Cinema has always been a natural vehicle for altered states. The medium literally controls what you see, what you hear, and how time moves, which makes it the perfect art form to simulate what happens inside a mind that’s been chemically rearranged. The best drug trip movies understand this on a structural level: they don’t just show a character taking something and acting weird. They rebuild their editing, their sound design, their cinematography, and sometimes their entire narrative logic around the experience of perception coming unglued.

What follows are 14 drug trip movies that do exactly that. Each film was chosen because the psychedelic experience isn’t a set piece or a sidebar: it is the core of the story, the reason the film exists, and the force that shapes every creative decision on screen. We’ve grouped them by mood and intensity so you can match your pick to your appetite, whether you want something that will make you laugh, something that will make you deeply uncomfortable, or something that will leave you staring at the ceiling for an hour afterward questioning the nature of consciousness.

The Best Drug Trip Movies

1

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

1998 • Adventure, Comedy
7.2
There is a reason Johnny Depp's Raoul Duke is still the first name that surfaces in any conversation about drug trip movies. Terry Gilliam directed this adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson's gonzo masterpiece like a man possessed, turning 1970s Las Vegas into a melting, morphing carnival of paranoia and dark comedy. Depp and Benicio Del Toro have the kind of unhinged chemistry that simply cannot be manufactured, and the film's commitment to putting the viewer inside the hallucination (carpet patterns crawling, hotel clerks transforming into moray eels, walls breathing) remains the undisputed gold standard for psychedelic filmmaking. No list of drug trip movies is complete without it, and no film has come closer to translating the hallucinatory experience into pure cinematic language.
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2

Enter the Void

2010 • Drama, Fantasy
7.3
Gaspar Noé's Enter the Void opens with a DMT hit, and the camera never returns to sobriety. Shot entirely from the protagonist's point of view (including after he dies), it floats over neon-soaked Tokyo in a hallucinatory odyssey that connects past trauma, present violence, and a cosmic cycle of rebirth inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead. At nearly three hours, it demands full commitment. The reward is one of the most visually staggering psychedelic films ever made: a movie that doesn't depict a drug trip so much as become one. The opening DMT sequence alone has inspired an entire generation of visual artists, and Noé's use of overhead tracking shots through Tokyo's neon grid has never been replicated with the same hallucinatory power.
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3

Requiem for a Dream

2000 • Crime, Drama
8.0
Darren Aronofsky didn't just make a movie about addiction: he made a movie that feels like addiction. His rapid-fire editing, split-screen compositions, and Clint Mansell's relentless string-quartet score create a cinematic experience that tightens like a vice across four parallel storylines. Ellen Burstyn's Oscar-nominated performance as a mother disappearing into amphetamine psychosis is arguably the most devastating work in any drug trip movie ever produced. The genius is structural: Aronofsky's "hip-hop montage" technique (extreme close-ups, accelerated sound, pupils dilating) has been imitated hundreds of times since, but in context, it functions as the visual vocabulary of compulsion itself. Among drug trip movies that treat the altered state as tragedy rather than spectacle, Requiem for a Dream stands alone.
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4

Altered States

1980 • Horror, Science Fiction
6.7
Ken Russell brought his signature maximalist energy to this story of a Harvard scientist (William Hurt in his electrifying film debut) who combines hallucinogenic drugs from indigenous shamans with a sensory deprivation tank and begins to physically regress into earlier evolutionary states. The drug trip sequences in this film are absolutely unhinged for 1980: eruptions of religious iconography, bodily transformation, and cosmic horror rendered through practical effects that feel more visceral than most modern CGI. What elevates Altered States beyond spectacle is its genuine philosophical ambition: the film asks whether chemically induced altered consciousness can access something real, something primal, and then has the nerve to answer "yes" in the most terrifying way possible. Among drug trip movies that fuse science fiction with genuine psychedelia, it remains unmatched.
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5

Climax

2018 • Drama, Horror
7.0
Gaspar Noé strikes again, and this time the premise is brutally simple: a troupe of professional dancers celebrates after a successful rehearsal, and then the sangria turns out to be laced with LSD. What follows is a single-location descent into collective psychosis. Long, spiraling camera takes track bodies writhing through hallways as paranoia, violence, and primal terror consume the group one by one. Sofia Boutella anchors an ensemble cast of real dancers who feel genuinely unraveling, and Noé's decision to shoot with minimal scripting gives the whole thing an improvised, documentary rawness that scripted drug trip movies rarely achieve. It is, in the most literal sense, the purest "bad trip" ever committed to film: a psychedelic horror experience that offers no safe distance.
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6

