If “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen” pulled you in with its creeping sense of dread and relationship-driven storytelling, you are not alone. The new Netflix series unfolds over the tense days leading up to a wedding, following a couple whose doubts and fears begin to spiral into something far more unsettling.

Created by Haley Z. Boston and executive produced by The Duffer Brothers, the show favors unease over jump scares, blending emotional intimacy with paranoia and dark humor. If that mix of psychological horror and character focus is what kept you watching, these ten Netflix titles offer a similar kind of lingering, under-the-skin tension.

The Haunting of Hill House

One of the defining horror series of the streaming era, this story builds its impact through emotional depth as much as supernatural fear. Mike Flanagan crafts a dual-timeline narrative that explores how trauma reshapes a family long after they leave a haunted home behind. Rather than relying on constant shocks, it allows dread to accumulate through memory and regret. That focus on interior lives makes its most frightening moments feel deeply personal.

Midnight Mass

Set in an isolated island community, this production begins with the arrival of a mysterious young priest whose presence coincides with a series of seemingly miraculous events. As the town embraces these changes, long-standing tensions around faith, guilt, and redemption start to surface. Conversations carry as much weight as the horror itself, with characters openly confronting belief and morality. The tension builds as devotion turns into something more unsettling, revealing how easily hope can shift into fanaticism.

Marianne

This French title embraces a more aggressive style, yet still grounds its terror in character psychology. A writer haunted by her own creations returns to her hometown, only to find that fiction and reality are merging. The show rarely offers relief, sustaining a relentless sense of menace. Its imagery is striking, but it is the emotional vulnerability of its lead that gives the horror weight.

Archive 81

A restoration specialist becomes obsessed with a collection of tapes tied to a missing filmmaker, leading him into a labyrinth of cult activity and unexplained phenomena. The structure allows past events to bleed into the present, creating a layered mystery. Instead of immediate answers, the series builds tension through fragmentation and suggestion.

The Fall of the House of Usher

Drawing from the work of Edgar Allan Poe, this one tracks the collapse of a powerful family as long-buried secrets resurface. Each chapter adds a new perspective, gradually revealing the full scope of the story. Its tone moves between intimate drama and grotesque spectacle without losing cohesion.

The Haunting of Bly Manor

A more restrained follow-up to “Hill House,” this series shifts the focus from outright terror to atmosphere and emotional complexity. Created by Mike Flanagan and inspired by the work of Henry James, it centers on an au pair caring for two children in a remote English estate where something is quietly wrong. The horror unfolds gradually, rooted in memory, love, and loss rather than constant shocks. By the time its central tragedy becomes clear, the title has transformed into something as heartbreaking as it is unsettling.

The Midnight Club

Set in a hospice where young patients share stories, this show uses horror as a way to confront mortality. Each tale introduces a different tone, but all are tied together by the characters’ shared reality. The framing device allows for both experimentation and emotional continuity.

All of Us Are Dead

This high-intensity series places a group of students at the center of a sudden zombie outbreak. The confined setting amplifies the urgency, forcing characters to make difficult choices under pressure. Relationships evolve quickly as survival becomes the only priority. Beneath the action, the title still finds room to explore fear, loyalty, and loss.

Kingdom

Blending historical drama with horror, this show follows a crown prince investigating a mysterious illness spreading across the kingdom during Korea’s Joseon era. What begins as a political inquiry soon reveals a terrifying plague that reanimates the dead, forcing him to confront both a growing epidemic and a web of court conspiracies. The period setting adds texture, grounding the supernatural elements in a detailed world. As power struggles intensify and the outbreak wors

Castle Rock

Inspired by the universe of Stephen King, this series is set in the fictional Maine town that connects many of his stories. The first season follows a death row attorney who becomes entangled in a mystery surrounding a silent prisoner discovered in a hidden cell, while later episodes expand into other unsettling events tied to the town’s history. Rather than adapting a single novel, it builds an original narrative that pulls from King’s recurring themes of guilt, fate, and psychological torment.