Cambodian horror films, like those of Thailand, are heavily influenced by popular
Japanese and
Korean horror films but also display elements from European and American horror. But the plots of Cambodian horror films often contain ghost stories, physically or psychologically violent revenge, spirit hauntings or possessions that can also be associated with myths taken from Cambodian folk religion such as the
ap. Films featuring ghost stories, mythology and blood rituals include
Ghost Banana Tree and
The Kantong Kiev Witch. One film,
The Haunted House, is loosely based on an actual
urban legend surrounding a supposedly haunted house in
Kampong Chhnang Province. Similar to more widely known Japanese movies, the more popular films rely on storytelling that takes a slower pace than Western horror, building suspense and focusing on the characters' suffering and anguish. A pervasive sense of doom and dread is maintained by portraying
psychologically disturbing situations and events. In a departure from the East Asian formula, however, Cambodian films often feature over-the-top gore and cheaply overdone effects. Popular horror films in this modern vein that emphasize psychological terror include
The Weird Villa,
Secret Well (2007, from Ángkor Wat Productions), and
Heart Talk, a 2008
Khmer Mekong Films production written by British novelist and screenwriter
Matt Baylis. Films with revenge motifs are usually based on unrequited or betrayed love and often feature the offended person, who either is killed or commits suicide, rising from the dead either as a ghostly apparition or a spirit that can possess other bodies. The plots are usually resolved only after sufficient revenge has been taken or when the ghost or spirit is defeated by a holy man (an
Achaa,
Ruesi, or
Khru) or a Buddhist Monk. Horror revenge-themed movies include
Villa Horror,
Annoyed, Moheagita and
The Last Tag. Cambodian monster films are another subgenre of horror. Although considered a relatively new subgenre, these movies are just extensions of the older folk mythology type films with different monsters. Similar to the older
Snake King films, these low-budget monster films employ much outdoor cinematography and amateurish special effects. The characters in monster movies are usually groups of teens on outings or cross country journeys without adult supervision. Well known examples of monster films are
The Forest,
Queen of Cobra and
People eating Lizard.
Slasher films haven't been very common but a few have been made in Cambodia. Most portray many adolescent victims killed in a typically random, unprovoked fashion usually within a single night. The first slasher film produced by a Cambodian company was
The Waterfall of Death, which has noted similarities to the American murder thriller
I Know What You Did Last Summer and the Thai psychological killer film
Scared. ==List of Cambodian horror films==