Horror Movie Franchises, Ranked
If you've ever glanced at our site before, you are probably well aware of the fact that horror movies receive poor reviews from professional critics far more often than they receive praise. Nevertheless, could there be some horror franchises that have distinguished themselves in the eyes of reviewers?
To find out, we have ranked every horror movie franchise by the average Metascore for all of the films in the franchise. (We are only including franchises with a minimum of four films with Metascores.) The results can be viewed in the gallery above.
Note that there is a major caveat: At some point, many horror franchises stop releasing films in theaters and switch to a direct-to-video model. (Or they choose that route from the beginning.) Those straight-to-home-video films tend not to get reviewed by our usual group of critics, and thus we are unable to calculate a Metascore for those films. (Metascores require at least four reviews.) As a result, several long-running horror franchises did not hit our four-films-with-scores minimum and are not included in our ranking. These excluded franchises include:
Critters (only 2 scored films: Critters and Critters 2)
Phantasm (3 scored: Phantasm, Phantasm II, Phantasm V)
Prom Night (3 scored: Prom Night and its 2008 remake, plus Prom Night II)
Puppet Master (of the 13 films, only this year's The Littlest Reich has a score)
Return of the Living Dead (2 of the 5 films first debuted on TV and don't have scores)
... as well as Anaconda, Children of the Corn, Lake Placid, Leprechaun, Pumpkinhead, Silent Night, Tremors, and Wrong Turn, to name a few.
Also excluded are a few very old franchises (like Universal's 1930s/40s Frankenstein series) and foreign franchises that don't have at least four films with proper American theatrical releases. This latter group includes various Japanese monster movie properties as well as more recent titles like Ju-on and The Ring.
In addition to introducing the world to a previously unrecognized need for larger aquatic vessels, Steven Spielberg's 1975 thriller (based on Peter Benchley's novel) changed Hollywood forever. An all-time classic that briefly became the highest-grossing film in history, Jaws—along with Star Wars, which replaced it atop the box office chart two years later—helped usher in the era of the summer blockbuster (as well as the entire concept of a "wide release.") If it weren't for that man-eating shark terrorizing a New England town, your summer calendar wouldn't be filled with big-budget action films every year.
Spielberg, of course, moved on to other projects, but Jaws ultimately returned for three sequels, which failed to come anywhere close to matching the financial or critical heights of the original. You're probably better off thinking about Jaws as a single film rather than a franchise.
The films:
87 Jaws (1975)
51 Jaws 2 (1978)
27 Jaws 3-D (1983)
15 Jaws: The Revenge (1987)