Can You Name All 13 Horror Movies Jamie Lee Curtis Has Been In?

Don’t forget her uncredited role in ‘Halloween III’.

Curtis’ most recent role is returning with Lindsay Lohan for the sequel comedy fantasy movie Freakier Friday (2025).

Jamie Lee Curtis is one of the most iconic “scream queens” in horror. She earned this status after starring in Halloween (1978) and a handful of other horror movies in the 80s. She also has a genre pedigree: her mother, actress Janet Leigh, starred as Marion Crane in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960). Her father, Tony Curtis, was also a big movie star and Jamie Lee grew up in Hollywood.

JLC’s royalty was discussed in Scream (1996).

Jamie Lee Curtis and her mother Janet Leigh appeared together in Halloween: H20 (1998). Janet played the role of Norma Watson, the assistant to the headmistress (played by Jamie Lee Curtis) at a private boarding school. The original car Janet Leigh drove in Psycho was also featured.

Janet Leigh played her daughter’s secretary in Halloween: H20.

Surprisingly, Curtis says she doesn’t even like horror movies because in real life, as she scares easily. Here’s a funny story she told the New York Times about going to see Silence of the Lambs in the 90s:

I was making My Girl in Florida, and the makeup man had done Silence of the Lambs and it was out in theaters. He wrote me a crib sheet, which I took with me into the theatre with a little flashlight, and I sat in the back row by myself. It read, “When Jodie goes to the storage locker, close your eyes and ears and wait for the second scream,” and I would cover my ears, close my eyes, curl up in a little ball, and sing “Au Clair de la Lune” in my head.

Whether or not she’ll be watching the slasher film with me, Jamie Lee Curtis will always be my choice for final girl. Here are all of Jamie Lee Curtis’s horror movie credits:

Halloween (1978)

Halloween: Jamie’s career-defining entry into horror films.

Jamie Lee Curtis’s most iconic role is Laurie Strode, a mousy high school student who meets Evil on Halloween night while she is babysitting. Her character is able to keep the kids safe and fend off Michael Myers, at least until the sequel. Halloween became the most successful independent film of its time. It is also considered one of the biggest movies in horror and is credited with inspiring the genre of modern horror as fans know it today. It is also widely referenced in horror culture. For instance, Jamie Lee Curtis’s iconic closet scene is playing in the scary movie Scream (1996) while the characters discuss her status as a horror legend, saying “she’s the…scream queen.”

The Fog (1980)

The Fog was another John Carpenter horror film starring Jamie Lee Curtis.

Jamie Lee Curtis’s next film after Halloween was also directed by John Carpenter. The Fog is supernatural horror movie about a coastal California town where Mother Nature goes wild and a mysterious fog begins descending on the town. It turns out the fog isn’t harmless, as it carries the malevolent ghosts of shipwrecked sailors. Curtis’s mother Janet Leigh also appears.

Prom Night (1980)

A group of high-school teens is stalked by a masked killer in Prom Night.

A Canadian slasher film, Prom Night follows a group of high-school students as they prepare for prom while being targeted by a masked killer. As the friends try to solve the murder mystery, they realize the killer may be motivated by a secret the friends share from their past. Casting Jamie Lee Curtis helped the production find financing, and today the movie is considered a cult classic.

Prom Night was remade in 2005, though the story differs significantly.

Terror Train (1980)

Terror Train: Halloween on a train.”

Another Canadian slasher film, Terror Train follows a group of college students on a train on New Year’s Eve. The group intends to host a costume party, and the costumes are appropriated by masked killers. The executive producer said the purpose of Terror Train was that he wanted to “make Halloween on a train.”

Road Games (1981)

Jamie Lee plays a hitchhiker in Road Games.

Road Games follows a truck driver, Patrick Quid, as he begins to suspect he knows the identity of a serial killer. Jamie Lee Curtis plays a hitchhiker, picked up by Quid who discusses the case with him. While investigating the suspect, Curtis disappears and is snatched by the serial killer.

Halloween II (1981)

Halloween II: Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) finds herself in the hospital.

This direct sequel to Halloween begins only a few moments after the first movie ends. Michael Myers has disappeared after being shot by Dr. Loomis. Laurie Strode is taken to the Haddonfield hospital and Michael follows her there, killing those who stand in his way.

Halloween III (1982)

Jamie Lee Curtis appeared uncredited in Halloween III.

Jamie Lee Curtis has an uncredited role as an operator who announces the town curfew. This film was not considered part of John Carpenter’s Halloween and was intended to mark the beginning of an anthology series unrelated to Laurie Strode and Michael Myers.

Halloween H20: 20 Years Later (1998)

Halloween H20: Laurie Strode goes undercover to avoid Michael Myers.

Jamie Lee Curtis reprised her role as Laurie Strode 20 years after the release of the original Halloween. In this film, Laurie is in hiding as the headmistress of a private boarding school. Her son is one of the students at the school who is in danger when Michael Myers comes to find Laurie on Halloween night.

Virus (1999)

Virus: An abandoned Russian spaceship harbors untold horrors.

A sci-fi horror movie about the crew of a lowly space transport vehicle who board an abandoned Russian spaceship thinking the salvage will make them rich. Jamie Lee Curtis plays an ex-Army officer who contends with her greedy captain and the deadly virus onboard the mysterious ship.

Halloween: Resurrection (2002)

This is one film franchise that refuses to die.

Halloween: Resurrection shows that Laurie Strode killed a random EMT at the end of Halloween: H20. Laurie became an indefinite resident at a psychiatric hospital where she was found and killed by Michael Myers, despite laying a pretty good trap out for him. A year later, an “internet reality show” called Dangertainment hosts a group of college students at Michael Myers’s childhood home.

The plots of Halloween: Resurrection, as well as Halloween: H20 and Halloween II, were disregarded by 2018’s Halloween.

Halloween (2018)

Halloween (2018): Resetting the clock and starting the trilogy all over again.

Jamie Lee Curtis returned to the Halloween franchise with this 2018 film, the beginning of a trilogy that disavows everything except the original Halloween (1978). A Blumhouse production, Halloween (2018) catches up with Laurie Strode as a grandmother living outside of Haddonfield and clearly still traumatized by the events of the 1978 film. She has a strained relationship with her daughter and granddaughter and has turned her home into a bunker where she has spent the last 40 years hiding from Michael Myers.

When the movie was first announced, Blumhouse CEO Jason Blum said Halloween is the biggest horror movie of all time and has influenced the company to make horror movies. The movie lived up to the hype and had the biggest opening for a slasher movie since Scream. As of 2021, it had grossed over $255 million worldwide.

Halloween Kills (2021)

Jamie Lee Curtis in the trailer for Halloween Kills.

Halloween Kills finds Michael Myers alive after the events of Halloween (2018). While Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) recovers at the hospital, the town of Haddonfield becomes enraged that Michael persists in stalking and killing people. The town rises up and hopes to make their motto “evil dies tonight” a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Halloween Ends (2022)

Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) with the newly evil Corey Cunningham (Rohan Campbell).

Halloween Ends finds Laurie Strode in Haddonfield raising her granddaughter Allyson Nelson (Andi Matichak) and writing a memoir about her life with Michael Myers. Unfortunately Michael’s new BFF, Corey, has his sights set on Allyson.

Further reading:

Meet The Author

Chrissy is the co-founder of Creepy Catalog. She has over 10 years of experience writing about horror, a degree in philosophy and Reiki level II certification.

Chrissy Stockton