Spun

2003 • Comedy, Crime
6.6
Directed by music video legend Jonas Åkerlund (who cut his teeth on clips for Prodigy and Madonna), Spun follows 72 hours in the life of a meth-addicted college dropout played by Jason Schwartzman, with Mickey Rourke as a twitchy cook and the late Brittany Murphy delivering a fearless, heartbreaking performance as a wired stripper. The film's editing mirrors the amphetamine experience with surgical precision: hyperkinetic cuts, time-lapse sequences, distorted aspect ratios, and visual effects that refuse to let your eyes rest for a single second. It's a style-over-substance argument that works precisely because the style IS the substance. One of the most criminally underrated drug trip movies of the 2000s, Spun deserves its growing cult reputation as a film that understood the aesthetics of stimulant psychosis before anyone else tried.
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7

MadS

2024 • Horror, Thriller
6.5
This French micro-budget sensation pulled off something genuinely audacious: a drug trip movie told in one unbroken take. Teenager Romain tests a new designer pill from his dealer, picks up an injured woman on the roadside, and from that moment, the camera refuses to cut as the night spirals into a hallucinatory nightmare where the line between chemical hallucination and something far more sinister dissolves completely. The single-shot format is not a gimmick here: it's the mechanism that traps the viewer inside the trip with no reprieve, no edit to catch your breath, no cutaway to safety. Among recent drug trip movies, MadS is the most formally daring, and its lo-fi production values only amplify the feeling that something has gone profoundly, irreversibly wrong.
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8

Infinity Pool

2023 • Horror, Science Fiction
6.1
Brandon Cronenberg (yes, David's son, and very much his own filmmaker) delivers a resort-set horror film where Alexander Skarsgård's failed novelist encounters a fictional country's perverse legal system: commit a crime, pay to have your clone executed in your place, and watch it happen while dosed on a psychedelic drug that fractures your entire sense of self. The trip sequences are searing and kaleidoscopic, layered with imagery of biological replication and ego death, and Mia Goth prowls through every scene with the predatory magnetism that has made her the defining horror actress of her generation. Infinity Pool asks what happens when a drug trip doesn't just alter your perception but literally duplicates and destroys your identity, and it is not interested in giving you a comfortable answer.
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9

Naked Lunch

1991 • Crime, Drama
7.0
David Cronenberg accomplished what the industry declared impossible: he adapted William S. Burroughs' "unfilmable" novel by weaving the author's real biography into the hallucinatory text itself. Peter Weller stars as an exterminator whose bug powder becomes his drug of choice, catapulting him into the Interzone, a shifting landscape populated by talking insects, sinister agents, and typewriters that transform into pulsing organic creatures. Among drug trip movies that lean into full-blown surrealism, Naked Lunch is the benchmark. The hallucinations are not visual effects layered onto a "real" world: they ARE the film's reality, and the audience is never given the comfort of knowing what's chemical and what's actual. Cronenberg's body horror sensibility collides with Burroughs' paranoid prose to produce something genuinely singular in the history of psychedelic cinema.
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10

A Scanner Darkly

2006 • Animation, Science Fiction
6.8
Richard Linklater used rotoscope animation (live-action footage painted over frame by frame) to adapt Philip K. Dick's novel about an undercover narcotics agent (Keanu Reeves) who becomes addicted to the very drug he's surveilling: Substance D, which splits the brain's hemispheres and fractures identity. The animation itself wobbles, shifts, and occasionally seems to malfunction, making every single frame feel chemically unstable. Robert Downey Jr., Woody Harrelson, and Winona Ryder round out a stacked cast in what is arguably the most intellectually rigorous entry on this drug trip movies list. Dick's source material was autobiographical (he wrote it as a memorial to friends lost to drug abuse), and Linklater honors that grief without ever losing the hallucinatory visual invention that makes the film so rewatchable.
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11

The Wave

2019 • Science Fiction
6.0
Frank, an insurance lawyer on the cusp of a promotion, takes a mysterious hallucinogenic drug at a party and watches his entire reality disintegrate. But The Wave isn't content to just deliver pretty visuals: the hallucinations function as a mechanism for moral reckoning, forcing Frank to relive and confront the genuinely terrible things he's done to other people in pursuit of his career. It's clever, vibrant, and surprisingly moving for a film built around a psychedelic experience, and lead actor Justin Long delivers a performance that balances comedy, horror, and genuine emotional vulnerability. Among drug trip movies that use the altered state as a vehicle for character transformation rather than mere spectacle, The Wave is one of the smartest entries in the genre.
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12

