Scott Derrickson isnāt among my favorite directors, but rewatching his work gave me new respect for him. Yet, binge-watching his films has deepened my appreciation for his craft and vision. His range surprised meāespecially realizing he directed the Keanu Reeves remake of āThe Day The Earth Stood Still.ā Or whatās arguably one of the best possession films out there (and not that the competition is fierce), āThe Possession of Emily Rose.ā
What I truly admire about Derricksonās work is his knack for taking familiar, often overused storylinesālike possession or cursed videotapesāand spinning them into something fresh and original. With āThe Black Phone,ā he proves he can stretch a simple idea into something sharp and memorable. Of all the lists Iāve made, this one feels the least final. My last three picks are probably interchangeable and could shift spots depending on the day. So without any further ado, hereās my Scott Derrickson movie list. Let me know in the comments how you would rank them yourself!
9. Hellraiser: Inferno (2000)
After writing for the āUrban Legendā franchise, Derrickson made his directorial debut with another established horror name: āHellraiser.ā By then, the series had already lost much of its spark, and while this entry doesnāt revive it, you can sense Derricksonās ambition. The film plays more like a āSe7enā-style detective thriller than a full-on āHellraiserā movie, which isnāt necessarily a bad thing. The visuals and practical effects are solid, for instance, corpses hanging from walls, surreal dreamscapes, and that signature grim tone.
Doug Bradleyās Pinhead, though, feels shoehorned in, confirming the rumor that his scenes were added late. The biggest issue is the pacing: ninety minutes that crawl by, weighed down by a dull, derivative detective story and flat performances. You can see what Derrickson was going for ā moral rot, guilt, a descent into hell ā but it never fully connects. Still, for a first film, it shows the fingerprints of a director reaching for something larger than the material.
8. The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)
After the success of āEmily Rose,ā Derrickson was handed a much bigger project: a remake of Robert Wiseās 1951 classic. Iād seen the original twice and liked it, but didnāt worship it.Ā So I went into this one with low expectations and no baggage ā mostly hoping for some entertainment. What I got was ⦠okay. Not terrible, not great. The film reaches for earnestness and moral weight ā swapping Cold War paranoia for environmental indictment ā but much of it lands flat. The attempted emotional beats between Jaden Smith and Jennifer Connelly feel perfunctory.
Theyāre trying, but the scenes rarely move you. Keanu Reeves embodies the alienās stoicism well enough, but his performance can read as muted rather than mysterious. A few set pieces pop ā the robot laser targeting the planes is a striking action moment. Yet the movie never builds sustained tension. Derrickson seems to be testing how much solemnity a big studio sci-fi can carry, but the production gloss often overwhelms the ideas underneath. Itās watchable, with flashes of craftsmanship, but it leaves behind the sense of untapped potential. Overall, a polished remake that rarely surprises.
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7. Deliver us from Evil (2014)
With āDeliver Us From Evil,ā Derrickson returned to the possession genre but added a procedural twist. I remember watching this in theaters without realizing it was by the same directorājust drawn in by the trailer. Itās not a bad film, but itās also not as sharp or intense as it couldāve been. Derrickson knows how to handle tension, yet much of it here feels muted. The detective subplot is textbook and undercooked, while the exorcism scenes deliver the real spark.
The makeup and creature effects are excellent, especially that sequence where the woman crawls out of the cell. Itās genuinely chilling. The final showdown, too, has that loud, fiery energy you expect from Derrickson at his best. Bana and Ramirez make a solid pair, though the film wouldāve benefited from introducing their dynamic earlier. Instead, the first hour meanders, only finding real rhythm near the end. By then, the stakes feel oddly small. Still, the ambitionās there. Sadly, itās just buried under the weight of its own procedural setup.
6. The Gorge (2025)
By now, Derrickson has proven heās comfortable twisting familiar tropes into something resembling originality. āThe Gorgeā continues that streak, built around a strong premise: two rivals forced to guard a hellish rift that occasionally spits out monsters. It sounds wild, and it kind of is, but the execution canāt quite keep up with the pitch. Miles Teller and Anya-Taylor Joy perform well, and their chemistry gives the film its emotional pulse, though their romance develops a bit too fast.
The creature design is memorable, if not groundbreaking, and Derrickson crafts a few legitimately tense sequencesālike the vertigo-inducing midair scene. Unfortunately, the second half unravels. The story rushes through revelations that shouldāve landed harder. By the end, I found myself wanting the film to linger in its mystery rather than sprint toward its action-packed conclusion. Itās not without merit, and some moments feel classic Derrickson. Nevertheless, āThe Gorgeā ends up as one of those āalmostā films: ambitious, intermittently fun, but frustratingly thin.
5. Black Phone 2 (2025)

Derricksonās latest film, āBlack Phone 2,ā has grown on me since I saw it. Watching it right after rewatching the first one helped. I caught callbacks Iād missed, like the opening brawl with Finney. The premise of āThe Grabberā returning through the phone sounds like a stretch, but Derrickson sells it surprisingly well. Ethan Hawke is fantastic here, giving The Grabber more presence than before. Heās no longer just a shadow in the dark but a full-blown physical menace.
