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Welcome to the Horror Issue

How a century of horror movies reflects our existential fears, the surreal real estate market for ghostly homes, and visiting a haunted house in 2021.

A gray outline of the United States sits in the center of the image as drips of navy blood slide down the nation.
A gray outline of the United States sits in the center of the image as drips of navy blood slide down the nation.
Doug Chayka for Vox

When the pandemic began in March 2020, a nation shut itself indoors, flipped on the television, and began streaming scary movies. Bird Box and I Am Legend let us live out our survivalist nightmares; Contagion felt like a prophecy. Unexpected global catastrophe had long been the stuff of horror movies; suddenly, horror was real. It was knocking on our doors.

The question of what we have to fear after a pandemic has upended our way of life, after many have dulled to the reality of hundreds of thousands of fellow Americans dead, haunted us as we conceived this month’s issue of the Highlight. Should we fear a few onscreen sociopaths anymore? Or the telltale fires and floods of climate change? Or only our feral, unpredictable selves?

In our cover story, Aja Romano looks to the movies to root out American fear. Films have long served as a mirror for our collective anxieties about the unfamiliar, powerlessness, and environmental breakdown. From Godzilla and other monsters of our own making to Psycho’s Norman Bates to Get Out’s unsuspecting boyfriend Chris, the villains and protagonists of our favorite horror movies serve as a proxy for us, lumbering through a century of war, social unrest, and tectonic change.

Housing reporter Jerusalem Demsas asks what it means that things that go bump in the night have the power to affect housing prices (even if they’re only in our heads), creating a cottage industry of businesses that “cleanse” homes of untoward spirits and warn homebuyers of a house’s unseemly past. And Luke Winkie went to another sort of haunted house: New York’s Blood Manor, a seasonal scare-fest where he sought to learn what it feels like to venture out in search of thrills when one’s year has already been defined by fear.

Finally, Terry Nguyen traces the culture’s voyeuristic obsession with “botched” plastic surgery that punishes women for bad work even as it demands artificiality, and Chris Chafin relives the mainstreaming of scary thrills for kids in the ’80s and ’90s.

This month’s issue is fun, funny, and tinged with the idea that fear is an American obsession. We hope you enjoy it.


An original take on the poster for the Bride of Frankenstein movie.
Carlos Basabe for Vox

The horror century

The scariest movies have always been a dark mirror on Americans’ deepest fears and anxieties.

By Aja Romano


Rows of houses lined up on a dark street. One house is illuminated by a red light.
Zac Freeland/Vox

House isn’t selling? Blame the ghosts.

Realtor? Check. Appraiser? Check. Ghostbuster? Check.

By Jerusalem Demsas


Man in a scary mask crawls towards the camera while bloods spatters on the floor and red lighting illuminates his body.
Michael Delrosso/Courtesy of Blood Manor

Can a haunted house even scare us in 2021?

When a pandemic rages just outside our doors, maybe escapism is all we can hope for.

By Luke Winkie


A photomontage of a person getting injections in their face and breasts, which have been replaced with cherries.
Beth Hoeckel for Vox

The morbid appeal of “botched” plastic surgery

Cosmetic procedures are on the rise. So is our voyeuristic fascination with how they go wrong.

By Terry Nguyen


Illustration of a small child sitting on a small bed with a large tentacled monster hovering over.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

The age of monsters

In the ’80s and ’90s, kids’ media was full of murder and mayhem. What changed?

By Chris Chafin

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