OBSESSION (2026) – Review

Hey, I know we were just there last month with LEE CRONIN’S THE MUMMY, but don’t you feel like making another visit to the “guys and ghouls” that reside at that creepy ole’ “Blumhouse”? Now, I’m not referring to an actual piece of decrepit real estate, but rather a movie production company that’s known mainly for cinematic terror tales, much like Hammer and Amicus over in the UK so long ago. This time out, they’re dipping into a bag of magical “thingamabobs” for a cautionary tale with a sardonic and very black sense of humor. So forget that dusty monkey’s paw and toss out the Arabian lamp, because this “deliverer of all desires” just may become your new OBSESSION. But, as the saying goes, “be careful what you wish for”. Very, very careful…

In the opening scene, we meet the story’s main protagonist, the morose, brooding “Bear” (Michael Johnston). He’s on a most precarious mission, not a big heist or a quest for treasures. No, he’s desperate to escape the “friend zone” in order to start a serious romantic relationship with his music store co-worker Nikki (Inde Navarrette). Bear just has to find the perfect moment to make his case. Perhaps it will be tonight after some bar trivia with two other “retail slaves”, Ian (Cooper Tomlinson) and Sarah (Megan Lawless). Oh, but a “pet emergency” has him backing out when he talks to Nikki on the phone. Bear hears some racket on her end, and Nikki says that she just accidentally dropped her crystal necklace down a drain. Ah ha! This could provide an “in.” Bear runs down to the “new age” trinket store for a replacement. But something else catches his eye. It’s a weird “Tchoksy” called “One Wish Willow”. This “old timey” toy guarantees that your wish will be granted after breaking it in two (it’s a wand-like wooden stick). At the end of the trivia night, Bear gives Nikki a lift home from the pub. And he botches his “pitch”. After an awkward goodnight, she heads toward her door. His frustration pushes Bear into giving this “new-old” toy a try (a “break”, really). He wants her complete and consuming love… and Nikki stops in her tracks and returns to his car. From then on, they’re a nearly inseparable couple. But Ian and Sarah think they’re also insufferable. Nikki begins to undergo a huge personality change, lying about her family and exhibiting even more extremely disturbing behavior (some odd culinary creations, for one thing). Yes, she is obsessing over him, hence the title. A desperate Bear calls the 800 number on the OWW box. The odd fella at the call center tells him that there are no “take-backs.” The only way to break the “wish” is for the “wisher” to die! Talk about an unbearable dilemma (sorry ’bout that)!


I suppose the main focus of the story is the “audience surrogate” Bear, played with a twitchy awkwardness by the energetic Johnston. He’s something of an “everyman”, full of yearning, but little confidence. It takes Bear a while to realize the full impact and awful consequences of his actions, but when it “kicks in,” Johnston is a sweaty ball of pure panic. But the film’s real “breakout” star is the amazing Ms. Navarrette, who impressed me for the last few years as Lana Lang’s daughter Sarah on the CW’s “Superman and Lois”. Oh, she has made the leap to the big screen with a gonzo, “go for broke” tour de force performance as the bewitched Nikki, a “dreamgirl” who suddenly becomes a nightmare. The switch in vocal intensity and her incredible physical contortions (and those rubbery facial expressions) earn her a spot in the loopy ladies of terror “hall of fame”, right next to Glen Close as Alex of FATAL ATTRACTION and Jennifer Jason Leigh’s Hedy in SINGLE WHITE FEMALE. Yet, somehow, Ms. N conveys Nikki’s tragic fate behind the frozen smiles (best shown during a nocturnal plea). To think she was the “sweetheart of Smallville”. Much of the standard comic relief is provided by Tomlinson as the party “bro” who is not quite the supportive “wing man” that he projects. Lawless exudes a tenderness behind the tough-talking punk chic stylings of the concerned and sympathetic Sarah. One of the more pleasant surprises is the supporting turn by a beloved TV comedy icon as the quartet’s befuddled boss (IMDB lists him, but I just can’t bring myself to spoil it).

