cult-favorite Jennifer’s Body follows the close yet mismatched friendship between popular cheerleader Jennifer and nerdy Needy, which is further complicated when Jennifer becomes possessed by a demon and develops a taste for her male classmates.

Dripping with mid-2000s emo energy, Jennifer’s Body is a movie made by women for women. Bold in its exploration of competitive femininity, female friendship, lesbian desire, and the male gaze, it speaks directly to teenage girls. Though it was originally misunderstood and mismarketed, the film has since found its target audience, who now celebrate its endlessly quotable dialogue, subversive themes, and captivating performances. A decade later, Jennifer’s Body has claimed its place as a feminist horror classic.

1

Ginger Snaps

A Trangressive Reinvention Of The Werewolf Movie


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Ginger Snaps


Release Date

August 1, 2000

Runtime

108 minutes

Director

John Fawcett





Few films capture the messiness and metamorphosis of girlhood quite like Ginger Snaps. This Canadian cult horror classic follows two socially outcast sisters, Ginger and Brigitte Fitzgerald, whose close relationship is tested when Ginger is bitten by a werewolf on the night she gets her first period.

Something’s wrong. Like more than you being just… female.

Ginger’s lycanthropic transformation is playfully figured as the horror of coming into adolescence, a dark allegory for how women’s sexuality is often treated as abnormal, threatening, or even monstrous. Though satirical, Ginger Snaps provides an emotionally raw portrait of girlhood married with gore, exploring sexuality, puberty, and sisterhood with thoughtful feminist consideration and leaving room for possible queer and trans readings. As an early-2000s update to the ‘menstrual horror’ canon established by Carrie, Ginger Snaps created the blueprint for a lot of the films on this list.

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