Madeleine McGraw steals the show again, balancing humor, energy, and grit. In fact, sheās the filmās secret weapon. Derricksonās direction shines in the set pieces: the skating kills are clever and tense, and his use of Super 8 footage nods to āSinisterā and the filmās eerie texture. Itās less claustrophobic than its predecessor. At the same time, itās broader in scope, trading basement dread for kinetic urban paranoia. Not every idea lands, but as sequels go, itās a rare one that deepens its myth instead of recycling it.
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4. The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005)
Iāve always felt that Friedkinās āThe Exorcistā worked best not for its demon or possession, but for its humanity, i.e., the crisis of faith, the helplessness of watching someone you love disintegrate. Derricksonās āThe Exorcism of Emily Roseā taps into that same emotional core, and thatās what makes it one of my favorite possession films.
The movie devotes more time to its courtroom drama than to the actual exorcism, but that works to its advantage. The horror scenes, when they come, are brutal and memorable. Jennifer Carpenterās performance is downright unnerving, yet grounded in tragedy. The fog-drenched sequence on the poster remains one of Derrickson’s directorial careerās most striking visual moments.
What really anchors the film, though, are Laura Linney and Tom Wilkinson. Their dynamic is restrained but deeply human. You believe in both of them, even as their beliefs collide. Derrickson finds the sweet spot between faith and skepticism, crafting a film thatās scary, thoughtful, and surprisingly empathetic. Itās quieter than most exorcism movies, and that might disappoint those expecting jump scares, but for me, that restraint is its greatest strength.
3. The Black Phone (2021)
As I said earlier, Derrickson has a real gift for choosing stories that feel instantly cinematic. āThe Black Phone,ā based on Joe Hillās short story, is easily among his best. I liked it when it came out, but after watching the sequel, I appreciate it even more. Mason Thamesās performance plays better on rewatch, especially as you see his characterās emotional evolution. Madeleine McGraw continues to be the MVP. She is funny, fiery, and surprisingly moving. Ethan Hawkeās Grabber is pure nightmare fuel, and the maskāhalf grin, half griefāis genius in its simplicity.
Visually, the film is classic Derrickson: dream sequences that bleed into reality, a tight sense of space, and that nostalgic 1970s grime that makes everything feel both familiar and cursed. Mark Korvenās score leans into āSinisterā-style dread, amplifying the unease without overwhelming it. Some of the comedic beats threw me off at firstāthe pinball kidās crude banter especiallyābut they work better now. The mix of humor, trauma, and supernatural revenge just clicks. Itās a rare horror film thatās scary, fun, and strangely cathartic all at once.
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2. Sinister (2012)
Four years after his detour into big-budget sci-fi, Derrickson returned to horror with āSinister,ā the film that solidified his reputation. āEmily Roseā proved he could blend genre with drama, but this one cemented him as a modern horror craftsman. Sure, it borrows from āRinguā with its cursed film motif, but Derrickson gives it a distinctly American flavor, i.e., quiet suburban dread mixed with existential rot. The snuff film sequences are terrifying precisely because theyāre so restrained: grainy, minimal, and brutally effective.
The real MVP here, though, is Christopher Youngās score, which practically hums with unease. The music is absolutely vital. It acts as the movie’s nervous system, carrying every emotional signal directly to the devastating final sequence. A few jump scares feel cheap (yes, the āBughul peek-a-booā moment still makes me roll my eyes), but the atmosphere is so well sustained it hardly matters. āSinisterā lingers, not because of gore, but because of how ordinary everything feels until itās not. Itās horror as quiet corruption, and itās haunting in a way few modern genre films manage.
1. Doctor Strange (2016)
Here comes the big one. āDoctor Strangeā marked Derricksonās leap into true blockbuster territory. And against all the odds, itās his most accomplished film to date. Iāve seen it three times now, and I still find myself grinning like an idiot at how bold and kaleidoscopic it is. Visually, itās stunningāM.C. Escher on acid, with cities folding in on themselves and time looping like a cosmic mixtape. Derricksonās horror roots peek through in flashesāthe hands multiplying, the astral projectionsābut itās all filtered through Marvel polish. Ben Davisās cinematography gives the film real cinematic weight, and Cumberbatch fits the role perfectly: charming, egotistical, but never cartoonish.
Itās also one of the few Marvel films where the visual effects genuinely serve the story rather than swallow it whole. Sure, you can sense the studio guardrails, and I wish Derrickson had been allowed to go darker, but his stamp is there, especially in the trippier sequences that flirt with Lovecraftian awe. For all its spectacle, āDoctor Strangeā remains surprisingly focused on redemption and humility. Itās not flawless, but itās confident, weird, and unmistakably Derrickson. Itās proof enough that he can scale up without losing his spark.