It’s tough to believe that this is only the second feature from writer/director Curry Barker, as this is one terror tale brimming with confidence and a wonky style. And, perhaps due to his stand-up comedy past, a wicked sense of humor, from snarky satire to silly slapstick. Sure, we’ve gotten many variations of the “wish fulfilled” themes of regret, but Barker’s put a fresh spin in them, while harkening back to the “can men and women be friends” issues of WHEN HARRY MET SALLY (miss ya’ Rob) and even ALADDIN (Robin’s Genie can’t zap Jasmine into loving that “strett rat”). Barker also captures the intense “forced bonding” that occurs with “workmates”, especially those in their early 20’s. It’s a snarky sneer at old romcom cliches, even down to the “falling in love” montage (love the eyeroll from Sarah). Although the marketing gurus give away too much in the ads, this off-kilter, creepy romp still has lots of surprises and delivers on the scares with a sense of hopelessness and dread from one selfish little act. It’s just a shame that the film doesn’t quite “stick the landing” as the last act feels too rushed and the ending denouncement falls a bit flat (I want to stay with the duo for a few more minutes). Even with that caveat, those horror fans who have missed the mirth in the macabre may or may not be obsessed, but they should be entertained by OBSESSION. I wonder if they tried to get the rights to that old Jiminy Cricket tune?


3 Out of 4


OBSESSION opens in theatres everywhere on May 15, 2026

Blumhouse Announces Octavia Spencer To Return In MA Sequel

(from left) Darrell (Dante Brown, back to camera), Chaz (Gianni Paolo), Sue Ann (Octavia Spencer) and Haley (McKaley Miller) in “Ma,” directed by Tate Taylor.

Tom Stockman wrote in his review, “MA is one of the most fun ‘audience’ movies I’ve seen in some time. It’s scary, but not under-the-skin terrifying and it’s darkly funny, generating nervous laughter as well as a few big gut-busters. I hope MA finds the cult status it deserves.” And so it has.

As part of its first-ever The Business of Fear event examining the growing power of horror subgenres, Blumhouse has announced that Academy Award-winning actress Octavia Spencer will return as Ma in a sequel to the hit Blumhouse revenge horror film.

The original 2019 film, directed by Tate Taylor, earned more than $60 million in global box office, but also spawned hundreds of memes, with audiences embracing Ma as an iconic horror character for the ages. The fandom helped make Ma a phenomenon at Blumhouse’s recent Halfway to Halloween festival.

Ma has proven to be a social phenomenon since its release in 2019, with fans eagerly embracing the film and Octavia’s iconic performance as Ma. Ma likes to say ‘don’t make me drink alone,’ so we’re thrilled Octavia will join us again for a second round,” said Jason Blum, Founder/CEO, Blumhouse.

Synopsis: Everybody’s welcome at Ma’s. But good luck getting home safe.

Oscar® winner Octavia Spencer stars as Sue Ann, a loner who keeps to herself in her quiet Ohio town. One day, she is asked by Maggie, a new teenager in town (Diana Silvers, Glass), to buy some booze for her and her friends, and Sue Ann sees the chance to make some unsuspecting, if younger, friends of her own.

She offers the kids the chance to avoid drinking and driving by hanging out in the basement of her home. But there are some house rules: One of the kids has to stay sober. Don’t curse. Never go upstairs. And call her “Ma.”

But as Ma’s hospitality starts to curdle into obsession, what began as a teenage dream turns into a terrorizing nightmare, and Ma’s place goes from the best place in town to the worst place on earth.

Ma also stars Juliette Lewis (August: Osage County) as Maggie’s mom, Luke Evans (Beauty and the Beast) as a local dad, Missi Pyle (Gone Girl) as his girlfriend, and McKaley Miller (TV’s Hart of Dixie), Corey Fogelmanis (TV’s Girl Meets World), Gianni Paolo (TV’s Power) and Dante Brown (Lethal Weapon TV series) as Maggie’s friends.

From Tate Taylor, the acclaimed director of The Help and Get On Up, and blockbuster producer Jason Blum (Get Out, Halloween, The Purge series) comes a thriller anchored by a daring and unexpected performance from Spencer, one of the most powerful actors of her generation.

St. Louis Among Cities To Celebrate AMC’s BlumFest, Including The 15th Anniversary of PARANORMAL ACTIVITY And Enter Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 Sweepstakes

(from left) Foxy, Chica, Freddy Fazbear and Bonnie in Five Nights at Freddy’s, directed by Emma Tammi.

