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.

WAMG Giveaway – Win MA Starring Octavia Spencer on Blu-ray

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“Don’t make me drink alone!”

What starts out as a teenager’s dream turns into a terrifying nightmare in MA, the suspenseful thriller from Blumhouse, the producers of Get Out and Happy Death Day, arriving on Digital August 20, 2019 and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand September 3, 2019 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Fans can now discover more than 20 minutes of thrilling bonus features not seen in theaters including a never-before-seen alternate ending, alternate and deleted scenes, and featurettes that take fans deeper into the unusual and unsettling world of MA. Starring Oscar® winner Octavia Spencer (The Help, The Shape of Water), the stirring and suspense-filled horror film “makes you cringe in all the right places” (Owen Gleiberman, Variety) and is packed with unexpected twists and turns that will have viewers on the edge of their seat from start to finish.

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Now you can win the Win the Blu-ray of MA. We Are Movie Geeks has one copy to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment below telling us what your favorite movie co-starring Octavia Spencer is. (mine’s THE SHAPE OF WATER). It’s so easy!

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

Octavia Spencer delivers an unnervingly daring performance as Sue Ann, a lonely woman who keeps to herself in a quiet Ohio town. When local teenager Maggie (Diana Silvers, Glass) asks Sue Ann to buy booze for her group of friends, she decides to make some new friends of her own and offers her basement for the kids to party. They just have to follow a few simple house rules: Someone has to stay sober, don’t curse, never go upstairs and call her “Ma.” As Ma’s hospitality curdles into obsession, her place goes from the best place in town to the worst place on earth.

Directed by Tate Taylor (The Help, Get On Up) and executive produced by Octavia Spencer, MA features an outstanding supporting cast including Juliette Lewis (August: Osage County), Luke Evans (Beauty and the Beast), Missi Pyle (Gone Girl), McKaley Miller (“Hart of Dixie”), Corey Fogelmanis (“Girl Meets World”), Gianni Paolo (TV’s Power), and Dante Brown (“Lethal Weapon” TV series).

BONUS FEATURES ON BLU-RAY, DVD & DIGITAL:

  • NEW Alternate Ending
  • Creating Sue Ann – Take a deeper look at the character of Sue Ann, and how trauma from people’s past can manifest itself later in life.
  • Party at Ma’s – The cast, crew, and filmmakers discuss how all the elements came together to make this unique thriller.
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Theatrical Trailer

MA will be available on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital.

  • Blu-ray unleashes the power of your HDTV and is the best way to watch movies at home, featuring 6X the picture resolution of DVD, exclusive extras and theater-quality surround sound.
  • Digital lets fans watch movies anywhere on their favorite devices. Users can instantly stream or download.

MA – Review

A Cult Classic is born! And I don’t use that term loosely. I’ve been emceeing the midnight shows here in St. Louis at Landmark’s The Tivoli Theater for a decade now and if MA finds the audience it deserves, I can totally see it playing there in a year or two with an inebriated audience screaming its many memorable lines back at the screen. “Don’t make me drink alone!” could become the new “No more wire hangers!”

Octavia Spencer stars in MA as Sue Ann (aka Ma), a 50-ish veterinary assistant who keeps to herself in a peaceful rural Ohio town. One afternoon, Ma is confronted in a liquor store parking lot by Maggie (Diana Silvers), a teen who’s just moved to town with her mother (Juliette Lewis) who asks her to buy alcohol for her and her new pals.  Ma sees this as the chance to make some younger, if gullible, friends and opens up her basement as a safe place for the kids to drink and party, out of the eyes of their parents and local cops. But Ma has four strict house rules: One kid has to remain sober to drive, they can’t take the lord’s name in vain, they can’t go upstairs, and they can’t get Ma wet (ok, I made that last one up). ‘Ma’s Place’ is soon the party hangout for the whole school, but the older woman’s hospitality turns to obsession when the teens begin to realize how unstable she may be (my first hint would have been when she orders one boy to strip naked at gunpoint the first time they meet her) and look for other locales to get wasted. Old wounds involving some of these kid’s parents are opened and Ma’s place eventually goes from the best party pad in town to a nightmarish hell of torture, revenge, madness, and murder!

The brilliance in casting Octavia Spencer as the dotty Ma (the role was obviously written for her) pays considerable, glorious dividends. In everything from her Oscar-winning breakout role in THE HELP to the strong work she’s done on films like HIDDEN FIGURES and THE SHAPE OF WATER, Spencer is a chameleon of an actress. She can be the sweetest sort of woman in one performance, then turn around here and wow as a ruthless psychotic. Spencer has a field day with Ma, creating a quirky object of hate, fear, sympathy, and childishness. Spencer pushes her character this way and that, dispensing kindness and threat in equal proportions. Even after we know she’s crazy (which is early on) there is often something compassionate about her. Spencer feels like the ultimate lonely person bringing out Ma’s mentally ill side, though not in a melodramatic way. Nor is her psychosis laughable. Even when she gets foolish and says “You are guilty of being so cute! “, which is worthy of a chuckle, the scary side of her is always present. In flashbacks to her own high school years, we see the genesis of her psychosis where she was the victim of a horrible sexual prank in the “janitor’s closet” (Kyanna Simone Simpson as the young Ma is heartbreaking in these scenes), carried out by the parents of some of the young teens she’s now hosting. This backstory adds depth to Ma, a unique creation and I can’t quite think of any performance to compare Spencer’s to. There’s a bit of Kathy Bates in MISERY, some Glenn Close in FATAL  ATTRACTION, even a pinch of the ‘Horror Hags’ played by the likes of Joan Crawford and Tallulah Bankhead in the ‘60s (Ms Spencer is just 47 but coded  matronly). It’s unlikely, but in a perfect world, Ms Spencer would receive awards attention for her work in MA.

The screenplay for MA by Scotty Landes is somewhat predictable but shrewd enough not to go in totally obvious directions. Teenage behavior is exhibited that’s dangerous enough even without psycho Ma in the mix, but MA is not the teen body count parade you may expect. The script sets up a number of more pitiless adult characters to bear the (often bloody) brunt of Ma’s homicidal tendencies. This works well because good actors have been cast in these roles including Luke Evans as a cad who’d caused Ma such pain in the past, Tate Taylor (the film’s director) as a clueless cop, Allison Janney (who looks like she was on set for one day) as Ma’s impatient boss, and Missi Pyle (a mean girl staple in the ‘90s) as a drunken harpy named Mercedes (“I’m more a Porsche man”).

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. Even if it’s stomped on by Godzilla and Elton John at the box-office this weekend, I suspect it’s a movie that will live on.

5 of 5 Stars

TONIGHT! Win Free Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of MA Movie Starring Octavia Spencer

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.

Octavia Spencer as Sue Ann in “Ma,” directed by Tate Taylor. Photo Credit: Anna Kooris/Universal Pictures © 2019 Universal Studio


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.

Ma is written by Scotty Landes (Comedy Central’s Workaholics) and Taylor, is produced by Blum for his Blumhouse Productions, by Taylor, and by John Norris (executive producer, Get On Up), and is executive produced by Spencer, Couper Samuelson, Jeanette Volturno, and Robin Fisichella.

In theaters May 31.

https://www.mamovie.com/

Enter for your chance to win two free passes to the St. Louis advance screening of MA. The theatrical sneak preview is TONIGHT, May 28, at 7pm.

Add you name and email address in our comments section below.

NO PURCHASE REQUIRED. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

Rated R for violent/disturbing material, language throughout, sexual content, and for teen drug and alcohol use.

(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. Photo Credit: Anna Kooris/Universal Pictures © 2019 Universal Studios