A lot of modern horror seems obsessed with replacing cosmic dread with social anxiety. Instead of ancient gods, we get landlords, HOA committees, and office managers as the new monsters. Look at something like 'I'm Thinking of Ending Things'—the real terror isn't a ghost, it's the slow erosion of identity within a relationship, or the way memory warps. Even creature features have shifted; the parasitic organism isn't just a physical threat anymore, it's a metaphor for losing autonomy, for being consumed by ideologies or systems you can't escape. Viral horror, like in 'The Girl with All the Gifts', often explores what humanity is willing to sacrifice for survival, blurring the line between monster and savior.
We're also seeing a huge wave of 'trauma as the monster' narratives, but the execution varies wildly. When it's done well, the haunting is a manifestation of grief or guilt that feels visceral, like in 'The Only Good Indians'. When it's done poorly, it just feels like therapy session with jump scares. I miss when horror could just be about a thing in the dark that wants to eat you, without needing a PhD in psychology to unpack it. The pressure for every story to have a profound 'meaning' can sometimes drain the pure, primal fun out of the genre.