Blumhouse has announced an all-new sweepstakes where fans can enter to win a pair of tickets to the Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 premiere in 2025. Entrants must be subscribed to the Blumhouse newsletter The Van, and the giveaway will run until 10/31/24. This is to celebrate the original film returning to AMC Theatres as part of BlumFest on October 30. Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 premieres December 5, 2025.

Blumhouse and AMC Theatres are celebrating Halloween now and running through the end of October with AMC’s BlumFest. Every Wednesday Blumhouse fans can attend special screenings, score one-time-only giveaways, be the first to see exclusive sneak peeks, and more. AMC’s BlumFest marks the first time that BlumFest, the annual October celebration of all things Blumhouse, has included a national screening program.

The six-week festival kicked off Wednesday, Sept. 25 in 54 cities and 150 AMC Theatres across the U.S., and features six different repertory films – anchored by the 15th anniversary of Paranormal Activity September 25. 

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY

Festival-goers can catch their favorite Blumhouse films on the big screen, with screenings each Wednesday night at 7pm and 9pm local time, and tickets priced at a discounted rate. Plus, all attendees will receive a special poster giveaway commemorating this year’s lineup, plus see exclusive sneak peeks and exclusive recorded messages from directors and talent from the films.

Tickets are on sale at AMCTheatres.com and within the AMC Mobile App for the following films:

  • Wednesday, October 9, 2024 – Insidious: Chapter 2 – written by James Wan and Leigh Whannell and directed by James Wan
  • Wednesday, October 16, 2024 – Happy Death Day – written by Scott Lobdell and directed by Christopher Landon
  • Wednesday, October 23, 2024 – The Black Phone – written by Joe Hill, Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill, and directed by Scott Derrickson
  • Wednesday, October 30, 2024 – Five Nights At Freddy’s – written by Scott Cawthon, Seth Cuddeback and Emma Tammi and directed by Emma Tammi

INSIDIOUS 2

“This whole month is a love letter to Halloween and our fans, and we’re grateful to our partners at AMC for joining us for BlumFest, our annual October celebration of all things Blumhouse. I can’t believe we’re already celebrating the 15th anniversary of Paranormal Activity, because it feels like we’re just getting started,” said Jason Blum, Founder and CEO of Blumhouse. 

“Though AMC entertains Blumhouse film fans year-round, the Halloween season makes horror movies even more fun,” said Elizabeth Frank, EVP of Worldwide Programming and Chief Content Officer at AMC Theatres. “We’re excited to bring the BlumFest celebration to the big screen with fan favorite movies and unique extra content.”

The full list of cities includes: Atlanta (GA), Austin (TX), Baltimore (MD), Boston (MA), Charlotte (NC), Chattanooga (TN), Chicago (IL), Cincinnati (OH), Columbus (GA), Columbus (OH), Dallas (TX), Denver (CO), Detroit (MI), El Paso (TX), Grand Rapids (MI), Harlingen (TX), Hartford (CT), Houston (TX), Huntsville (AL), Indianapolis (IN), Jacksonville (FL), Kansas City (MO), Las Vegas (NV), Los Angeles (CA), Madison (WI), Miami (FL), Milwaukee (WI), Minneapolis (MN), Mobile (AL), Nashville (TN), New Haven (CT), New Orleans (LA), New York (NY), Norfolk (VA), Oklahoma City (OK), Orlando (FL), Peoria (IL), Philadelphia (PA), Phoenix (AZ), Pittsburgh (PA), Portland (OR), Raleigh (NC), Rockford (IL), Sacramento (CA), San Diego (CA), San Francisco (CA), Seattle (WA), Spokane (WA), St. Louis (MO), Tallahassee (FL), Tampa (FL), Tucson (AZ), Tulsa (OK), Washington, D.C.

Learn more about AMC’s BlumFest here: http://amctheatres.com/events/blum-fest-2024

Blumhouse’s “Halfway to Halloween” Film Festival Includes INSIDIOUS, SPLIT, THE PURGE – Begins Friday, March 29

Blumhouse, the driving force in horror, and AMC Theatres are celebrating Halloween early with the first-ever Halfway to Halloween Film Festival. The five-day festival kicks off Friday, March 29 in over 40 cities and 100 AMC movie theaters across the U.S., and features five different repertory films – anchored by the 13th anniversary of Insidious April 1, nearly halfway to Halloween. Insidious marked the first collaboration between the now-merged Blumhouse and Atomic Monster. 

