Movies · Streaming Guides

All the New Horror Streaming in August 2020, and What’s Leaving

Here’s our monthly rundown of all the horror flicks dropping and departing from your favorite streaming services in August 2020.
horror streaming August 2020 Wicker Man
By  · Published on August 12th, 2020

Welcome to Horrorscope, a monthly column keeping horror nerds and initiates up to date on what to watch now. Here’s a guide to all the essential horror streaming in August 2020.


October may get all the credit, but horror is an all-year thing. From camp slashers to outdoor disasters, summertime horror is a cut above. Fall has Michael Myers and Ginger Snaps. Summer has sweaty greats like The Texas Chain Saw MassacreJaws, and Sleepaway Camp. These are hot, restless, and uncomfortably well-lit nightmares. Films that capture the hellish aspects of the dog days: the bugs, the heat, the urge to get dangerously drunk around large bodies of water. Did we mention the bugs?

Indeed, it doesn’t need to be the fall for a good old fashioned seasonally resonant horror marathon. You can conjure the spookies just as easily on a hot summer night. Or in the middle of a blazing August afternoon. This month, I’ve highlighted some films from this month’s streaming additions/departures that fit nicely into the summer horror canon. We’ve got an Aussie cosmic horror filled with lace and midday naps. Plus: bugs, bonfires, and bad campers (oh my!).

Be sure to peruse the complete list below, calendar in hand, for a full picture of what horror flicks are coming and going form your favorite streaming services this month.


Pick of the Month: Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975)

horror streaming in August 2020 Picnic At Hanging Rock

Synopsis: On a drowsy Valentine’s Day in 1900, the students of an Australian finishing school take a day-trip to a nearby geological wonder. While the rest of their cohort snoozes in the sun, four students and one teacher set off into the brush. The youngest girl returns, wild-eyed and screaming. Days later, another girl emerges with no recollection of what took place. The two remaining students and their teacher are never found. Plucked, it would seem, off the face of the earth. 

Peter Weir’s gauzy Aussie period piece is a fantastically enigmatic vision, a dream-like vanishing that will drive those seeking answers to madness. It is one of the most salient examples of cosmic horror outside of the existing handful of H.P. Lovecraft adaptations. When the girls disappear, time gets funny and they climb the rock, drawn by unknown forces, never to return. Were the girls raptured? Did they get lost? Was there some sort of suicide pact? Weir lets the lack of clarity hang in the air like a mist. And, instead, he lets that uncertainty expose the fragility of the control-obsessed powers that be.

Available on Criterion Channel August 2nd.


Worms…worms everywhere

horror streaming August 2020 Squirm Shower Head

Synopsis: Fun fact (according to this film): earthworms can be summoned to the surface of the earth with electricity. Funner fact (also according to this film): when you summon earthworms to the surface of the earth with electricity, it turns them into vicious flesh-eaters. So what happens when a power line goes down? Millions of hungry worms emerge from the dirt to eat people. Duh. 

A rare Mystery Science Theater 3000 classic that’s just as enjoyable without the commentary, Jeff Lieberman’s Squirm (1976) says it all right in the title.  I have immense respect for any film that knows exactly what it is. And boy oh boy does Squirm deliver: this is a film about worms invading a small Southern town, and it doubles down on that conceit. Legend has it the production wiped out New England’s supply of Glycera fishing worms for the rest of the year. Also of note: Squirm is one of the earliest examples of Rick Baker using prosthetics. Which should be a tantalizing enough hint to get you gorehounds to check this one out.

Available on Shudder August 1st.


How’d it get burned? It answered an anonymous letter claiming there was a missing girl on a creepy island

The Wicker Man Effigy

Synopsis: A righteous, devout police officer named Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) arrives on a remote island in search of a missing girl. Summoned to Summerisle by an anonymous letter, he is unnerved by the locals’ bizarre behavior and strange pagan rituals…and their insistence that the missing girl never existed.

