10 Best Single Horror TV Seasons Ever

The greatest single seasons slices of small screen terror.

Marianne Netflix
Netflix

TV as a whole is in a major boom period right now, with bigger budgets being offered up, more patience shown from networks, and more superstar names gravitating from the big screen to the small screen. Like the greater medium itself, this boom has certainly been seen in the horror corner of television in recent years.

The all-time greats of the genre are literally the stuff of nightmares, with their sinister, chilling moments remaining with a viewer long after you've finished an episode, a season or when the series has completely concluded. In fact, those shows are so fantastic at what they do, it's even enough to bring some viewers back for a rewatch and the chance to be scared all over again. Here, the attention is on specific seasons of those shows, as this article is all about exploring the very best single seasons of horror.

To steer clear of too much repetition, only one season of any given show will be included. Sure, one could argue that all three seasons of a series like Stranger Things are worthy of inclusion on this list, but don't be expecting to see three entries taken up with that excellent Duffer Brothers offering.

Taking all of that into account, then, here are ten brilliant, terrifying single seasons of horror television.

10. The Exorcist - Season 1

Marianne Netflix
Fox

When it was announced that the legendary Exorcist was being spun into a TV series, the collective horror community let out a frustrated groan at yet another famed idea of yesteryear being revisited and cashed in on rather than a network trying to create something entirely new and original.

To its credit, Fox's The Exorcist managed to be new and original while simultaneously revisiting something from decades past.

Billed as completely its own beast, this Jeremy Slater-created show introduces audiences to Alfonso Herrera's Father Tomas Ortega and the older, grizzled Father Marcus Keane (Ben Daniels) as they explore a supposed case of possession. The target of this haunting is young Casey Rance, with her family believing that both the girl and their house are being spooked by something dark and sinister.

While poor Casey's condition worsens, the pair of priests are refused permission from the church to perform an exorcism. Having kept audiences on their toes for its first five episodes, it's the end of that fifth offering that really shakes things up - revealing that the matriarch of the Rance family, Angela (Geena Davis), is in fact the Regan MacNeil character seen in the Exorcist movies.

In that one move, this TV series revealed itself to actually be a sequel to those films, and the handling of this reveal alone marks this debut season out as something stupendous.

Senior Writer
Senior Writer

Once described as the Swiss Army Knife of WhatCulture, Andrew can usually be found writing, editing, or presenting on a wide range of topics. As a lifelong wrestling fan, horror obsessive, and comic book nerd, he's been covering those topics professionally as far back as 2010. In addition to his current WhatCulture role of Senior Content Producer, Andrew previously spent nearly a decade as Online Editor and Lead Writer for the world's longest-running genre publication, Starburst Magazine, and his work has also been featured on BBC, TechRadar, Tom's Guide, WhatToWatch, Sportkskeeda, and various other outlets, in addition to being a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic. Between his main dayjob, his role as the lead panel host of Wales Comic Con, and his gig as a pre-match host for Wrexham AFC games, Andrew has also carried out a hugely varied amount of interviews, from the likes of Robert Englund, Kane Hodder, Adrienne Barbeau, Rob Zombie, Katharine Isabelle, Leigh Whannell, Bruce Campbell, and Tony Todd, to Kevin Smith, Ron Perlman, Elijah Wood, Giancarlo Esposito, Simon Pegg, Charlie Cox, the Russo Brothers, and Brian Blessed, to Kevin Conroy, Paul Dini, Tara Strong, Will Friedle, Burt Ward, Andrea Romano, Frank Miller, and Rob Liefeld, to Bret Hart, Sting, Mick Foley, Ricky Starks, Jamie Hayer, Britt Baker, Eric Bischoff, and William Regal, to Mickey Thomas, Joey Jones, Phil Parkinson, Brian Flynn, Denis Smith, Gary Bennett, Karl Connolly, and Bryan Robson - and that's just the tip of an ever-expanding iceberg.