Patrick Wilson with the Lipstick Demon standing behind him, from Insidious. Photo credit: Park Circus/CPE FD Holdings LLC

Festival-goers can catch their favorite Blumhouse films on the big screen, with tickets priced at just $8 per film. Plus, they’ll have the chance to win giveaways, get sneak peeks and see exclusive recorded messages from directors and talent from the films. Tickets are on sale on AMCTheatres.com and within the AMC Mobile App for the following films:

Friday, March 29 – Split

Saturday, March 30 – The Purge

Sunday, March 31 – Ouija: Origin of Evil 

Monday, April 1 – Insidious (13th year anniversary of the movie’s opening)

Tuesday, April 2 – The Invisible Man

“We wanted to celebrate local communities of horror fans throughout the country with a fun, affordable and slightly evil night at the movies. We’re grateful to our partners at AMC for helping us bring this idea to life,” said Jason Blum, Founder and CEO, Blumhouse.

“Blumhouse films terrify and delight horror fans. We are excited to bring these favorites back to the big screen,” said Elizabeth Frank, EVP Worldwide Programming and Chief Content Officer, AMC Theatres.

The full list of cities includes: Atlanta (GA), Baltimore (MD), Boston (MA), Charlotte (NC), Chattanooga (TN), Chicago (IL), Cincinnati (OH), Columbus (OH), Dallas (TX), Denver (CO), Detroit (MI), Harlingen (TX), Hartford (CT), Houston (TX), Indianapolis (IN), Jacksonville (FL), Kansas City (MO), Las Vegas (NV), Los Angeles (CA), Miami (FL), Minneapolis (MN), Mobile (AL), New Haven (CT), New Orleans (LA), New York (NY), Norfolk (VA), Orlando (FL), Philadelphia (PA), Phoenix (AZ), Pittsburgh (PA), Rockford (IL), San Diego (CA), San Francisco (CA), Seattle (WA), Spokane (WA), Tallahassee (FL), Tampa (FL), Tucson (AZ), Tulsa (OK), Washington, D.C., Wichita (KS).

Learn more about the first-ever Halfway to Halloween Film Festival here: www.amctheatres.com/events/halfway-to-halloween

NIGHT SWIM – Review

You know might feel really great, and completely relaxing, after surviving the often stressful end-of-the-year holidays? Why a refreshing dip in the pool of course! Oh, but you’re not near an indoor facility, so you’ll have to wait out the long frigid winter until the temps are near ninety or so. Well, how about making a virtual splash at the multiplex? And this “cement pond” doesn’t shut down with the sunset. But doing “laps” alone in the fluorescent lit waters can be pretty spooky. And that’s the inspiration for the first new horror flick of 2024, which may just make you “swear off” any notions about taking a NIGHT SWIM. Marco…Marco…


This tale of soggy terror begins with a flashback to the early 1990s. Late one night a girl of eight or nine spies her ailing brother’s motorboat doing circles in the deep end of the family pool. When she can’t raise her folks, the youngster decides to try and “fish” it out with the cleaning scoop, causing her to fall in, and disappear…and we’re in the present day. Former pro baseball player Ray Walker (Wyatt Russell) is checking out a possible new home with wife Eve (Kerry Condon) along with kids Izzy (Amelie Hoeferle) and Elliot (Gavin Warren). They’re not impressed with the “accessible” (Ray’s sidelined due to MS) townhouse that their real estate agent has shown. But on the drive home, they spot a gorgeous two-story house with a big swimming pool. Thinking the pool will be great for his physical therapy, Ray, along with Eve, makes an offer…which is quickly accepted. After they’ve unpacked, the family begins fixing up the pool until an odd dark brown bile oozes out of the drain. A “home aquatic ” expert informs them that a natural spring is just under the pool floor, and his crew can fix any potential seepage issues. Soon after the whole family enjoys the relaxing waters until…the weirdness really begins. Cider, the family cat, vanishes leaving his kitty collar floating under the diving board. Then Ray begins having memory flashes while underwater which leads to his health miraculously improving. But when things take an ugly turn at a big neighborhood pool party, Eve does some digging. She learns of the young girl in the flashback, and of other disappearances over the previous seventy or so years. Will her family become the latest victims in the pool’s twisted history?

Following up her stellar work in 2022’s THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN (she won a coveted St. Louis Film Critics Assoc. award), Condon provides a strong family matriarch, who’s ready to do the research and the legwork to get to the bottom (or deep end) of this mystical pond. Her Eve wants to be encouraging to her family, especially her stricken hubby, while trying to keep the peace, especially with her squabbling siblings. Condon even gets a chance to hone her action “chops” in the truly breathtaking finale. She’s a good parental partner with Russell, who gets to show his easy-going warmth as the father who may need as much nurturing as his kids. Ray’s frustrated as he recalls his “glory days’ until something “in the water” gives him renewed hope. And Russell builds on Ray’s underdog status making his turn to his darker impulses in the third act terrifying and heartbreaking. Hoeferle is quite effective as the big sister yearning to pursue a first love, while uneasy about her new surroundings and those eerie nights practicing for the school’s Christian swim team. As the somewhat timid and awkward kid brother, Warren projects a real vulnerability as he struggles to follow in his dad’s cleats and navigate his new environs. The film also sports a couple of nifty supporting turns by Nancy Lenehan as the loopy, clueless real estate agent and Jodi Long as the creepy, nearly unhinged former owner of the house.


Expanding on his 2014 short of the same name director and co-writer (with Rod Blackhurst) Bryce McGuire strives to establish an engaging family dynamic to fuel the story’s moments of deadly danger and mystery. Unfortunately, the domestic sequences feel sluggish, making viewers frustrated as they wait for another spooky “soaking” of suspense. The pacing also lets us ponder the more absurd and illogical aspects of the plot. The opening incident happened thirty years ago and nobody in the neighborhood, or the suburb, remembers. Wouldn’t the police, or at least one of the former owners, have shut down the pool after so many have vanished? Then the pool’s loopy secret is slowly revealed with elements of the 80s COCOON along with some biblical riffs. Finally, the last act payoff is amped up with another scary-possessed parent targeting the kids (done more effectively in last year’s EVIL DEAD RISE). Plus many of the terror “shocks” feel “watered-down” to get an inclusive PG-13 rating (maybe an unrated home video version is in the works). Ultimately the movie upholds a tradition of starting the new movie year with a “quick buck” chiller to fill the multiplex at post-awards time (at least last January’s M3GAN had a sly satiric bent). It’s an easy cliche, but NIGHT SWIM just doesn’t float, but slowly sinks. Alright, everybody out of the pool…


1.5 Out of 4

NIGHT SWIM is now playing in theatres everywhere

Watch The Second Trailer For The NIGHT SWIM Movie – In Theaters January 5

What are you afraid of?

Watch and share the new trailer for NIGHT SWIM, in theaters January 5.

No running. No diving. No lifeguard on duty. No swimming after dark. 

Atomic Monster and Blumhouse, the producers of M3GAN, high dive into the deep end of horror with the new supernatural thriller, Night Swim

Based on the acclaimed 2014 short film by Rod Blackhurst and Bryce McGuire, the film stars Wyatt Russell (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier) as Ray Waller, a former major league baseball player forced into early retirement by a degenerative illness, who moves into a new home with his concerned wife Eve (Oscar® nominee Kerry Condon, The Banshees of Inisherin), teenage daughter Izzy (Amélie Hoeferle, this fall’s The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes) and young son Elliot (Gavin Warren, Fear the Walking Dead). 

Secretly hoping, against the odds, to return to pro ball, Ray persuades Eve that the new home’s shimmering backyard swimming pool will be fun for the kids and provide physical therapy for him. But a dark secret in the home’s past will unleash a malevolent force that will drag the family under, into the depths of inescapable terror. 

Night Swim is written and directed by Bryce McGuire (writer of the upcoming film Baghead) and is produced by James Wan, the filmmaker behind the SawInsidious and The Conjuring franchises, and Jason Blum, the producer of the Halloween films, The Black Phone and The Invisible Man. The film is executive produced by Michael Clear and Judson Scott for Wan’s Atomic Monster and by Ryan Turek for Blum’s Blumhouse.

© 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Watch The Brand New Trailer For IMAGINARY

Pyper Braun as Alice in Imaginary. Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis

In theaters March 8 is the horror film IMAGINARY.

From Blumhouse, the genre-defining masterminds behind FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’S and M3GAN, comes an original horror that taps into the innocence of imaginary friends – and begs the question: Are they really figments of childhood imagination or is something more terrifying lying just beneath?

When Jessica (DeWanda Wise) moves back into her childhood home with her family, her youngest stepdaughter Alice (Pyper Braun) develops an eerie attachment to a stuffed bear named Chauncey she finds in the basement. Alice starts playing games with Chauncey that begin playful and become increasingly sinister.

As Alice’s behavior becomes more and more concerning, Jessica intervenes only to realize Chauncey is much more than the stuffed toy bear she believed him to be.

IMAGINARY is directed by Jeff Wadlow (Cry Wolf, Truth or Dare, Kick-Ass 2 and Fantasy Island). The cast includes DeWanda Wise, Tom Payne, Taegen Burns, Pyper Braun, with Veronica Falcon, and Betty Buckley.

FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’S – Review

With only a couple more months left in 2023, will it be the movie year of the toy? Considering the BARBIE box office bonanza…probably. That’s especially true if you throw video games into that category. We’ve seen those Super Mario Brothers, a nifty true-life thriller on the making of TETRIS, another non-fiction sports flick involving the motor-racing world of GRAN TURISMO. And now we go from brightly colored pixel ‘shrooms to whirring-blade-fueled horror. Really, a game that elicits fear as you rack up the points? Oh yeah, this one is so popular there has already been at least one cinema rip-off (using those Saturday morning funsters THE BANANA SPLITS which this official fan club member did not appreciate). It’s kinda’ how THE SWORD AND THE SORCERER beat Conan to the multiplex by a few weeks in 1982. Well, now here comes the “real deal”, based on the gaming smash, and its follow-ups, from 2014. So, can moviegoers handle FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’S? Grab a slice and collect those tokens!

It all begins with an unlucky security guard making his final late-night “rounds” in the food and fun emporium. After the main title we meet the main hero, Mike Schmidt (Josh Hutcherson). as he loses another job, this one’s security at a mall. It seems an incident triggered a childhood memory in which he saw his kid brother Garrett vanish forever from a family picnic. Now, the only family he has (the parents are long gone) is his kid sister Abby (Piper Rubio) whose behavior has her grade school teacher concerned. She’s retreated into her drawings and talking to her invisible friends. Mike’s gotta get a new job, otherwise, haughty Aunt Jane (Mary Stuart Masterson) will swoop in and grab custody (along with the government moola). His only chance is an odd supervisor at an employment service, Mr. Raglan (Matthew Lillard). He thinks Mike is perfect for an all-night security slot at a long-shuttered kiddie franchise, Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza. After getting a neighbor teen girl, Max (Kat Conner Sterling) to watch Abby, Mike takes the job. The joint is creepy with its old arcade games and empty pizza boxes, but nothing is more unnerving than the life-sized animatronic figures in Freddy’s band. Naturally, Mike drifts off to sleep, but something new has been added to his abduction nightmare. Five mute children appear to block his way. He jolts awake and gets the feeling that something is watching him. Meanwhile, Max picks up a “side hustle” with Aunt Jane. She and her pals will break in at Freddy’s, trash the place, and cause Mike to get fired. So will this plan work? And what will happen to Mike and Abby during those remaining nights at Freddy’s?

Hutcherson excels at giving Mike a constant vibe of sweaty desperation. He’s haunted by his past and full of dread about the future, Can he take care of lil’ sis? Or hold down any sort of job. His nocturnal childhood “cage” may have just found a “key” through Freddy’s place. But this release may just endanger the one person he strives to protect. As that person, Rubio as Abby has more energy than most “spooky” kiddies in other flicks. She conveys a dark sense of humor while standing up to her often too possessive “big bro”. Masterson is superbly “hissable” as the prime villainess here, a wicked aunt rather than a wicked stepmother, who’s even more snarky has she :plays nice” with Mike and Abby. Also, there’s a nice turn by Elizabeth Lail as a sympathetic policewoman whose beat just happens to include Freddy’s. There’s a bit of a romantic spark between her and Mike, but Officer Vanessa’s main mission is to put him on the “straight and narrow” while providing the proper “tools” for his deep dive into the old place’s mythos. And it’s great to see Lillard out of the “Scoobyverse” as the off-putting “red herring” (or is he), Raglan.

