Only a few horror films have been made in the Nordic countries. Academic Gunnar Iversen said that outside silent era productions such as the Swedish film
The Phantom Carriage (1921), the Swedish-Danish collaboration
Häxan (1922) or
Vampyr (1932) directed by the Danish director
Carl Theodor Dreyer, horror films from Sweden and Denmark mostly consisted of low-budget
exploitation films. Norway, Finland and Iceland produced almost no horror films until the 2000s. Iversen stated the lack of a horror film tradition in the Nordic countries had to do with government financing of film and strong censorship and a general ideological climate he described as "skeptical of or even hostile to genres like horror." Among the exceptions were what Iverson described as World War II, some
monster movie productions made with the involvement of American producers were made such as the Swedish
Invasion of the Animal People (1959) and the Danish
Reptilicus (1961) and low budget horror and
sexploitation films like the Danish film
The Sinful Dwarf (1973) and the Swedish
Thriller: A Cruel Picture (1973). Others have horror-like scenarios that are predominantly comedies such as the Norwegian film (1985) or the Icelandic
Spooks and Spirits (2013). Since the 1990s, film policy in Nordic countries has increasingly embraced film as an industry, resulting in a larger number of different genre films. Along with more liberal censorship practices involving graphic violence, particularly in Sweden and Norway, a new market with films like the Danish production
Nightwatch (1994). The film became a huge success, not only in Denmark, but internationally and in other Nordic countries. Fourteen years later,
Lars von Trier made the film
Antichrist (2009) that similarly explored boundaries between art film and horror as he had done in his television series
The Kingdom (1994–1997). Few horror films have been made in Finland such as
The White Reindeer (1952) and the horror and comedy hybrid
The Moonlight Sonata (1988). In 2008, two Finnish horror films premiered with
Dark Floors (2008), featuring the band
Lordi and was one of the most expensive feature films made in Finland and was not a success in the box office. The second was
Sauna an art and horror film hybrid similar to
Antichrist, which Iverson described both as being exploring subjective states and Nordic history. , director of
Let the Right One In (2008), the film that academic Gunnar Iversen described in 2016 as the most popular and successful of any Swedish horror films of the 21st century. Norway had only produced two films Iversen said could be described as horror in the 20th century, the first being
Lake of the Dead (1958) and
Island of Darkness (1997). In comparison, at least 12 horror films have been produced in Norway between 2003 and 2013, many which were financial successes. The first film of the 21st century horror boom was
Dark Woods (2003) which was followed by
Cold Prey (2008) which received two sequels and
Manhunt (2008). Films received what Iversen described as "a new level" with the international box office success of
Dead Snow (2009). With the exception of the films of
Pål Sletaune, Norwegian horror films always take place outside urban areas. Charlotte Wiberg writing for the
Swedish Film Database in 2017 that Sweden has produced approximately 60 to 70 horror films. Between
The Phantom Carriage and
Ingmar Bergman's
Hour of the Wolf (1968), Swedish horror films were primarily made by director
Arne Mattsson such as (1967). Wiberg referred to 1995 as a "watershed year" for Swedish horror with the release of the parody film
Evil Ed (1995), which was followed by several horror films in varying budgets and what she described as "a love of the genre rather than any aspiration for critical acclaim." This included specific genre archetypes such as the zombie film (2005) which went
straight-to-video and the vampire film
Frostbite (2006). While several horror films have been made in Sweden since the year 2000, Iverson said the most impactful, popular and successful was
Let the Right One In (2008). In Iceland, no horror films were made until 2009 with the film
Reykjavik Whale Watching Massacre, which Iverson described as containing aspects of high and low culture using American
slasher film elements in an Icelandic context of the countries
2008 financial collapse. Greenland also has only produced one horror film with
Shadows in the Mountains (2011). ==Netherlands==