Robin Hardy’s The Wicker Man (1973) is, without a doubt, one of the best atmospheric slow-builds ever made. Mirroring its pace with Howie’s investigation, the film gradually deposits clues, leading us deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole until it’s too late. Despite being an uptight party pooper, and despite the creeping inevitability that this isn’t going to end well, you hope Howie will make it out in one piece. But your chances are slim when Christopher Lee delivers a career-best (and Hammer Horror defying) performance as Lord Summerisle. This is the presiding granddaddy of the folk horror genre. If it’s been collecting dust on your watch list, it is time to keep your appointment with the Wicker Man.

Leaving Netflix August 29th.


Long Weekend (1978)

horror streaming August 2020 The Long Weekend

Synopsis: A suburban couple and their dog embark on a camping trip on a remote beach to try and save their marriage. The pair show a wild amount of disrespect towards nature: putting out cigarettes in the sand, littering, and killing local wildlife. As tensions mount between the couple, nature decides enough is enough.

Colin Eggleston’s Long Weekend (1978) is an obsessively made thriller, a terror trip of two people so despicable they invite karmic justice from Mother Nature herself. Their toxicity leeches out into their surroundings, and as they lash out at the earth, the animals, and at each other, you can’t help but feel that this is all going to end in (well-deserved) disaster. This is a minimalist and essential eco-horror entry that’s tantalizingly bleak and more serious than your typical “nature strikes back” fare.

Available on Criterion Channel August 2nd.


Streamable Horror Incoming This Month

Streaming ServiceMovieDate
Amazon PrimeMy Bloody Valentine (1981)August 1
The Criterion ChannelThe Cars That Ate Paris (1974)August 2
The Criterion ChannelPicnic at Hanging Rock (1975)August 2
The Criterion ChannelLong Weekend (1978) August 2
The Criterion ChannelSpirits of the Dead 1968August 9
The Criterion ChannelGanja & Hess (1973)August 13
The Criterion ChannelHouse (1977)August 23
The Criterion ChannelFunny Games (1997)August 23
The Criterion ChannelHair High (2004)August 30
HuluHellraiser (1987)August 1
HuluMy Bloody Valentine (1981)August 1
NetflixMad Max (1979)August 1
NetflixThe Addams Family (1991)August 1
NetflixWhat Keeps You Alive (2018)August 1
NetflixWe Summon the Darkness (2019)August 8
NetflixScary Movie 5 (2013)August 12
Netflix1BR (2019)August 23
NetflixThe Bridge Curse (2020) August 27
ShudderSquirm (1976)August 1
ShudderAmityville: It’s About Time (1992)August 1
ShudderLa Llorona (2019)August 6
ShudderRing (1998)August 10
ShudderRing 2 (1992)August 10
ShudderRing 0: Birthday (2000)August 10
ShudderThe Last Drive-In: Summer Sleepover SpecialFriday, August 14 at 9 p.m. EST/6 p.m. PST
ShudderJawbreaker (1999)August 17
ShudderHellmaster (1992)August 17
ShudderUncaged (2020)August 17
ShudderRandom Acts of Violence (2019)August 20
ShudderThe Evil (1978)August 24
ShudderMortuary (1983)August 24
ShudderOne Dark Night (1983)August 24

Shudder30 Miles From Nowhere (2018)August 24
ShudderThe Shed (2019)August 27

Horror Titles Expiring from Streaming Soon

On Their Way Out: These films have one foot in the grave—bump ‘em to the top of your August 2020 queue while you can!
Streaming ServiceMovieDate
Criterion ChannelThe Last House on the Left (1972)August 31
Criterion ChannelThe Hands of Orlac (1924)August 31
Criterion ChannelThe Golem (1920)August 31
Criterion ChannelThe Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)August 31
Criterion ChannelNosferatu (1922)August 31
Criterion ChannelCaniba (2017)August 31
HuluIncident at Loch Ness (2004)August 31
HuluZardoz (1974)August 31
NetflixCasper (1995)
August 1
NetflixChernobyl Diaries (2012)
August 1
NetflixScary Movie 2 (2001)August 1
NetflixThe Witch Files (2018)August 1
NetflixThe Wicker Man (1973)August 29

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Based in the Pacific North West, Meg enjoys long scrambles on cliff faces and cozying up with a good piece of 1960s eurotrash. As a senior contributor at FSR, Meg's objective is to spread the good word about the best of sleaze, genre, and practical effects.