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Hive-minded people can be inspirational or, in some cases, evil. There’s nothing like a little gaslit paranoia to break you down psychologically. In some of the movies below, they do just that.
Whether it be a gang of demon-worshipping kids, a Norwegian cult, or immersive gaslighting, the theme is always the same: everyone wants you dead or converted.
Not a single killer. Not a single demon. The entire community is the problem. These are horror films where small towns, cultish groups, or insular societies protect the evil, feed it, or are the evil. The setting isn’t a backdrop — it’s complicit.
The Wicker Man
A devout policeman investigates a disappearance only to realize the entire island is aligned against him. Sunshine, folk songs, and smiling faces mask ritualistic dread. Community as weapon.
Hot Fuzz
Yes, it’s a comedy — but beneath the satire is something genuinely dark: a village willing to kill to preserve “perfection.” Mob control dressed as civic pride.
Children of the Corn
When the kids run the town, you know something’s wrong. Religious fanaticism and collective belief turn farmland into nightmare terrain.
Dead & Buried
An underrated gem where a seaside town hides a grotesque secret. The horror builds as you realize the sheriff may be the only one not in on it.
The Village
Fear is manufactured to control the population. Shyamalan’s slow-burn reveals how leadership manipulates isolation to maintain power.
Messiah of Evil
A sleepy California town with blank-faced residents and eerie communal behavior. Dreamlike, unsettling, and deeply underseen.
Midsommar
A sun-drenched cult that operates with chilling politeness. Ritual becomes normalized when everyone smiles at the same time.
Antebellum
A modern entry where the horror isn’t folklore — it’s systemic. The evil thrives because a coordinated group chooses to maintain it. Tradition becomes weaponized, and the real dread comes from how organized the cruelty is.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries
