10 Home Invasion Movies Based on True Stories

10 Home Invasion Movies Based on True Stories


The best home invasion movies make the audience feel like they’re right there with the protagonist…and the antagonists. But perhaps that’s not just effective filmmaking. Sometimes a movie hits extra hard, and feels extra real, because that’s precisely what it is. Real. Or, at least inspired by true events, either loosely or directly.




The following films possess a certain realism, and that’s because they are all, to varying extents, based on true-to-life events. They’re the types of movies that stick with one, and make them feel all the more grateful they haven’t experienced these films’ events in their own lives. From Blumhouse fan favorites to gut-wrenching classics, these are the best home invasion movies based on reality.


10 In Cold Blood (1967)

One of the 1960s’ more gut-wrenching films, In Cold Blood is a startling adaptation of Truman Capote’s nonfiction novel. Robert Blake and Scott Wilson star as Perry Smith and Richard Hickock, respectively. They were two real-life criminals who slaughtered a family of four during a home invasion with the goal of stealing a safe.


What Makes It Hauntingly True?

Just as in the movie, the two men chose not to leave any witnesses. It’s a horrible thing to do for money, and the movie does a great job of making the duo contemptible. And, also in real life, actor Robert Blake was charged, then acquitted, then found liable for the wrongful death of his second wife. Rent In Cold Blood on Amazon.

9 Straw Dogs (1971)

Sam Peckinpah’s brutal Straw Dogs was based on the novel The Siege of Trencher’s Farm by Gordon Williams. That novel was inspired by the prison escape of “The Mad Axeman” Frank Mitchell, an event that deeply upset and frightened Williams and those in his community.


One of Cinema’s Toughest Watches

The cinematic adaptation is even more violent and gut-wrenching than the book. It also has two assault scenes which were and remain extremely controversial, at the very least making the movie quite hard to find on streaming services. It’s amazing the movie secured release at all back in 1971, but as violent as it is, it’s nearly as thoughtful, particularly when it’s contemplating what the home invasion would do to someone like Dustin Hoffman’s soft-spoken character.

RELATED: 9 Home Invasion Movies That Went Badly for the Invaders

8 Black Christmas (1974)

Black Christmas

Release Date
December 20, 1974

Director
Bob Clark

Runtime
1hr 38min


Early in his career, Bob Clark (director of Porky’s and A Christmas Story) looked to a real-world event for cinematic inspiration. That story was George Webster’s, a 14-year-old who viciously beat his mother to death with a baseball bat. That said, the movie doesn’t really touch that specific territory all that much (though, in a way, Psycho did).

What Makes it the Scariest Slasher?

Just as Black Christmas was before Halloween, Black Christmas is legitimately more frightening than Halloween. This becomes more apparent with rewatches. Both films feel very real, but Black Christmas has the edge, and most of that comes down to the antagonist’s repugnant phone calls and descent into full insanity.

7 When A Stranger Calls (1979)


While When a Stranger Calls essentially serves as a less effective Black Christmas, it still nails the moment that counts. Or, rather, the ever-terrific Carol Kane does. The sweet, memorably-voiced actor was perfect casting, because seeing her face when she learns the killer is inside the same house as she is as good if not better than the same moment with Olivia Hussey in Bob Clark’s film.

What’s the True Story?

According to Business Insider, the movie was based on the horrifying case of Janett Christman, who was only 13 when she was murdered back in 1950. And they never found the killer. Stream When a Stranger Calls for free with ads on Fubo TV.

6 Angst (1983)


Angst is an early ’80s Austrian horror film that stands in league if not above the majority of America’s slasher films from the same period. This is mostly because of the technical elements bolstering Angst‘s impact. Furthermore, Erwin Leder (who had starred in Das Boot the year before) delivers a powerhouse performance.

A Perfect Title for This Story

The entirety of Angst is unsettling, yet it’s shot with an engrossing, beautiful touch. The film only gets more haunting when one learns it was based on Austrian triple murderer Werner Kniesek. That real-life individual tortured and killed a family of three while on parole and is serving a life sentence. Stream Angst for free with ads on Tubi.

