10 Movies Like ‘The Woman in the Yard’

The Woman in the Yard (2025)
The Woman in the Yard (2025)

Here are Cinephile Corner’s 10 recommendations for movies like The Woman in the Yard:

Smile

Smile (2022)

While Smile delivers on a couple creative and freaky scares, it ultimately falls apart with a prototypical first hour and a generally confusing second one. Sosie Bacon stars as a traumatized doctor looking for answers to her visions.

Read our full review of Smile

Cobweb

Cobweb (2023)

Cobweb might be accused of adhering to some familiar horror tropes, but its commitment to its genre roots is what makes it stand out. The movie surpasses expectations with its tight narrative, commendable performances, and a commitment to delivering unadulterated horror.

Read our full review of Cobweb

Hold Your Breath

Hold Your Breath (2024)

Hold Your Breath has a premise that is fit for a 20 minute short film, not a full length feature. It has a rather easy one sentence elevator pitch to sell you on its terror. A mother of two believes a sinister presence that takes the form of “The Grey Man” is closing in on her home during the Dust Bowl in 1930s Oklahoma. Directors Will Joines and Karrie Crouse use this place and time period to tell a story of guilt and grief set to the backdrop of a historical event shutting people indoors and with their own thoughts.

Read our full review of Hold Your Breath

Speak No Evil

Speak No Evil (2024)

While I appreciate many of James Watkins’ directorial choices and the strong performances from James McAvoy, Aisling Franciosi, Scoot McNairy, and Mackenzie Davis—who all have great chemistry—I can’t shake the feeling that Speak No Evil missed an opportunity. It could have delivered a real shock to the studio horror system but instead falls into the same familiar patterns. The film ends up being a watered-down, more subdued version of the original, which felt fresh and unsettling just a few years ago. It’s not a complete failure, but it misses the mark.

Read our full review of Speak No Evil

Night Swim

Night Swim (2024)

With a PG-13 rating, and a concept so thinly developed beyond “scary swimming pool,” Night Swim relies heavily on cheap scares and creepy underwater sight gags – where few of which actually earn their keep. Wyatt Russell and Kerry Condon star in a sometimes silly, often underdeveloped horror movie.

Read our full review of Night Swim

Carry-On

Carry-On (2024)

Jaume Collet-Serra wouldn’t seem like the next director to add to that list, given his recent track record with disappointing Dwayne Johnson vehicles like Jungle Cruise and Black Adam. However, his holiday thriller Carry-On defies expectations, moving quickly and building enough tension to make it a surprisingly worthwhile entry in the Netflix action canon.

Read our full review of Carry-On

Doctor Sleep

Doctor Sleep (2019)

There is supposedly a better director’s cut of Doctor Sleep out there that fills in the gaps of a few character traits, motivations, and decisions. Honestly, I’m not sure I care. This is about as rigorous and uninteresting as any horror franchise rebooted in recent memory. It’s a glossy, airless, and ultimately unnecessary return to a world that was perfect as is.

Read our full review of Doctor Sleep

Ring

Ring (1998)

Ring is among the most influential movies to ever come out of Japan. Setting aside it’s successful attempt to blend Japanese filmmaking into the mainstream, Hideo Nakata‘s wildly successful 1998 film is one of the horror genre’s most well-regarded releases. It transcended where it came from, becoming an international powerhouse and spawning and English-language remake due to its popularity.

Read our full review of Ring

Black Adam

Black Adam (2022)

When Black Adam isn’t trying to piece together narrative fragments into a puzzle without any inside pieces, it’s cramming in every genre trope at its disposal. The action is clunky and unengaging and relentless, bludgeoning you with one horribly rendered CGI fighting sequence after another. Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson fails to deliver a new hierarchy for the now-defunct DC extended universe.

Read our full review of Black Adam

Evil Dead Rise

Evil Dead Rise (2023)

There aren’t many horror franchises able to reinvent themselves as often as Evil Dead does while still maintaining relevancy and quality. Maybe it’s because Sam Raimi holds his creation so close to his heart that only a select few are able to take on the premise, or maybe it’s because the premise seems simple and malleable enough to make nearly anything work. It can shoot for the downright zany and ludicrous with Evil Dead II or Army of Darkness, or it can strive to be like Lee Cronin’s newest spin Evil Dead Rise – a movie so sick and twisted that you can’t help but give it its dues by the time the credits roll.

Read our full review of Evil Dead Rise

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