If there is one thing most people have in common, it's that they love a good scare during October. For audiences that have gone through all the typical horror movies and are looking for something else, sometimes real life can be just as scary, if not more so, than fiction. Documentaries are meant to capture life as it is, including the good, the bad, and in some cases, the terrifying.

Whether investigating an actual crime that captures headlines or exploring the supernatural unknowns of the world, some documentaries will leave viewers scrambling back to fiction horror films for a more expected kind of scare.

Updated on October 8th, 2022 by Meagan Bojarski:

The popularity of Netflix's new documentary Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story shows that people are still looking for real-life stories to chill them to the bones. Throughout October, this instinct may lead them to look for stories that will shock and disgust them more than any horror story could manage. From classic urban legends to historical atrocities, documentaries prove that the real world is just as terrifying as the one filmmakers dream up.

Haunters: The Art Of The Scare (2017)

Stream On The Roku Channel

The poster for Haunters: The Art Of The Scare beside an example of one of those haunted attractions

Many people visit haunted houses in the lead-up to Halloween, but Haunters looks at how far the scare industry has gone. The documentary details the history of scare attractions before going into how dark some experiences can get, including putting participants through literal torture.

Alongside looking at the haunted houses themselves, the documentary looks at the legal parameters that influence them and how much the people behind the most extreme examples are willing to risk in their own personal lives. The trick when it comes to horror has always been to stay just on the right side of fiction and fact, but this documentary shows how easily blurred that line really can be.

A Certain Kind of Death (2003)

Watch On YouTube

The poster for A Certain Kind of Death (2003) alongside a clip from a funeral featured in the documentary.

Many people fear death however it comes, while others just hope it's not painful. But A Certain Kind Of Death (available on YouTube) captures one of the worst-case scenarios. Sometimes, bodies show up without any information surrounding them. If no family claims them, they enter into the abyss of anonymity.

Where possible, coroners and field workers attempt to learn about these forgotten people, giving them the dignified burials they would have wanted. When that isn't possible, the procedure is a lot more upsetting. The documentary handles these topics respectfully, but it does include real bodies and the processes they go through. Nothing has been manipulated to be scary, but the subject itself is sure to change the way its audiences think about death forever.

A Haunting In Connecticut (2002)

Stream On YouTube

A Haunting in Connecticut poster

Those who enjoyed 2009's The Haunting in Connecticut might be interested to learn about the Discovery documentary based on the same events. When the Parker family moves into a former funeral home, they begin to be tormented by spirits that don't want them there. This docudrama is based on real events, and the reenactments are chilling.

While there will always be skeptics, reviewers on IMDb claim that the documentary is far scarier than the fictionalized version, sticking with many viewers long after they turned it off. The manifestations of the haunting begin simply enough but soon turn down a nightmarish path that is likely to keep viewers up at night.

Room 237 (2012)

Stream On AMC+

Jack (Jack Nicholson) looks at a replica of the maze from The Shining

Fans of The Shining have to check out Room 237, a documentary broken into nine sections, each investigating a different interpretation of the film. Depending on each viewer's stance, the film comes across as a fun exploration of a beloved film or proof that conspiracy theorists can fool a lot of people.

This documentary doesn't suggest that it has found the true meaning of The Shining as much as it allows its subjects to go on about the details they've obsessed over. However, director Rodney Ascher, who also created The Nightmare, an exploration of night terrors and sleep paralysis, knows how to make his audience uncomfortable, which adds a layer of uncertainty as fans investigate these bizarre theories.

Rats (2016)

Rent On Apple TV

The Rats poster

Don't watch this documentary while eating, or before sleeping, or while in a big city, or possibly at all. Rats looks into the role rodents play in cultures around the world, and many of those are genuinely horrifying.

The images are more similar to a horror movie than a standard documentary, and yet what's worse is how paranoid the documentary can make its viewers feel. Rats are everywhere, and every fact the documentary shares insight into their intelligence and resilience makes it worse. For those who want to be sickened by their horror content, Rats is the most disturbing documentary to watch for that kind of feeling.

The Imposter (2012)

Stream On Tubi

The poster for The Imposter (2012) along with a clip of Frédéric Bourdin, the titular imposter

In 1994, a 13-year-old boy named Nicholas Patrick Barclay went missing. Four years later, he reappeared. But the family soon discovered that this was not actually their son, miraculously returned to them, but someone using his name to deceive them. The Imposter explores this true story to see how the deception could have gone unnoticed.

Films like Us prove how much the idea of doppelgängers and duplicates disturbs most people. They like to believe they are utterly unique, but this story challenges that, making a crack in the myth of individuality. The documentary keeps audiences on the edge of their seats while posing questions that can shake them to their core. Director Bart Layton follows the facts and details carefully, but with a level of storytelling genius that makes its tale truly unforgettable.

Killer Legends (2014)

Stream On The Roku Channel

The poster for Killer Legends (2014) alongside a news clipping about "the Hook Man"

Directed by Joshua Zeman, Killer Legends explores the potential origins of some of America's darkest urban legends. Delving into the history behind the babysitter killer, the hook man, poisoned Halloween candy, and killer clowns, the documentary is sure to provide some chilling evidence into the legitimacy of these frequently dismissed legends.

While the formatting of this documentary limits its success, it is definitely worth watching, especially for those who were terrified by some version of these legends when they were younger. The subject and the editing work together to create a thoroughly eerie atmosphere, which will be perfect for those who find horror stories that much more terrifying when they include a grain of truth.

Hostage To The Devil (2016)

Rent On YouTube

Father Malchin in front of souviners from his exorcisms in Hostage to the Devil

Directed by Marty Stalker, Hostage to the Devil tells the story of Father Malachi Martin, an Irish Catholic Priest famous in the Jesuit world for performing astounding exorcisms and being the author of The Scribal Dead Sea Scroll. There are many claims that Father Martin was the basis for Father Merrin in The Exorcist.

This documentary covers the hundreds of minor and significant exorcisms he claimed to have performed over his years serving the Catholic Church. With interviews of his colleagues and those he supposedly helped with exorcisms, a terrifying picture of the secrecy of church involvement in exorcisms is painted. The final spooky degree comes from the retelling of his death from a fall, supposedly after a four-year-old he was exercising was used by the Devil to speak to him.

The Mothman Of Point Pleasant (2017)

Stream On Prime Video

Cover of Mothman Documentary next to picture of collapsed Silver Bridge

The first in what would become a career obsession for director Seth Breedlove, this film is one of the first to dig into the theories of the mythical Mothman. In 1966-67, the residents of Point Pleasant, West Virginia began reporting sightings of a humanoid creature with wings that spanned at least six feet and had glowing red eyes, resembling the creature known in mythology—and in current pop culture—as Mothman. Some felt that the beast was there to cause evil, while others insisted the Mothman was a disaster harbinger. Either way, anyone who encountered him was terrified by the experience.

Through interviews and old footage, Breedlove weaves a tale of spookiness and out-of-this-world encounters, culminating in what is still the third-deadliest bridge failure in United States history with the collapse of the Silver Bridge on December 15, 1967.

Wrinkles The Clown (2019)

Stream On Hulu

Wrinkles The Clown written in white next to picture of clown in front of balloons with He's just a phone call away under it in white

It's no secret that clowns have long been a staple in the world of horror, but many people have coulrophobia in their everyday, authentic lives. Even those who are not scared of clowns have reason to be terrified of Wrinkles. When a video of a clown crawling out from the bed of a little girl appeared on YouTube, the creepiness of that one video was enough to skyrocket this to the top of the scare list.

When the maker put in his video that he was hirable to scare misbehaved children into acting better, the legend of Wrinkles the Clown was born. The documentary follows the figure, with plenty of twists and turns to keep audiences guessing.