5 The People Under the Stairs (1991)


The People Under the Stairs is both a lesser-known home invasion movie deserving of more love and the ultimate example of an underappreciated Wes Craven. The gentrification-focused narrative was far ahead of its time, and while there’s the occasional jump scare or two, the film’s true frights come from the depravity of the two central antagonists.

A Wes Craven’s Unsung Classic

The People Under the Stairs is essentially a reverse home invasion movie. And, with that twist, Craven finds ample opportunity to criticize the systematic and greed-fueled dismantling of urban areas. In this movie, the invaders are technically trying to steal from a home, but the home’s owners make them look like saints.

Not to mention, it was somewhat of a passion project for the late Craven, who stated he was inspired by a news story where two burglars broke into a home and found a pair of children chained up in its basement. Rent The People Under the Stairs on Apple TV.

RELATED: Jordan Peele’s The People Under The Stairs Reboot Adds Doom Patrol Writer Ezra Claytan Daniels


4 Scream (1996)

scream

Scream

Release Date
December 20, 1996

Runtime
111

Solely responsible for slashers’ continued success throughout the ’90s, Wes Craven’s Scream is just about a perfect film. And, for some, especially those raised in the decade in which it was released, it’s absolutely perfect. The opening scene alone is an exercise in both tension and devastation, helped in no small part by the casting of America’s sweetheart, Drew Barrymore.

Loosely Based on the Gainesville Ripper, Danny Rolling

Scream writer Kevin Williamson took direct inspiration from the horrid story of Danny Rolling, AKA the Gainesville Ripper (via Complex). That man took five lives, which is the exact number of characters the two Ghostfaces kill in the IP’s original installment. That said, while Rolling was sentenced to death for five murders, he claimed to have killed eight people.


3 Panic Room (2002)

Panic Room

Panic Room

Release Date
March 29, 2002

Runtime
112

If David Fincher’s filmography has an underrated entry, it’s Panic Room. It’s an utterly and perpetually intense thriller with a standout lead performance from Jodie Foster (and equally excellent supporting work from Forest Whitaker and Kristen Stewart). One that, of course, involves a high-tech panic room.

Based on a Collection of Panic Room News Coverage

The film is not based on one particular tragic event, but its screenwriter, David Koepp, did draw inspiration from reality. Specifically, the increased news coverage in the early 2000s focused on almost futuristic panic rooms for in-home protection against violent intruders.


2 The Strangers (2008)

A nice sleeper hit in the Summer of 2008, The Strangers was nothing if not organically jarring. There’s nothing in this movie that couldn’t happen in reality. And, say, when a shotgun blast goes off, the recipient doesn’t ever get back up again (even if they’re an It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia star).

Creepily Realistic and Realistically Creepy

On one hand, the film bears some resemblance to the 1981 Keddie Resort killings, according to Slash Film. Furthermore, back when the movie was released, writer and director Bryan Bertino said the movie was also based on an event from his own childhood. One where, while their parents were out, he and his brother answered the door for some strangers who, as it turned out, were robbing the homes that didn’t answer the door. Stream The Strangers on Shudder.


1 The Purge (2013)

The Purge

The Purge

Release Date
June 7, 2013

Runtime
85 Minutes

One of the earliest franchise-spawners for Blumhouse, The Purge is nonetheless quite different from its litany of sequels. Here, the action is centralized on a single locale and never strays. What’s that locale? A white-collar family’s mostly-unappreciated piece of ritzy suburbia.

An Important Early Hit for Blumhouse

This film, which is effectively a take on the real-life, once-held festival called Saturnalia, has a problematic premise. But, it’s not nearly as problematic as having actual people running around doing whatever they want. Either way, the premise was a recipe for success, and the production house has done a great job expanding on it, as there have been four sequels released. Rent The Purge on Amazon.




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