13 spooky movies with Cincinnati connections 😱🎬

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Dying to find a new movie that will get you into the Halloween spirit?

We have been buried in DVDs and YouTube clips of horror movies, mysteries and supernatural flicks to conjure up a list of 13 spooky films with local ties to Cincinnati.

No matter your taste for blood or chills or happy haunts, there is something here for everybody.

1. “Hocus Pocus” (1993) and “Hocus Pocus 2” (2022)

A Halloween staple, this Disney classic introduces the Sanderson sisters, a trio of witches from the 17th century portrayed by Bette Midler, Kathy Najimy and Cincinnati’s own Sarah Jessica Parker (who spent much of her childhood in Clifton). Watch it for the first or 101st time and pair it with “Hocus Pocus 2,” streaming on Disney+, as the Sanderson sisters return once again 29 years later.

2. “From Dusk Till Dawn” (1996)

Our local movie star George Clooney appeared with Quentin Tarantino in "From Dusk Till Dawn."
Our local movie star George Clooney appeared with Quentin Tarantino in "From Dusk Till Dawn."

Our local movie star George Clooney appears with Quentin Tarantino as fugitive bank robbers who hole up in a Mexican strip club filled with vampires in this violent action film from Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez. This one is as gory as it gets.

3. “Detention” (2011)

Josh Hutcherson of Union, Kentucky, stars in this extremely offbeat comedy horror film from music video director Joseph Kahn. It seems like a high school slasher flick but veers into time travel and aliens at an absurd pace.

4. “Haunt” (2019)

Filmed in Covington and Newport, this horror flick from the writers of “A Quiet Place,” Scott Beck and Bryan Wood, and producer Eli Roth of “Hostel” fame, turns a Halloween haunted house attraction into a deadly nightmare. The creepy clown masks should have been a clue.

5. “Nightmares” (1983)

This horror anthology features four stories, including one with Over-the-Rhine resident and voice of the streetcar Emilio Estevez about a video game hustler trying to reach the mythical level 13 in “The Bishop of Battle” game. Another tale features Albert Hague, an alumnus of Cincinnati’s College of Music, who composed the music for “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!”

6. “The Mark of Zorro” (1940)

Actor Tyrone Power as Zorro in “The Mark of Zorro” (1940). Power was a Purcell High School graduate.
Actor Tyrone Power as Zorro in “The Mark of Zorro” (1940). Power was a Purcell High School graduate.

Matinee idol Tyrone Power, a Purcell High School graduate, was famous for his swashbuckling adventures. His turn as the noble bandit Zorro set the standard for costumed heroes, and in Batman lore, it’s the movie that a young Bruce Wayne saw in the theater the night his parents were murdered and inspired him to become the Dark Knight.

7. “Jaws” (1975)

Steven Spielberg has directed a number of scary movies, from “Duel” (1971) to “Jurassic Park” (1993), but his tale of a terrifying great white shark is the biggest and best. The Cincinnati native made people afraid to go into the water and ushered in the era of the blockbuster. Ba dum …

8. “Poltergeist” (1982)

Perhaps less well known is that Spielberg wrote this classic ghost story, but it was directed by Tobe Hooper with heavy creative input from Spielberg. The early death of child star Heather O’Rourke – the little girl who touches the TV and says, “They’re here ...” – fueled rumors that the movie is cursed.

9. “A Fool There Was” (1915)

Silent movie actress Theda Bara graduated from Walnut Hills in 1903. She was cast as the lead in “A Fool There Was” (1915), portraying a seductress who would popularize the term “vamp.”
Silent movie actress Theda Bara graduated from Walnut Hills in 1903. She was cast as the lead in “A Fool There Was” (1915), portraying a seductress who would popularize the term “vamp.”

Silent film star Theda Bara (born Theodosia Goodman in Avondale) was the original vamp, short for vampire, meaning a femme fatale seductress. Bara made a career portraying vamps, but her first film is one of only a few of hers that survives.

10. “Dracula: Dead and Loving It” (1995)

Leslie Nielsen in the movie "Dracula - Dead and Loving It." Blue Ash native Amy Yasbeck co-starred as Mina, whom Dracula wanted to turn into his undead bride.
Leslie Nielsen in the movie "Dracula - Dead and Loving It." Blue Ash native Amy Yasbeck co-starred as Mina, whom Dracula wanted to turn into his undead bride.

Everyone chews the scenery in Mel Brooks’ spoof of the legendary vampire, played by the equally legendary Leslie Nielsen. Blue Ash native Amy Yasbeck (TV’s “Wings”) co-stars as Mina, whom Dracula wants to turn into his undead bride.

11. “The Killing of a Sacred Deer” (2017)

This psychological thriller from Yorgos Lanthimos turns a modern revenge plot into a “Sophie’s Choice” decision. Starring Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman, it was filmed at Christ Hospital, Hyde Park, Blue Jay Restaurant and Roger Bacon High School.

12. “Wrong Turn” (2021)

A group of friends hiking the Appalachian Trail – filmed in Hocking Hills and around Cincinnati – meet a group of cultists in the woods in a reboot of the “Wrong Turn” horror franchise, proving that no one learned a thing from the series’ previous six movies.

13. “Twilight Zone: The Movie” (1983)

Another anthology movie, this time with stories adapted from the classic 1959-1964 television series “The Twilight Zone” created and hosted by Rod Serling, who started on WLW radio and WKRC-TV in the 1950s. One segment is directed by Spielberg, but the best was helmed by “Mad Max” director George Miller, in which John Lithgow sees a gremlin on the wing of an airplane at 20,000 feet.

Bonus movie: “Bones and All” (2022)

So, this romantic horror story about two teenage cannibals that was filmed all over Greater Cincinnati last year won't be released until November, but the trailer is out. The film stars Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell, and was directed by Luca Guadagnino, who helmed Chalamet’s breakout film, “Call Me by Your Name.”

Note: This is an updated version of a story from October 2021.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: 13 spooky/Halloween movies with Cincinnati connections