
10 Best Movies Like Lady Beware
If you loved Lady Beware, we've curated the perfect watchlist for you based on shared genres, themes, and directorial style.

Night of the Hunted
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Horror. It captures a similar spine-chilling atmosphere.
When an unsuspecting woman stops at a remote gas station in the dead of night, she's made the plaything of a sociopath sniper with a secret vendetta. To survive, she must not only ...

God Is a Bullet
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Crime. It captures a similar adrenaline-pumping atmosphere.
Vice detective Bob Hightower finds his ex-wife murdered and daughter kidnapped by a cult. Frustrated by the botched official investigations, he quits the force and infiltrates the ...

Blue Velvet
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Crime. It captures a similar compelling atmosphere.
The discovery of a severed human ear found in a field leads a young man on an investigation related to a beautiful, mysterious nightclub singer and a group of psychopathic criminal...

Nocebo
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Horror. It captures a similar spine-chilling atmosphere.
A fashion designer suffers from a mysterious illness that puzzles her doctors and frustrates her husband until help arrives in the form of a Filipino caregiver who uses traditional...

Faces in the Crowd
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Crime. It captures a similar compelling atmosphere.
Anna is living with "face-blindness" after surviving a serial killer's attack. As she lives with her condition, one in which facial features change each time she loses sight of the...

The Number 23
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Lady Beware for fans of Thriller & Crime. It captures a similar compelling atmosphere.
Animal control officer Walter Sparrow becomes obsessed with a novel that he believes was written about him, as more and more similarities between himself and his literary alter ego...