Bliss

2021 • Drama, Romance
5.5
Owen Wilson and Salma Hayek star in this Mike Cahill-directed film about a man who, after being fired from his job, meets a woman who insists their grim reality is nothing more than a simulated drug trip inside a beautiful, utopian "real" world. The mysterious crystalline drug at the film's center is the mechanism that shifts between layers, and Bliss earns its place among drug trip movies by refusing to confirm which reality is authentic until the very end (and even then, it's debatable). It's a more emotional, character-driven entry than most psychedelic films, closer in spirit to Eternal Sunshine than to Fear and Loathing, and Wilson delivers a dramatic performance that will genuinely surprise anyone who only knows him from comedies.
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13

Pizza Movie

2026 • Adventure, Comedy
The newest entry on this list is already one of 2026's most talked-about comedies. Gaten Matarazzo and Sean Giambrone play college roommates who take a designer drug called "M.I.N.T.S." that puts them through escalating hallucinatory stages: body-swapping, involuntary truth-telling, heads exploding any time they swear. The only way to end the trip is to eat something. Their pizza is waiting in the lobby. It's two flights of stairs away. Directors Nick Kocher and Brian McElhaney (both SNL/Lonely Island alumni) nail the balance between absurdist visual comedy and genuine friendship stakes, and the film's escalating-obstacle structure gives it a propulsive energy that most drug trip movies in the comedy lane struggle to sustain. It's the lightest film on this list, but it earns its spot by making the hallucinatory experience both the source of every joke and the engine of real emotional conflict between its leads.
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14
6.6
If you want to hear famous people describe their most memorable drug trips, complete with wild animated reenactments, this documentary delivers in abundance. Celebrities including Sting, Carrie Fisher, Ben Stiller, Sarah Silverman, and the late Anthony Bourdain share hallucinogenic stories that range from hilarious to genuinely profound, and the animation team brings each psychedelic experience to vivid, stylistically varied life. It also weaves in a surprisingly substantive thread about the history of LSD and psilocybin research, giving the whole project more depth than its party-conversation premise suggests. Among drug trip movies (and yes, documentaries count), it's the perfect palate-cleanser after the heavier entries on this list, and an ideal entry point for anyone curious about the genre.
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Why Drug Trip Movies Continue to Push Cinema Forward

From the gonzo chaos of 1970s Las Vegas to a 2026 college dorm hallway that refuses to stop shape-shifting, these 14 drug trip movies represent the full spectrum of what happens when filmmakers commit to putting the audience inside an altered state of consciousness. The genre rewards the adventurous viewer: the editing is bolder, the sound design is more inventive, the color palettes are more daring, and the performances are almost always fearless, because actors playing characters on psychedelic trips have permission to go places that most roles never allow.

What unites every film on this list is a refusal to treat the drug trip as a gimmick. In each case, the altered state is the story’s foundation, not its decoration. That’s what separates true drug trip movies from films that merely include a drug scene: the commitment to rebuilding cinema itself around the experience of perception breaking apart and, sometimes, coming back together in a shape you didn’t expect. Whether you start with the comedy or plunge straight into the void, these films will change the way you think about what a camera can do.


FAQ About Drug Trip Movies

What is the most realistic drug trip movie?

Enter the Void is widely considered the most visually authentic depiction of a psychedelic experience in cinema, particularly its opening DMT sequence, which was developed in consultation with people who had firsthand experience with the substance. Requiem for a Dream is often cited as the most emotionally realistic portrayal of how addiction warps perception over time. For stimulant-specific realism, Spun captures the frantic, sleepless energy of a meth binge with an editing style that mirrors the drug’s effect on cognition. The “most realistic” drug trip movie ultimately depends on which substance and which stage of the experience you’re asking about.

What makes a good drug trip movie?

The best drug trip movies go beyond simply showing a character taking a substance: they restructure the filmmaking itself around the altered state. That means the editing rhythm changes (as in Requiem for a Dream), the camera behaves differently (as in Enter the Void’s first-person POV), or the visual medium itself becomes unstable (as in A Scanner Darkly’s rotoscope animation). Great psychedelic films also tie the trip to genuine narrative stakes, whether that’s a moral reckoning (The Wave), an identity crisis (Infinity Pool), or the complete dissolution of a social group (Climax). Style alone isn’t enough: the trip needs to matter to the story.

Are there any recent drug trip movies worth watching?

Absolutely. The genre has seen a strong resurgence in recent years. MadS (2024) is a one-take French horror film built entirely around a designer drug trip gone wrong. Infinity Pool (2023) combines psychedelic cinema with body horror and existential dread. And Pizza Movie (2026), the Hulu comedy starring Gaten Matarazzo, has quickly become one of the year’s biggest cult hits by turning a hallucinogenic experience into a hilarious obstacle-course comedy. The tradition of great drug trip movies is very much alive and evolving.

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