To quote uber-producer of modern horror, while with Seth Myers, Jason Blum, “We made this for the fans”. And so, for newbies (guilty) you may be perplexed, and more than a bit bored. as those same fan(atics) squeal and scream with delight with every game reference or cameo. This makes it difficult to compare, but the end cinematic results come off as another rather toothless (of course it’s rated ‘”PG-13″) time waster. It’s stunning how all the big “kills” (including major characters) are done “off-screen” with the discovered carnage hidden away from view. Director Emma Tammi does her best work in the scary pre-dawn moments at the “fun place”, but can’t hold our attention during the talky daytime set-ups, since many of the principals are one-note despite the team of screenwriters which includes her and the game’s creator Scott Cawthon. The biggest problem is that the game’s main focus, Freddy and his crew, don’t get a lot to do. This is a shame since the producers eschewed CGI for some nifty puppetry from the talented artists at Jim Henson’s creature shop (they made a menacing cupcake). The pre-teen crowd should have a blast yelling at the screen during Halloween group outings or slumber parties but horror “hounds” may be dreading (howling perhaps) a sixth day after FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’S.

1.5 Out of 4

FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDY’S is now playing in theatres everywhere and streams exclusively on Peacock

THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER – Review

So October has finally arrived and the studios are truly “bringing out the big guns” in order to “scare up” some box office bucks at the ole’ haunted multiplex. We’re talking the “classics” here. No, it’s not another SCREAM entry, since this one goes back a lot further in fear film history. Not as far as the “thirsty Count” since we’ve had two flicks about the true first “bat-man” in the past year. But it is older than the HALLOWEEN (the crew behind the last three are behind this one) series or the assorted other sinister stalkers. We can call this a fright franchise since there have been four (some say five) entries and even a short-lived TV series. And it all started exactly fifty years ago as a best-selling novel was adapted into what was then the most profitable horror movie ever (for at least a couple of years). Talk about a “hard act” to follow! That’s the daunting task ahead for this “reimagining” titled THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER.

It begins, much like the original did, with a flashback in an exotic foreign land. Victor Fielding (Leslie Odom Jr.) is enjoying a vacation in Haiti with his very pregnant wife Sorenne (Tracey Graves) thirteen (oh oh) years ago. He’s indulging his passion for photography when they’re separated by a devasting earthquake, which leads to a tragic decision. Flash forward to today as Victor shares a home in a small Georgia town with his daughter Angela (Lidya Jewett), who is curious about her mother. Luckily she’s made many friends in school, particularly Katherine (Olivia Marcum). One day they each toss out fibs about studying at each others’ houses to their folks. Instead, the duo explores a nearby wooded area to light a candle and attempt to communicate with the “spirit world” (maybe Angela’s mum will answer her queries). Hours pass, darkness falls, and Victor starts to panic. He reaches out to Katherine’s folks, who think she’s with Angela. The panicked parents meet at the police station where the very religious Miranda (Jennifer Nettles) and Tony (Norbert Leo Butz) eye Victor with suspicion. Soon the trio are covering the town with missing flyers. Amazingly the girls turn up alive three days later, thirty miles away. They get a clean bill of health at the local hospital despite some odd scars on the feet and legs. And then the truly freaky behavior begins, as the duo begins to speak in low guttural voices and lash out violently. Victor starts to consider admitting Angela into a mental health facility until his neighbor, a local nurse named Ann (Ann Dowd) gives him a copy of a book written by a woman claiming that her daughter was possessed by a demon. After checking out some online interviews, Victor visits the author, former actress Chris MacNeill (Ellen Burstyn). She agrees to observe Angela, but can her knowledge and experience end the living nightmare of the parents and save their daughters?

