
The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures is celebrating "one of global cinema’s most enduring, popular, and influential forms of filmmaking" in their newest exhibition: The Horror Show. Opening on September 26th in the fourth-floor Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg Gallery, "The Horror Show will take visitors on a journey through conventions, characters, and settings that have haunted theaters and audiences for more than a century. Winding through six thematic 'chambers' filled with rare, original props, costumes, production materials, and interactive displays, the exhibition explores why people love to be scared at the movies and how filmmakers satisfy that desire."
We have all the details on the exhibits, screenings, and special events you'll want to attend if you're anywhere in the LA area while the exhibition is running:
From the Press Release: The exhibition will be accompanied by public programs and film screenings that begin September 26 with the retrospective film series, John Carpenter: Prince of Darkness; the 2026 Monster Mash on October 24 featuring the US premiere of the 4K restoration of Horror of Dracula (1958); Museum After Dark on October 31 featuring a screening of The Craft (1996); and a 50th anniversary screening of Carrie (1976) with Oscar-winning actress Sissy Spacek on November 19.
“Our teams have done a phenomenal job creating an immersive and thrilling journey through the history of horror films, making an exhibition that is both emotional and experiential.” says Director and President of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and Academy Collection, Amy Homma. “Along with our amazing programming teams, we have selected a variety of film and educational programming to accompany the exhibition that is sure to excite all types of horror fans.”
“The Horror Show is an exploration of horror’s emotional, cultural, and symbolic power and examines why horror matters so deeply to many different types of communities,” said Senior Exhibitions Curator Jessica Niebel. “We are excited to celebrate the daring creativity of horror cinema with devoted fans and curious newcomers alike, inviting audiences to confront what frightens us—and discover why we keep coming back for more.”
Four-time Oscar-nominated actor Willem Dafoe, who serves on the advisory team for The Horror Show, said: “Cinema in general engages your sense of wonder, but horror can explode it. It is a popular form, born of modest financial resources and with a strong, lasting independent streak. And it has all the same possibilities for originality, inventiveness, and freedom that it did in its infancy.”
“Horror is crucial to culture and cinema, and to our evolving understanding of what it means to be alive on earth,” said filmmaker and exhibition advisor Osgood Perkins. “I couldn't think of a bigger or better celebration of the films and stories that have impacted audiences so profoundly and for so long. There is something for every horror fan to appreciate and enjoy in this exhibition, a hallway of limitless doors to be opened and explored.”
In addition to Dafoe and Perkins, the advisory team includes documentary filmmaker Ariel Baska, Oscar-winning prosthetic makeup artist and Academy member Howard Berger, author and filmmaker Tananarive Due, and film scholar Angela Marie Smith.
The Horror Show will be on view through July 25, 2027. While parental guidance is advised, the Academy Museum will also present a small -scale, family-friendly exhibition, Zombies!, in the adjacent Warner Bros. Gallery, on view September 26, 2026–July 25, 2027.
Zombies! explores how movie zombies are created and where their stories come from. Set in an interactive educational space, Zombies! showcases how filmmakers and artists create the unforgettable images of the undead we see on screen. Visitors can also discover the origins of zombies and how they have been adapted to become the classic horror monsters we know today.
A publication by the Academy Museum and DelMonico—richly illustrated with concept art, film stills, and behind-the-scenes production photos—will be available in September. The Academy Museum store will also offer exclusive The Horror Show merchandise, including apparel, toys, collectibles, and books.
Exhibition Overview
Visitors enter The Horror Show through a darkened, introductory gallery featuring a “soundscape” of music, voices, and sound effects, and then emerge into a long hallway lined with classic horror film posters from the Academy Collection and other lenders. On either side of this central space, six galleries, or “chambers,” are devoted to major strains of horror cinema.
The only pathway out of the exhibition lies through The Blood Room, an immersion in the many textures and shades of cinematic blood. Spilling out from the hallway of horrors, visitors are engulfed in a final sensorial macabre: gallery walls layered with gore, pushing the knowledge gleaned from the exhibition through one last, gooey visual of horror.
*This exhibition explores content that may not be suitable for all ages and may be disturbing to some individuals. Parental guidance is advised. Please use your discretion when viewing.
This exhibition also contains elements that may trigger seizures for visitors with photosensitive epilepsy.
Film Screenings and Programs
September 26–October 25, 2026 | John Carpenter: Prince of Darkness
Timed with the opening of The Horror Show, the museum welcomes one of the most celebrated masters of horror, John Carpenter, for the opening weekend of a retrospective film series. John Carpenter: Prince of Darkness will kick off with a screening of Halloween (1978) on Saturday, September 26, followed by screenings of They Live (1988) on Sunday, September 27, and Assault on Precinct 13 (1976) on Monday, September 28. Tickets go on sale to Academy Museum members on August 17 and to the public on August 18.
Saturday, October 24, 2026 | Monster Mash
Calling all creatures of the night! Join the Academy Museum for an all-ages, fang-tastic day of special-effects makeup demonstrations, thrilling tours, appearances by monsters, film screenings, and activities—all exploring the vampire, the famous creature of the night. Enjoy film screenings throughout the day, including Blade (1998), the US premiere of the 4K restoration of Horror of Dracula (1958), and Hotel Transylvania (2012). This event is for visitors of all ages and free with general admission. Separate tickets needed for film screenings.
Saturday, October 31, 2026 | Museum After Dark
Celebrate Halloween at the Academy Museum with a goth-themed after-hours party: cocktails, tarot readings, a special guest, and a screening of The Craft (1996). Inspired looks are highly encouraged. We want to see your most hauntingly glamorous costumes. This event is for adults 21 and over.
Thursday, November 19 | 50th Anniversary of Carrie with Sissy Spacek
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Brian De Palma’s horror classic with a screening of the film and a conversation with its star, Oscar-winning actress Sissy Spacek. Tickets go on sale to Academy Museum members on August 17 and to the public on August 18.
January 2027 | A celebration of Hammer Films
In Winter 2027, the museum will celebrate the history of iconic British production company, Hammer Films, with a 10-film retrospective featuring rare and newly restored horror titles. Hammer Films has played a defining role in shaping horror cinema, producing some of the genre's most iconic films. Under the ownership of John Gore Studios, the studio is now undertaking a program of 4K restorations to celebrate this legacy and bring its classic films to contemporary audiences.
Curation and Public Programming
The Horror Show is curated by Jessica Niebel, senior exhibitions curator, with Nicholas Barlow, assistant curator, and Alexandra James Salichs, curatorial assistant, Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. Additional support by THI Moving Image Lab Curatorial Fellow Bradford Nordeen. The Horror Show will be the museum’s sixth large-scale exhibition in its Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg Gallery, following Hayao Miyazaki (2021–22), Regeneration: Black Cinema 1898–1971 (2022–23), John Waters: Pope of Trash (2023–24), Color in Motion: Chromatic Explorations of Cinema (2024–25), and Jaws: The Exhibition (which closes July 26, 2026).
Zombies! is curated by Alexandra James Salichs, curatorial assistant, Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.
Public programs and film screenings are organized by Christina Ybarra, Director, Education and Public Engagement and K.J. Relth-Miller, Director, Film Programs.