Salem Horror Fest
Salem Horror Fest has one obvious advantage and one less obvious one. The obvious one is location: Salem, Massachusetts, already arrives with an American history of fear, accusation, and tourist-haunted iconography. The less obvious one is that the festival has used that setting to build a thoughtful platform for contemporary horror rather than a kitsch Halloween attraction. In the American circuit, it sits closer to Brooklyn Horror Film Festival than to giant market-facing events.
Its programming has often leaned toward socially alert independent work and titles that travel well through audience conversation. Birth/Rebirth, The Mortuary Collection, Influencer, and Attachment fit that sensibility: intimate, contemporary, and strong enough to hold a discussion after the screening.
Salem matters because it makes a themed location do real curatorial work instead of empty branding. For contemporary independent horror, that is more useful than atmosphere alone.
