Hello. There's a whole side of Netflix most people never see. Not your typical horror.
Not your mainstream thrillers. I'm talking about movies that push boundaries, cross lines, and leave you sitting there like, "Yeah, I probably wasn't ready for that. " I broke into that judge's house.
I told you to keep me out there. I don't know what I saw. I really tried.
Here are 10 extremely graphic movies hidden on Netflix. Let's get into it. Number 10, The Conference.
This 2023 Swedish slasher comedy follows a group of local government employees into a team building retreat that quickly turns deadly. Tensions are already simmering, tied to a shady development project and buried secrets when a masked killer starts picking them off one by one. Think office politics, quiet resentment, and revenge that's been a long time coming.
The setup sounds ridiculous. The kills are inventive and genuinely gruesome with just enough exaggeration to make them feel almost theatrical. Coming in at number nine, Don't Move.
Produced by Sam Ramy, this 2024 thriller follows a woman deep in grief who crosses paths with the wrong person in the wrong forest. She's injected with a paralytic agent, and then the film asks one simple horrifying question. What do you do when your own body becomes the enemy?
The tension in this one is relentless and almost mean-spirited in how it puts her through increasingly impossible scenarios. There's no fat here, no wasted scenes, no slow build. Number eight is The Platform.
This 2019 Spanish thriller takes place inside a vertical prison where food is lowered on a platform. Level by level, the people at the top eat well. The people at the bottom eat whatever's left or each other.
It's a cold, brutal metaphor that doesn't bother being subtle, and it works precisely because of that. The visuals are stark and suffocating. The performance is raw, the violence deeply unpleasant in a way that feels intentional rather than gratuitous.
This is one of those films where the graphic content isn't the point, but it is the price. Number seven, Gerald's Game. I can't get out.
What about the stories on the news where mothers lift their cars to save their children? She's no mother. This 2017 Stephen King adaptation sounds almost contained.
A woman handcuffed to a bed alone in a lakehouse after something goes horribly wrong. And for most of the runtime, it stays that way. Quiet, tense, and uncomfortably intimate as she tries to survive with no way out.
And then there's a scene. You'll know it when you get there. It's so physically specific, so brutally real that it completely bypasses your usual tolerance for horror.
Even people who've seen everything tend to go quiet during it. The rest of the film leans into psychological breakdown, isolation, trauma, and the mind turning against itself. But that one moment is the hurdle.
You either get through it or you don't. Number six is The Night Comes for Us. This film came out in 2018 and it is without exaggeration one of the most violent films Netflix has ever carried.
An Indonesian action thriller about a mob enforcer who protects a young girl from the organization that wants her dead. What follows is 2 hours of hand-to-hand combat so brutal and so sustained that it starts to feel almost elemental. The choreography is extraordinary, but that's almost beside the point.
What registers is how punishing it all feels. This isn't action movie violence where people absorb punishment and walk off. Bodies break here.
The film is relentless, and if you can stomach it, it's electrifying. Part one of Netflix's Fear Street trilogy. The dude was wearing a Halloween skull mask.
How is that not fun? And easily the most purely fun entry on this list. It's a teen slasher that doesn't shy away from spilling blood.
The kills are inventive, shocking, and often absurdly specific, including one unforgettable scene with a bread slicer that somehow works in the movie's favor. What makes it stand out is that it actually cares about its characters before it starts picking them off, which makes the horror hit harder. This is a slasher that balances tension, gore, and surprisingly real emotional stakes, proving that when the people in a horror film feel real, the scares land that much more effectively.
Number four, Hold the Dark. War soon. I must.
This 2018 Netflix original is set in an isolated Alaskan village where a naturalist is called in to investigate wolf attacks on local children. And then things get stranger and stranger and stranger. The pace is deliberately, almost aggressively slow, building an eerie tension that feels like it's creeping under your skin.
Then it hits. The story explodes into a shootout that's one of the most outrageously violent sequences you'll see on the platform. Director Jeremy Sonier treats violence like weather.
It arrives without warning. Number three, the perfection. What's happening?
What's happening? Oh my god, what's happened? The movie follows a former musical prodigy who reconnects with the institution she once left behind.
What begins as an elegant, unsettling character study gradually twists into something feverish and bodily horror adjacent, impossible to fully describe without spoiling it. There are sequences that make audiences physically recoil, images that burrow into your mind and refuse to leave. The film weaponizes your assumptions.
You think you know where it's going, but you don't. And when the violence comes, it's sudden, frenzied, and genuinely unsettling. Number two, Polar.
The movie follows Mads Mikkelson as the world's deadliest assassin, dragged back in for one last job while a team of cartoonishly lethal killers hunts him down. It's based on a graphic novel and leans fully into that, embracing every over-the-top violent beat. The action is ridiculous, messy, and completely entertaining.
Torture scenes that make you wse, body counts that pile up like confetti, and a color palette that practically screams comic book. Mickelson anchors it all with quiet, chilling control, making the chaos feel sharper and almost believable. This isn't a movie trying to be profound.
It's a wild oporadic thrill ride that knows exactly what it wants to be and succeeds. And number one, Apostle, he shall be cleansed according to the edict of this land. Directed by Gareth Evans, the man behind the raid.
Set in 1905, a man travels to a remote island to rescue his sister from a religious cult and discovers something far worse than fanaticism waiting for him there. This film is a slow, deliberate thing for its first half. Patient, atmospheric, building dread the way pressure builds in a sealed room, and then it opens up into something savage.
The torture sequences here are genuinely hard to watch. Not because they're gratuitous, but because Evans directs them with the same craft and precision he brings to everything else. There's no relief, no irony.
10 films, 10 reasons to clear your evening and lock the door. What strikes me most about a list like this is how different they all are. Some brutal and barreling, some quiet and surgical, some deeply weird.
The thing they share is that none of them are content to just sit there. They all reach through the screen and do something to you. Drp a comment below.
Have you seen any of these and which one left the biggest mark? And if you want more lists like this, horror, action, psychological thrillers, the stuff the algorithm won't recommend, stick around. There's a lot more where this came from.