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Love Alien‑Style Horror? 3 Twisted Sci‑Fi Movies to Stream Next (Plus One Wild Card)

Love Alien‑Style Horror? 3 Twisted Sci‑Fi Movies to Stream Next (Plus One Wild Card)
interest|Alien

Why Alien Fans Are Eating Well on Streaming Right Now

If you love the slow, creeping terror of Alien but have already memorised every chestburster beat, streaming platforms are quietly stacked with fresh nightmares. The current wave of sci fi horror movies leans into exactly what Alien did best: paranoia, body horror, and big ideas about humanity’s place in the universe. For Malaysian viewers browsing late-night horror movies streaming on Prime Video or free platforms, it can be hard to know which titles actually deliver that same unnerving, high-concept buzz. This guide narrows things down to four standouts: a Prime Video horror remake hailed as the greatest sci-fi horror redo ever made, a cult classic sci fi gem from the 90s that helped inspire an Oscar-winning film, a 70s shocker where God is literally the killer, and one utterly outrageous bisexual alien sex horror comedy that shows just how wild the genre can get.

The Greatest Sci-Fi Horror Remake on Prime Video: Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Back in 1956, Invasion of the Body Snatchers helped define paranoia-driven science fiction, channelling Cold War fears into a story about people being quietly replaced by emotionless doubles. Decades later, the 1978 remake didn’t just update the concept; it surpassed expectations so completely that it’s now widely dubbed “the greatest sci-fi horror remake of all time” and is currently available on Prime Video horror. The film steadily cranks up unease as ordinary life is infiltrated by something alien, culminating in a twist ending that “no one saw coming” and still shocks new viewers. For Alien fans, the appeal is obvious: no jump-scare overload, just a suffocating sense that you can’t trust your crew, your neighbours, or even yourself. If you’re into slow-burn Alien style horror that turns everyday city life into a nightmare of imposters, queue this one first.

The Faculty: High-School Body Snatchers and a Modern Cult Classic

Released in cinemas in 1998, The Faculty has grown into a cult classic sci fi horror favourite and is now streaming for free on Pluto TV, a free platform that’s adding it to its May line-up. Directed by Robert Rodriguez and written by Scream scribe Kevin Williamson, the film follows students at an Ohio high school who realise something is seriously wrong with their teachers. The creepy truth: the faculty are being taken over by an alien force, turning a typical teen setting into a pressure cooker of paranoia. The film boasts a stacked cast including Jordana Brewster in her feature debut, Josh Hartnett, Elijah Wood, Famke Janssen, Robert Patrick, Piper Laurie, and more. Its blend of sharp teen dialogue, gooey creature effects, and anti-authority bite helped it achieve cult status and even inspire the Oscar-winning Sinners. Alien fans who enjoy ensemble casts, body horror, and dark humour will feel right at home.

God Told Me To: A 70s Chiller Where the Killer Is Divine

For something stranger and more philosophical, seek out God Told Me To, a 70s sci-fi horror movie from legendary director Larry Cohen. The premise is as unsettling as it sounds: a wave of shocking violence is committed by people who insist God commanded them to kill. As the investigation deepens, the film suggests that the divine itself might be the murderer, turning familiar religious imagery into a source of cosmic dread. Rather than creature-feature thrills, this one channels the experimental spirit of its era, mixing crime drama, speculative theology, and unnerving set pieces. It’s a fascinating example of how sci fi horror movies in the 70s pushed boundaries, using genre to question belief, morality, and authority. Alien fans who appreciate slow, uncanny world-building and big, unnerving questions about higher powers and human insignificance will find this a haunting outlier in their horror movies streaming queue.

Touch Me: Bisexual Alien Sex Horror Comedy with Exploding Heads

To see how far Alien style horror has evolved, add Touch Me to your watchlist. Director Addison Heimann describes it as a “bisexual alien sex horror comedy,” and the film leans into that label with hip-hop dance routines, full-frontal tentacles, and a creepy housekeeper before things escalate—marked by a memorably timed head explosion about an hour in. The story focuses on unemployed thirty-something roommates Joey and Craig, who move into the mansion of Joey’s ex, Brian, an alien seemingly concerned with climate change. The lightest touch of Brian’s noodly appendage wipes away anxiety and pain, making him dangerously addictive. Framed as Joey telling her therapist the most absurd story she can as immersion therapy, the movie plays with unreliable narration while revelling in body horror and erotic absurdity. This wild card is ideal for Alien fans curious about offbeat, sex-positive, and darkly funny directions in modern sci fi horror movies.

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