Do not confuse this with the 1981 original. The 2019 version is pure, unapologetic violence. It follows a group of orphans who return to their haunted, crumbling orphanage to visit their dying caretaker—only to be hunted by a horrifyingly disfigured woman using black magic.

Watch Satan’s Slaves . Turn off your phone. Turn off the lights. Turn on the English subtitles. And when the mother starts whispering from inside the floorboards, thank the screen that you actually understand what she is saying.

For decades, Western audiences have been captivated by the refined terror of Japanese J-horror and the visceral gore of French extremism. But in the last five years, a new heavyweight has entered the ring: Indonesia . Often referred to as the "New King of Horror," Indonesia has produced some of the most disturbing, emotionally devastating, and technically brilliant horror films of the modern era.

The answer is . Indonesian horror is unique because it doesn't rely solely on jump scares. It draws from a rich tapestry of Islamic mysticism, ancient Javanese animism, and the very real socio-political violence of the country's history.

This film is a slow-burn folk nightmare. A toll booth attendant survives a brutal home invasion and discovers she might inherit a mysterious village—only to find the village is cursed due to a history of murder and a gundu (a ritual fetus).

However, for international fans, there has always been one massive barrier: the language. Bahasa Indonesia is a beautiful but specific language, and nuance is easily lost in bad translations. If you want to feel the true dread of a pocong (shrouded ghost) or the psychological torture of a santet (black magic ritual), you need .

Thanks to modern streaming services like Shudder and Netflix, the excuse of "I don't understand the language" no longer holds up. High-quality are just a click away.

Why you need the subtitles: The plot involves complex family lineage and the history of a babi ngepet (a pig demon). The English subtitles handle these translations with care, avoiding the "lost in translation" effect that would ruin the film's shocking third-act twist. Director: Kimo Stamboel Where to find it: HBO Max (formerly), Shudder.