Serving as the film’s anchor which strains to hold the disparate plot twists and turns is the talented Mr. Odom Jr. as everyman Victor. We first see him as a loving husband and later father who must not allow fear and panic to overwhelm him. We see that determination on Odom Jr’s face and a hint of desperation in his eyes. It’s then that he shifts into hero mode to rescue his precious daughter. In that role, Ms. Jewitt is quite endearing as the sweet, but often exasperating Angela as she peers into memories of that past which her father doesn’t wish to relive. Plus, she’s very creepy after her “return’, much like Ms. Marcum, who has a bright mischievous smile while disrupting class before morphing into a wild feral creature who terrorizes an entire church. Nettles is quite compelling as her devoted mama, while Butz is manic and boisterous as her “wildcard” papa. Ms. Dowd brings much gravitas and poignancy to the role of the neighborhood “nudge” (“Take in those trash cans!”) turned demon-fighter. Kudos also to Raphael Sbarge as Katherine’s Baptist pastor who eschews the usual cliche of the greedy mega-church huckster. But the film’s MVP is probably the franchise return of Burstyn who commands the screen as the haunted, but still fiery Ms. MacNeill, who is eager to join the battle despite her years, perhaps to release her from some half-a-century-old anguish.

Horror vet (the final HALLOWEEN trilogy) David Gordon Green takes over the directing reigns working from the script he co-wrote with Peter Sattler, Danny Mcbride, and Scott Teems. For the film’s first half, he keeps the pace flowing while setting up the creepy undercurrents of small-town America. Unfortunately, the specter of the 1973 original looms large, pushing him to try and emulate the quick editing unnerving image sequences of that iconic work. Green tries to temper this with more modern “jump scares”, which are offset by the loopy “set-ups” (Victor is barely slowed down when coming through the unlocked front door of his home). And did we really need the nast sequences at a homeless shelter or at a home for the mentally ill (shades of THE SNAKE PIT)? Speaking of modern, we get plenty of the current genre’s penchant for cruelty, especially with a pivotal scene involving MacNeill, that’s is so mean-spirited it pushes the boundaries of good taste for this much-maligned genre. But at least she’s not part of the final act “face-off’ in which a multi-faith Avengers-style team uses each of their religion’s teachings to battle the two possessed pre-teens sporting all manner of CGI-enhanced makeup prosthetics (Katherine sports a Frankenstein-like forehead while Angela harkens back to the 70’s grindhouse classic shocker ABBEY). All the chaos and pummeling sound and fury lead to a limp finale and a bland epilogue, even though a late “arrival” is somewhat charming. The folks at Blumhouse can’t quite work their monster magic on this familiar property, making THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER a reboot with no real “kick”, and only a smattering of those “Tubular Bells”.

1.5 Out of 4

THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER is now playing in theatres everywhere

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of Blumhouse’s TOTALLY KILLER

Totally Killer will premiere globally on October 6, exclusively on Prime Video and We Are Movie Geeks has your free passes to the special advance screening the must-see slasher-comedy film of spooky season.

From director Nahnatchka Khan’s (Always Be My Maybe, Fresh Off the Boat) first genre film, the cast includes Kiernan Shipka, Olivia Holt, Charlie Gillespie, Lochlyn Munro, Troy L. Johnson, Liana Liberato, Kelcey Mawema, Stephi Chin-Salvo, Anna Diaz, Ella Choi, Jeremy Monn-Djasgnar, Nathaniel Appiah and Jonathan Potts with Randall Park and Julie Bowen.

Thirty-five years after the shocking murder of three teens, the infamous “Sweet Sixteen Killer“ returns on Halloween night to claim a fourth victim. Seventeen-year-old Jamie (Shipka) ignores her overprotective mom’s (Bowen) warning and comes face-to-face with the masked maniac and, on the run for her life, accidentally time-travels to 1987, the year of the original killings. Forced to navigate the unfamiliar and outrageous culture of the 1980s, Jamie teams up with her teen mom (Holt) to take down the killer once and for all, before she’s stuck in the past forever.

The Advance Screening is Wednesday, October 4, 7pm at Ronnies. Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed. Rated R.

ENTER AT THE LINK: https://amazonscreenings.com/OEqxy21484

Time-travel to the 1980s and experience the outrageous culture shock through Jamie’s (Shipka) eyes on October 6!

Kiernan Shipka as Jamie Hughes, Olivia Holt as Teen Pam in Totally Killer

Credit: Courtesy of Prime

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