
Remember that Scream Factory’s main home Shout Factory TV has tons of horror and cult classics on demand, as well as episodes of adjacent interests like Mystery Science Theater 3000 and Elvira’s Movie Macabre. While the streaming channel itself runs such movies as Body Bags, Asylum, and The Devil’s Rain, some might find a specific curated channel limiting. That mindset extends nicely into their horror-specific streaming service Scream Factory TV.Īvailable through the Shout Factory TV app as its own unique entity, Scream Factory streams titles from their own library all day every day. Shout Factory has long been a champion of famous, infamous, and particularly forgotten horror.

Remember as well that if you don’t feel like digging around for something to watch, Pluto TV has several distinct dedicated horror channels, including one dominated by major horror releases like The Devil’s Rejects. While DTV releases and low budget releases dominate, there’s a lot of material that many would consider first-run, including horror. Their selection is often surprising, with tons of movies that can’t be found anywhere else.

While it’s perhaps best known for offering a few hundred free-with-ads streaming channels, covering every imaginable genre, interest, or even the desire to watch an entire channel dedicated to one TV show, Pluto has a strong on-demand section, too. The Roku Channel doesn’t have the largest library of free horror movies to stream, but it’s got enough to keep most fans entertained.Ī longtime source of free content, including hundreds of horror films covering many interests, Pluto TV remains popular with good reason.

Fanatics may want to look somewhere else, if you’re the kind of person who wants to see the horror movies currently flying under the radar. The service also offers numerous horror-centric TV shows, as well as several live channels showing different flavors of the genre 24/7. The range covers fan favorite films like Return of the Living Dead and John Carpenter’s remake of The Thing, as well as movies such as the 80s cult classic Waxwork, to any number of seemingly endless Howling or Children of the Corn sequels. The Roku Channel goes pretty deep selection-wise.
