20 movies that will leave you disturbed for days

Midsommar | Image Source: Apple TV (A24, Nordisk Film)
Midsommar | Image Source: Apple TV (A24, Nordisk Film)

When it comes to movies that leave a lasting impression, some go beyond simple entertainment, exploring psychological depths and unsettling themes that stay with viewers long after the credits roll. The list below features 20 films that challenge audiences with disturbing content, provocative narratives, and mind-bending twists. These disturbing movies use graphic imagery, surrealism, or innovative storytelling that disturbs viewers.

Each film listed here is a cult classic or a more recent cinematic provocation with something new to offer, disturbing, provoking thought, and encouraging the self-reflection and introspection that moving film often envisions to do. While not for all tastes, these movies are a must-watch for those searching for more than a thrill.

1. Donnie Darko

Donnie Darko | Image Source: Prime Video ( Pandora Cinema Newmarket Films)
Donnie Darko | Image Source: Prime Video ( Pandora Cinema Newmarket Films)

Donnie Darko is a cult film with elements of a psychological thriller and science fiction revolving around a troubled teenager haunted by visions of an eerie man named Frank in a nightmarish rabbit suit. It deals with ideas such as time travel, multiple dimensions, and how any decision creates a ripple effect. The movie has a nonlinear plot that says much through what it leaves unsaid.

The surrealist cinematography and philosophical dialogues show how Donnie is in turmoil with emotional alienation and how he has some mental illness. The motif of the rabbit suit is constant and a haunting metaphor for the internal chaos the protagonist feels and the disaster approaching him. The chilling atmosphere combined with deep layers of theme ensures that Donnie Darko lingers long after the credits, speaking to anyone who has ever wondered if they were in the right universe.

2. Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer | Image Source: Prime Video (DreamWorks Pictures)
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer | Image Source: Prime Video (DreamWorks Pictures)

In Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, the viewer is put in a world of sensual pleasure, like the protagonist's obsession with smell. The work takes viewers into 18th-century France, which is set between desire and violence- when pursuing beauty can follow moral decay. Beautiful cinematography gives the film another dimension; it makes a parable between the depth of Grenouille's depravity and the social insignificance of his grotesque actions.

3. Requiem for a Dream

Requiem for a Dream | Image Source: Prime Video (Artisan Entertainment, Lionsgate, Summit Entertainment)
Requiem for a Dream | Image Source: Prime Video (Artisan Entertainment, Lionsgate, Summit Entertainment)

Requiem for a Dream follows the intertwining lives of four characters living in Brooklyn, New York, as they succumb to the destructive allure of drugs, leading to their unraveling and descent into addiction. The film delves deep into the lives of these characters, exploring their dreams, hopes, fears, and the devastating consequences of their choices. Throughout the film, the eerie score and all the intense visuals can be felt to elevate the burden behind each scene, making the audience pull even deeper into the downward spirals of the characters.

As aspirations transform into obsessions, then to despair, a transformation of the situation is dictated because hope gives way to hopelessness, illustrating an all-encompassing control over one's being through addiction. Such brutal imagery in the climax speaks about the cautionary tale and comments on society's fixation on instant gratification and the cost of puffed-up ideals. It shakes viewers and forces them to confront the fine line between dreams and nightmares and the human capacity for self-destruction.

4. Audition

Audition | Image Source: Prime Video ( Art Port)
Audition | Image Source: Prime Video ( Art Port)

Audition is presented under the guise of a seemingly romantic story at the outset but explodes in the middle as a psychological horror. The film mocks societal expectations regarding love and the depths one could stoop to achieve emotional bonding with others. Being masterful at holding the audience's tension and treading the pace from romantic to horror, it becomes more and more disturbing when that happens. The plot twists to a shocking climax and makes an essential statement about vulnerability, trust, and dark undercurrents of repressed desires that simmer beneath the surface.

5. Midsommar

Midsommar | Image Source: Apple TV (A24, Nordisk Film)
Midsommar | Image Source: Apple TV (A24, Nordisk Film)

Unlike every other film, Midsommar places the gross ritualism of its celebration against the backdrop of the serene beauty of its pastoral location. In the context of a disintegrated relationship amid grief and trauma, the story depicts sunlit horror that makes up the emotional collapse of the protagonist. Even with Ari Aster's hard work of detailing and symbolism, the storytelling remains lively and intact in the room for debates about the nature of cults and belonging in communities.

6. Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom

Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom | Image Source: Prime Video (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, United Artists)
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom | Image Source: Prime Video (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, United Artists)

One of the most reprehensible films in world cinematic history, Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom, sets boundaries related to representation and morality, creating a brutal satire of fascism and consumerism. In showing its public characters struggling with issues of power and sexual exploitation, the movie explores themes of power, corruption, and the degradation of human morality. The film is often seen as a testament to the human capacity for cruelty and an indictment of the abuse of power.

7. The Human Centipede

The Human Centipede | Image Source: Prime Video (IFC Films)
The Human Centipede | Image Source: Prime Video (IFC Films)

The Human Centipede is a rare find in the horror genre: it's so grotesque and thought-provoking that it genuinely deserves attention. In this madness of a film, a mad scientist surgically connects three unwilling victims to form a "centipede." The film is so jarring that it challenges people to confront their tolerance for on-screen violence and depravity.

On top of this, the film urges audiences to recognize the ethics behind human experimentation and science pursuits. All these have deep-seated fears of the loss of body autonomy, which turns a human being into an object of grotesque fascination. Often deemed exploitative, the movie is a thought-provoking analysis of human cruelty and forces the audience to consider the very basis of horror as entertainment.

8. Beau Is Afraid

Beau Is Afraid | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)
Beau Is Afraid | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)

Beau Is Afraid is surrealist and filled with dark humor: the contours of reality are ambiguous in the film. Mirroring modern anxieties, the protagonist's journey through a nightmare world mirrors the apprehension of doing something wrong and not being good enough. The dreamlike tale, its characters, and where the twist lies make this work an unsettling yet thoroughly riveting observation of the human condition.

9. The Lobster

The Lobster | Image Source: Netflix (NOS Audiovisuais, Element Pictures)
The Lobster | Image Source: Netflix (NOS Audiovisuais, Element Pictures)

The Lobster, by Yorgos Lanthimos, is a satirical dystopia in which singletons have a given amount of time to find someone to fall in love with; failing to do so, they will be transformed into an animal of their choice. This darkly funny tale of absurdity explores the extreme lengths people will go to to fit social expectations over love and companionship. Through deadpan dialogue and surreal imagery, this film criticizes the commodification of relationships and the human need for validation. The story makes viewers rethink romantic love, autonomy, and the pressure society heeds about finding a lover.

10. Swiss Army Man

Swiss Army Man | Image Source: Prime Video ( A24)
Swiss Army Man | Image Source: Prime Video ( A24)

Swiss Army Man takes the premise of what might have happened if a castaway on an island after a shipwreck finds a dead body emitting hiccups-who he magically and inexorably befriends. The plot results in an absurd premise unfolding into an unforgettable exercise in loneliness, human connection, and looking for meaning in a seemingly indifferent world. The movie works through inventive visuals and humor to create existential themes that question social taboos and boundaries between life and death. As the relationship between the living man and the corpse evolves, it highlights the desire for acceptance and the struggle to reconcile one's identity in isolation.

11. Tusk

Tusk | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)
Tusk | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)

Tusk turns a bizarre premise into a haunting meditation on the loss of humanity. It follows a podcaster who encounters a deranged old man intent on turning him into a walrus while searching for a strange story. As the body takes on a grotesque form, it is a frightening, metaphorical representation of obsession and transformation. Tonal shifts between horror and absurdity keep the viewer consistently on edge, and the transformation of the character catalyzes introspection into identity and the mysterious and dark result of unbridled curiosity. Tusk defies conventional limits of horror in weaving comedy and tragedy.

12. Tenet

Tenet | Image Source: Netflix (Warner Bros. Pictures)
Tenet | Image Source: Netflix (Warner Bros. Pictures)

Tenet is a puzzle movie that challenges the viewers to understand the rather intricate ideas of time and reality in a more profound and complex sense. Christopher Nolan adds another worthy and compelling screen exploration to his prestige catalog with intricate storytelling woven through fantastic visuals, sending the viewer on a head-spinning trip. The movie is based on causality and free will, and the statement at the climax attempts to leave the audience pondering over time and the consequences of our acts.

13. Enemy

Enemy | Image Source: Prime Video ( Entertainment One)
Enemy | Image Source: Prime Video ( Entertainment One)

Enemy is a psychologically grounded treatment of its protagonist as a doppelgänger, capturing themes of identity and repression. The surreal imagery and score create in the audience a sense of dread but, above all, ambiguity, which allows the discussion of human duality and maybe nature or self-identity. Its conclusion is genuinely haunting, providing viewers with much to discuss regarding the nature of reality.

14. Under the Silver Lake

Under the Silver Lake | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)
Under the Silver Lake | Image Source: Prime Video (A24)

Under the Silver Lake is about as close as any on this list to successfully marrying mystery with social commentary, lampooning the absurdity of modern life. The frantic search for meaning through the relentless scrabbling of a besieged hero distills the anxieties of our times about being connected and authentic. Its hallucinatory storytelling and lush visuals assault the vacuity of consumer culture, making for a haunting film that lingers in the viewer's consciousness, prompting them to ask more questions about the world around them.

15. Titane

Titane | Image Source: Prime Video (Diaphana Distribution)
Titane | Image Source: Prime Video (Diaphana Distribution)

Titane is an intense, visceral body horror and an identity exploration as it tells the story of a young woman who develops an unnatural relationship with machinery after a car accident that left her covered in a titanium plate on her head. The film enters into a much more conventional narrative of gender and family, and something rather bold is undertaken to grapple with trauma, love, and transformation. Its shameless visual style and incendiary subjects combine to create a range of emotions, thus making this piece an intensely personal yet universally true story about acceptance, self-discovery, and even embracing non-traditional ways of forming connections.

16. Infinity Pool

Infinity Pool | Image Source: Prime Video ( Elevation Pictures)
Infinity Pool | Image Source: Prime Video ( Elevation Pictures)

Infinity Pool combines psychological horror and social commentary, covering privilege and moral decay. Showing scenes of excess in a luxurious resort, the movie explores how humans can be violent when protected by a lack of accountability for their actions. The film provokes discussion about the ethics of escapism and the darker aspects of human nature, mainly through disturbing visuals and an unsettling narrative.

17. Videodrome

Videodrome | Image Source: Prime Video (Criterion, Universal Pictures)
Videodrome | Image Source: Prime Video (Criterion, Universal Pictures)

Videodrome is a meaningful movie involving media influence and body metamorphosis. The dreamlike narrative has blurred the borderline between the real and the fictional to make the viewer question the notion of perception in a world of hypersensitivity to media. With disturbing imagery and layered themes of lust and domination resonating supremely, the film makes people think hard about the role of technology in society and in the individual itself.

18. Saltburn

Saltburn | Image Source: Prime Video ( Amazon MGM Studios)
Saltburn | Image Source: Prime Video ( Amazon MGM Studios)

Saltburn follows the story of a young boy embroiled with an elite classmate and thus plunges into the setting of luxury. There is more to the story than the glossy sheen of elitism: it narrates the obsession and moral compromise related to pursuing status that leads to the most alarming consequences. The story wittily interlaces humor and tension, provoking the question of the price of loyalty and how close it gets to being adoration instead of exploitation when viewed through a distorted lens of belonging.

19. A Clockwork Orange

A Clockwork Orange | Image Source: Prime Video (Warner Bros)
A Clockwork Orange | Image Source: Prime Video (Warner Bros)

A Clockwork Orange, directed by Stanley Kubrick, is a chilling peek into a dystopian future where the state tries to reform violent youth with contentious psychological treatments. The film's plot follows Alex, a delinquent whose freedoms are erased as he undergoes behavioral conditioning that raises the central question of free will. The film, with its stylized violence, haunting soundtracks, and iconic imagery, reflects issues in moral dilemmas on crime, punishment, and state control. This challenges the audience to grapple with questions and problems about the ethics of using invasive methods in the pursuit of societal order and personal autonomy loss.

20. Antichrist

Antichrist | Image Source: Prime Video (Artificial Eye and American by IFC Films)
Antichrist | Image Source: Prime Video (Artificial Eye and American by IFC Films)

Antichrist is a disturbing film of mourning and depression, depicted in stark imagery. A couple's journey toward madness is wrenching enough, but the film's content is provocative and psychologically profound, pushing viewers to face their fears and anxieties. The intertwining of horror elements and art-house sensibilities produces a disturbing atmosphere that sinks in long after the experience, provoking reflection on the sources of pain and healing.

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Edited by Sarah Nazamuddin Harniswala