Alam Nyo Ba?

Monday, April 6, 2026

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Runtime Revealed, and It’s Much Longer Than Expected

In June of 2024, it was announced that Evil Dead Rise director Lee Cronin had signed on to write and direct a new genre project for Atomic Monster, Blumhouse Productions, and New Line Cinema… and that December, we found out what that mysterious project is, as it was revealed that Cronin has come up with a new take on the concept of The Mummy! Cronin confirmed, “This will be unlike any Mummy movie you ever laid eyeballs on before. I’m digging deep into the earth to raise something very ancient and very frightening.” The film is set to reach theatres on April 17, 2026 – and with that date swiftly approaching, the film’s official runtime has been revealed, letting us know that it’s much longer than expected!

What is the runtime of The Mummy?

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy has a reported runtime of 134 minutes (2 hours and 14 minutes), making it one of the longer mummy movies ever made.

Cast

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy stars Jack Reynor (Midsommar), Laia Costa (Victoria), May Calamawy (Moon Knight), Veronica Falcón (Queen of the South), Hayat Kamille (Vikings: Valhalla), and May Elghety (Clash).

It should be noted that, since the project is set up at New Line Cinema, this “new take on the horror trope revolving around the ancient mummified undead” has nothing to do with the classic Universal horror property. We heard back in May 2024 that there are three Mummy projects in development at Universal, including a prequel that screenwriter Wes Tooke is working on and a sequel to the Brendan Fraser films (those being The Mummy 1999, The Mummy Returns, and The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor). It was recently confirmed that Fraser and Rachel Weisz are coming back for The Mummy 4, which has Radio Silence attached to direct from a script by David Coggeshall.

How the runtime compares to previous Mummy films

For a bit of context, here’s how Cronin’s film stacks up against earlier entries:

  • The Mummy (1999) – approximately 125 minutes
  • The Mummy Returns (2001) – approximately 130 minutes
  • The Mummy (2017) – approximately 110 minutes

At 134 minutes, Cronin’s take edges past them all.

Synopsis

Here’s the synopsis: synopsis: The young daughter of a journalist disappears into the desert without a trace—eight years later, the broken family is shocked when she is returned to them, as what should be a joyful reunion turns into a living nightmare.

Atomic Monster and Blumhouse are co-financing Lee Cronin’s film. James Wan is producing alongside Jason Blum and John Keville. Michael Clear, Judson Scott, and Macdara Kelleher serve as executive producers. Alayna Glasthal is the executive overseeing the project for Atomic Monster. Cronin’s Doppelgängers banner is also producing.

Are you looking forward to catching Lee Cronin’s The Mummy on the big screen later this month? What do you think of the runtime? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

The post Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Runtime Revealed, and It’s Much Longer Than Expected appeared first on JoBlo.


Why Alien: Resurrection Is the Weirdest Movie in the Franchise

After the critical failure but financial success of Alien 3 (1992), it was only a matter of time before 20th Century Fox launched another Alien movie out of the airlocks. But what direction would they go? They needed something big. Something shocking. In fact, they needed a full-blown resurrection, figuratively and literally.

  • Which major directors were considered to helm the film?
  • What scene nearly killed multiple actors during filming?
  • And what bizarre, very French creative choice was ultimately deemed too much?

Let’s head back to the Betty and find out what happened to Alien: Resurrection.

The Script: Joss Whedon’s Unusual Starting Point

When 20th Century Fox decided to revive their action-horror franchise, they turned to a rising writer: Joss Whedon. Fresh off Buffy the Vampire Slayer and his Oscar-nominated work on Toy Story, