29 Great Zombie Apocalypse Movies And How To Stream Or Rent Them Online

David Emge in Dawn of the Dead
(Image credit: United Film Distribution)

For about as long as I can remember, I have always been drawn to zombie apocalypse movies, and have long thought that the best horror movies are those that involve armies of the undead. What started out as a fear of flesh-eating ghouls slowly turned into an enjoyment of the genre. If there was a zombie movie on DVD, I had it in my collection. And whenever there was a possibility of some kind of ghoul showing up in an upcoming horror movie, I would make plans to be there.

I've watched a lot of zombie movies over the years, and thought it would be fun to put together a list of my favorites and the various ways you can watch them online. And yes, George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead is finally on the list after not being available digitally for years. 

Arnold Schwarzenegger in Maggie

(Image credit: Lionsgate Films)

Maggie (2015)

If someone were to pitch a zombie movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, most would assume it would be an action-packed thriller with some wild sequences and catchy one-liners. However, Henry Hobson’s Maggie is anything but that. In this tense and incredibly emotional drama, Schwarzenegger plays the devoted father of a young girl (played by Abigail Breslin) who has become infected after being bitten by a zombie. A touching and gut-wrenching affair, the movie shows the great lengths parents go to protect their children, even in the face of an inevitable fate.

Stream Maggie on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy Maggie on Amazon.

A survivor battling zombies in The Night Eats the World

(Image credit: WTFilms)

The Night Eats The World (2018)

Dominique Rocher’s The Night Eats the World (or La nuit a dévoré le monde in French) follows a musician living in Paris (played by Anders Danielsen Lie) as he awakes one morning to discover that a zombie outbreak has taken over the French capital. Less of a movie about daring escapes and the search for answers, this thrilling horror film instead focuses on one lone man’s attempt to survive the apocalypse one day at a time.

Stream The Night Eats the World on Peacock.
Stream The Night Eats the World on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy The Night Eats the World on Amazon.

A zombie on a phone in The Dead Next Door

(Image credit: Amsco Studios)

The Dead Next Door (1989)

The Dead Next Door is perhaps one of the cheesiest zombie movies of all time, but that’s honestly part of its charm. J. R. Bookwalter’s 1989 horror flick follows a group known as the Zombie Squad as they attempt to get control of a massive outbreak of undead flesh-eaters. Things take a turn, however, when they enter the turf of a crazed cult that may or may not have a cure. Outrageous gore, voiceovers by Bruce Campbell, and home video look and feel make this a cult classic worth revisiting.

Stream The Dead Next Door on Plex.
Stream The Dead Next Door on Tubi.

Logan Miller in Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

Scouts Guide To The Zombie Apocalypse (2015)

Directed by Christopher Landon, Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse follows three friends (played by Tye Sheridan, Logan Miller, and Joey Morgan) as they are forced to come up with crafty ways to survive an outbreak of the undead. Equal parts terrifying and hilarious, this wild adventure is full of blood, guts, brains, and some wild action as the teenagers fight through the night with all types of zombie-killing weapons.

Stream Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse on Paramount+.
Stream Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse on Amazon.

Milla Jovovich inside a lab in Resident Evil.

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Resident Evil (2002)

While not the George A. Romero planned adaptation, Paul W.S. Anderson’s 2002 take on Resident Evil still has its great moments, even if it’s nostalgia for the early 2000s talking. Loosely based on the first game of the iconic survival horror franchise, this movie follows Alice (Milla Jovovich), a woman who’s lost her memory, as she attempts to get to the bottom of a mysterious outbreak and deadly underground lab. Plus, it has one of the best ending shots of any zombie movie.

Rent/Buy Resident Evil on Amazon.

Ken Foree in Dawn of the Dead

(Image credit: United Film Distribution)

Dawn Of The Dead (1978) 

Featuring some of the most resourceful horror movie characters, a great setting, and more social commentary than we know what to do with, George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead is still considered one of the best zombie movies of all time more than 45 years after its release. This 1978 classic follows a helicopter pilot, his pregnant TV news station producer girlfriend, and two cops as they escape Philadelphia and take refuge at a massive indoor mall. Bountiful resources and a place to lay their heads await, but so do hundreds of flesh-eating ghouls trapped within.

Sure, this horror sequel is campier than its predecessor, Night of the Living Dead, and it doesn’t feel as claustrophobic, but this doesn’t mean it’s lacking in any way. In fact, thanks to Tom Savini’s impressive and inventive make-up and special effects work, this movie blows away anything that came before.

Rent/Buy Dawn Of The Dead on Amazon.

The Braindead cast

(Image credit: Trimark Pictures)

Before Peter Jackson became a director known for The Lord of the Rings, King Kong, and documentaries like The Beatles: Get Back, the New Zealand filmmaker made a name for himself in the world of horror. One of his best features is 1992’s Braindead, a zombie movie that combines equal parts horror and comedy to create a hilarious and blood-soaked cinematic experience

Also known as Dead Alive, the movie follows Lionel Cosgrove (Timothy Balme) as he tries to keep his mother, Vera (Elizabeth Moody) in quarantine after she is bitten by a rat, only for her to repeatedly escape and infect more and more of their neighbors. Filled with camp, comedy, romance, and buckets of blood, this is one you won’t want to miss.

Stream Braindead on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy Braindead on Amazon.

Hugo Stiglitz in Nightmare City

(Image credit: New Fida)

Nightmare City (1980)

Umberto Lenzi’s 1980 Italian horror film, Nightmare City (also released as City of the Walking Dead) combines elements of zombie movies, vampire thrillers, and anti-nuclear sentiments to tell its wild, engaging, and terrifying story. Sent to cover the emergency landing of a military plane carrying scientists investigating a nuclear accident, a news reporter (played by Hugo Stiglitz) instead witnesses a group of crazed and seemingly invincible men attacks and drink the blood of soldiers on the runway.

What follows is a race against time to not only tell and warn people of the ensuing danger but also try to get to the bottom of the story and figure out its cause before it's too late. Forced quarantine, a city bursting at the seams with ghouls, and other dangers make this no easy task.

Stream Nightmare City on Kanopy.

A scene from Night Of The Creeps

(Image credit: Tri-Star Pictures)

Night Of The Creeps (1986)

Fred Dekker, who’d go on to work on everything from The Monster Squad to Tales from the Crypt, got his start with the 1986 sci-fi/horror comedy, Night of the Creeps. When two college students (played by Jason Lively and Steve Marshall) steal a cadaver as part of an initiation ceremony to join a frat at their college, they unwittingly take a corpse that is under the control of alien invaders. As the zombies begin to grow in numbers (thanks to extraterrestrial slugs), Corman University becomes ground zero of the apocalypse.

If you’re a fan of B movies, zombies, aliens, and all things ‘80s, then this campy yet earnest horror flick is going to quickly become one of your go-to cult classics.

Rent/Buy Night Of The Creeps on Amazon.

Nathan Fillion in Slither

(Image credit: Universal)

Slither (2006)

One of the funniest movies about zombies and alien invaders, James Gunn’s 2006 cult classic, Slither, checks all the boxes. After an alien parasite takes over a small South Carolina town and turns its residents into zombies, Police Chief Bill Pardy (one of Nathan Fillion’s best roles) takes it upon himself to figure out what the hell is going on and stop things from getting worse.

Released nearly a decade before Gunn introduced Guardians of the Galaxy to the world and helped usher in a new era for superhero movies, this short, sweet, and hilarious horror-comedy gave the director a major platform to show what he was working with.

Rent/Buy Slither on Amazon.

Imogen Poots in 28 Weeks Later

(Image credit: Disney / Fox)

28 Weeks Later (2007)

Released in 2007, 28 Weeks Later is one of those awesome horror movie sequels that works despite being a major departure from its predecessor. Set months after the initial release of the “Rage” Virus that decimated England, the movie centers on a group of U.N. soldiers as they try to contain its spread.

Though none of the actors from the 28 Days Later cast return for this one, the audience is introduced to some outstanding characters throughout this action-packed horror thriller. Oh, and that opening sequence is still just as great more than a decade-and-a-half later. And with the upcoming 28 Years Later on the way, now would be a fun time to revisit this thrilling zombie flick.

Stream 28 Weeks Later on Hulu.
Rent/Buy 28 Weeks Later on Amazon.

Army of the Dead team from Netflix movie

(Image credit: Netflix)

Army Of The Dead (2021) 

Seventeen years after coming onto the scene with his surprisingly good Dawn of the Dead remake, Zack Snyder returned to the zombie genre with the Netflix exclusive, Army of the Dead. This flashy, over-the-top, and action-packed Las Vegas adventure feels like Ocean’s Eleven with zombies, because of its setting and large ensemble cast.

Set years after a zombie outbreak devastated Las Vegas, a group of mercenaries led by Scott Ward (Dave Bautista) is sent into the ruins of Sin City to break into a massive vault and recover $200 million hidden inside. Just like his Dawn of the Dead movie, this action-packed, blood-filled, and rather emotional zombie flick has a lot of brains and heart.

Stream Army of the Dead on Netflix.

Lupita Nyong'o and Alexander England singing Shake It Off in Little Monsters

(Image credit: Neon)

Little Monsters (2019)

In 2019, Abe Forsythe gave the world his unique spin on the zombie genre with the horror-comedy, Little Monsters. Instead of a group of mercenaries sent into a deadly location or a group of scientists trying to find a cure, this charming tale centers around a kindergarten teacher played by Lupita Nyong’o, a children’s TV show host portrayed by Josh Gad, and Alexander England’s washed-up musician as they try to protect a group of young kids from a deadly zombie outbreak.

With a lot of heart, soul, and so much gore, this remarkably funny zombie romp is full of surprises and great moments around each corner. Like zombies grabbing your limbs, this movie takes hold of your heart.

Stream Little Monsters on Hulu.

A zombie from Zombie

(Image credit: Variety Film Production)

Zombie (1979) 

Zombie (or Zombi 2) is Lucio Fulci’s 1979 unofficial sequel to George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead. But instead of taking place in a shopping mall, the movie is mostly set on a Caribbean island and follows a researcher, a journalist, and several other new characters as they investigate claims of a strange viral outbreak.

This movie is just as terrifying as it is campy (a zombie fights a shark), features one of the most disgusting eye scenes of all time, and is definitely not for the faint of heart. However, this is a classic addition to the genre that is a must for horror fans, even if it is just to check out the impressive zombie effects and all that incredible gore.

Rent/Buy Zombie on Amazon.

Asia Argento in Land of the Dead

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

Land Of The Dead (2005)

After a 20-year break, the late George A. Romero returned to his iconic zombie franchise with 2005’s Land of the Dead. Set in a walled-off Pittsburgh protected from the millions of ghouls outside its gates, the movie plays out like A Tale of Two Cities but with zombies, in that the wealthy live a life of luxury and security in a massive tower while everyone else fights for scraps (and their lives). 

If a rebellion to overthrow the ruthless Paul Kaufman (Dennis Hopper) isn’t bad enough, the survivors also have to deal with a group of undead who have evolved and started to work under the direction of Big Daddy (Eugene Clark), one of the smartest and best movie zombies of all time.

Rent/Buy Land of the Dead on Amazon.

Rose McGowan in Planet Terror

(Image credit: Dimension)

Planet Terror (2007) 

Released as one half of the Grindhouse double-feature, director Robert Rodriguez’s 2007 zombie thriller, Planet Terror, is one hell of a ride. On a seemingly normal night, a rural Texas town becomes overrun with zombies that bring death, destruction, and chaos to the once-quiet community. 

Injured go-go dancer Cherry Darling (Rose McGowan), whose leg is ripped off in the mayhem and later replaced with an assault rifle, and her ex-boyfriend El Wray (Freddy Rodriguez) lead a group of survivors through the night in hopes of creating a better tomorrow. This proves to be no easy task, however, and survival is far from guaranteed.

Rent/Buy Planet Terror on Amazon.

The One Cut of the Dead cast

(Image credit: Enbu Seminar)

One Cut Of The Dead (2017) 

Shin'ichirō Ueda’s uniquely funny 2017 Japanese zombie comedy, One Cut of the Dead, follows an obsessive filmmaker, his cast, and crew as they film a horror movie in an abandoned and haunted plant that is attacked by real zombies. Instead of screeching to a halt, the production continues and is completed in a single take due to various reasons.

It’s best to stop reading about One Shot of the Dead there, as the movie takes some wild and crazy turns that are so off-the-wall they’re hard to believe.

Rent/Buy One Cut of the Dead on Amazon.

Gong Yoo in Train to Busan

(Image credit: Next Entertainment World)

Train To Busan (2016)

Nearly a half-century after George A. Romero introduced audiences to the idea of the flesh-eating undead masses, South Korean filmmaker Yeon Sang-ho gave us one of the most refreshing and beautifully crafted films in the genre with 2016's Train To Busan. Set aboard a high-speed train infested with the walking dead, this movie carries on a lot of the messages that Romero inserted into his classic Dead anthology.

Throughout its nearly two-hour runtime, Train To Busan contains some of the best and most inventive trappings for its survivors. With one half of the survivors stuck on the back of the train and the other half on the front, they must find a way through the wall of zombies separating the two. 

Stream Train to Busan on Peacock.
Rent/Buy Train to Busan on Amazon.

Manuela Velasco in [REC]

(Image credit: Sony)

Rec (2007) 

Often considered one of the best found footage horror movies, the 2007 Spanish thriller, Rec, follows a young reporter (Manuela Velasco) as she and her cameraman (Pablo Rosso) become trapped in an apartment complex in which the residents are turned into flesh-eating zombies.

Directed by Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza, this streamlined thriller makes the most of its 78-minute runtime to produce one of the most frightening and unique experiences that pumped new life into the zombie horror subgenre upon release.

Rent/Buy Rec on Amazon.

Martin Freeman in Cargo

(Image credit: Netflix)

Cargo (2018) 

Based on their 2013 short film of the same name, Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke’s 2017 zombie drama, Cargo, follows a father (Martin Freeman) as he and his infant daughter navigate rural Australia in hopes of being rescued in the midst of a massive viral outbreak that turns people into rabid monsters within 48 hours.

In a race against time, and the onset of infection, the father searches for a way out of the terrifying situation, one that only gets more dire by the minute. Far more dramatic than most zombie movies, Cargo will absolutely leave you gutted by the time it’s finished.

Stream Cargo on Netflix.

Duane Jones in NIght of the Living Dead

(Image credit: Image Ten)

Night Of The Living Dead (1968)

You couldn't have a list of the best zombie movies without including George A. Romero's landmark low-budget thriller, Night Of The Living Dead. Not only did this 1968 classic start one of the greatest horror franchises in the history of cinema, it was also paramount in the creation of the modern zombie movie.

This black-and-white tale of the undead follows a small group of strangers who seek shelter in an old farmhouse in rural Pennsylvania. As the zombies slowly begin to overtake the exterior of the house, the survivors are verbally ripping one another apart as they fail to put aside their differences.

Stream Night of the Living Dead on Max.
Stream Night of the Living Dead on Peacock.
Rent/Buy Night of the Living Dead on Amazon.   

Shaun of the Dead cast

(Image credit: Rogue Pictures)

Shaun Of The Dead (2004)

Not all zombie movies have to be dark and dreary retellings of the apocalypse as Edgar Wright showed us in the hilarious horror comedy Shaun Of The Dead. Written alongside the film's star, Simon Pegg, this parody of the genre remains one of the best zombie movies.

Following the life of Shaun (Pegg), a down-on-his-luck electronics salesman and his best friend Ed (Nick Frost), the film pits the two deadbeat losers against hordes of undead on the streets of London. While technically a comedy, Shaun Of The Dead doesn't hold back on the gore, guts, or headshots as Shaun, Ed, and their friends and family try to escape to their favorite bar, the Winchester, where who knows what'll happen.

Rent/Buy Shaun of the Dead on Amazon.

Woody Harrelson and Jesse Eisenberg in Zombieland

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Zombieland (2009)

If you are looking for a star-studded cast, loads of comedy, and plenty of zombie kills then Zombieland is the movie for you. Released in 2009, this Ruben Fleischer picture brings together Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg, Emma Stone, and Abigail Breslin as the group of outcasts come together and make their way across the continental United States that has been all but destroyed by the masses of undead littering the landscape.

One part comedy and one part horror, this highly imaginative mashup of the genres offers some of the most inventive zombie kills and plot devices ever seen in horror movies. With a long list of "rules" in order to prolong their survival, this ragtag group gives us laughs, chills, and plenty of kills. There are even a few tears along the way.

 Stream Zombieland on Netflix.
Rent/Buy Zombieland on Amazon.

Joseph Pilato being ripped apart in Day of the Dead

(Image credit: United Film Distribution Company)

Day Of The Dead (1985)

In 1985, George A. Romero completed his original Dead trilogy with Day of the Dead, an extremely bleak concluding chapter that picked up years into the zombie apocalypse. Confined to a military base established in an old mining system, a group of scientists and soldiers attempt to coexist in hopes of finding a cure for the virus that has brought humanity to its knees.

While Romero's previous efforts lacked in the detailed gore department, Day of the Dead goes all out with some of the best work by legendary special effects artist Tom Savini. It’s slower, meaner, and less action-packed than Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead, but this ‘80s horror movie has quite the bite.

Stream Day of the Dead on Peacock.
Rent/Buy Day of the Dead on Amazon. 

Zombies in Dawn of the Dead

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

Dawn Of The Dead (2004)

Zack Snyder’s Dawn Of The Dead, which was written by James Gunn, is similar to George A. Romero’s horror classic in name and setting only, but that's not to say it's a bad movie. Instead, it's just a different approach to the zombie mall concept. With an ensemble cast that includes Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, and Ty Burrell before he went on to become the lovable Phil Dunphy on Modern Family, this reimagining has some bright spots. 

The most memorable of those scenes is the film's opening, in which Polley's character must escape her suburban neighborhood as it's being ripped apart by the undead masses. The way the scene transitions to the superb title sequence still amazes me.

Rent/Buy Dawn of the Dead on Amazon. 

Teresa Palmer and Nicholas Hoult in Warm Bodies.

(Image credit: Summit Entertainment)

Warm Bodies (2013)

Who says you can't have a romantic comedy set inside a world that has been overtaken by millions of zombies? I guess no one told Jonathan Levine that before he adapted and directed the 2013 zombie comedy Warm Bodies about a ghoul by the name of "R" (Nicholas Hoult) who falls in love with a very living Julia Grigio (Teresa Palmer).

Based on a novel by the same name, the oddball comedy horror mashup is as funny as it is terrifying as the romance blooms in a world that is nearly a decade into a widespread zombie outbreak. With their perfect mixture of romance, thrills, and chills, Warm Bodies is perfect for anyone looking for a happier approach to the zombie genre.

Stream Warm Bodies on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy Warm Bodies on Amazon.

Bill Murray in The Dead Don't Die

(Image credit: Focus Features)

The Dead Don't Die (2019)

I could hem and haw about the intricacies of Jim Jarmusch's absurdist The Dead Don't Die, but I'll cut to the chase and say that this is one of the most refreshing and hilarious zombie movies I've ever seen. Not quite a horror movie and yet still not exactly your typical comedy, this mishmash of genres, along with the insane cast (Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Tom Waits, etc.), The Dead Don't Die is a gem.

When a zombie outbreak takes over a small city, the local police force, mortician, and hermit must make sense of the world around them as the dead mysteriously return from the grave. This one isn't for everyone, but man is it great.

Stream The Dead Don’t Die on Max.
Rent/Buy The Dead Don’t Die on Amazon.

Clu Gulager, James Karen, and Thom Mathews in The Return of the Living Dead

(Image credit: Orion Pictures)

The Return Of The Living Dead (1985)

I was just a kid when I first saw The Return Of The Living Dead, so young that I failed to see the humor in this 1985 oddball horror comedy and thought it was the scariest movie I'd ever seen. It was truly frightening watching this classic on WGN that fateful October afternoon. Since then, I've grown to love this unconventional zombie movie about a viral outbreak in Louisville, Kentucky, of all places.

Written and directed by Dan O'Bannon, who's mostly known for writing the screenplay for Ridley Scott's Alien six years earlier, The Return Of The Living Dead takes place in a world in which Night Of The Living Dead was based. Add a medical disaster, a gang of street punks, and a soundtrack for the ages, and you have yourself one of the goofiest and goriest comedies to come out of the 1980s.

Stream The Return of the Living Dead on Prime Video.
Rent/Buy The Return of the Living Dead on Amazon. 

Brad Pitt in World War Z.

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

World War Z (2013)

And then there is the Marc Foster-directed World War Z, starring Brad Pitt as Gerry Lane, a former United Nations investigator who is tasked with finding the cause of a viral outbreak that has spread throughout the world. Based on the novel of the same name by Max Brooks, World War Z, is a fun, globetrotting adventure about a man who happens to find himself in the face of danger at every turn.

The film is a departure from the narrative structure of the well-written novel on which it was based, but World War Z does have some of the most exciting action sequences and a finale in the zombie-infested World Health Organization headquarters that still makes me quiver all these years later.

Stream World War Z on Netflix.
Stream World War Z on Paramount+.
Rent/Buy World War Z on Amazon. 

Well, this should be enough to hold you over while we wait for the next great zombie movie to take us back to the graveyard. But it wouldn’t be all that surprising to see the dead rise again at some point during the 2024 movie release date schedule.

Philip Sledge
Content Writer

Philip grew up in Louisiana (not New Orleans) before moving to St. Louis after graduating from Louisiana State University-Shreveport. When he's not writing about movies or television, Philip can be found being chased by his three kids, telling his dogs to stop barking at the mailman, or chatting about professional wrestling to his wife. Writing gigs with school newspapers, multiple daily newspapers, and other varied job experiences led him to this point where he actually gets to write about movies, shows, wrestling, and documentaries (which is a huge win in his eyes). If the stars properly align, he will talk about For Love Of The Game being the best baseball movie of all time.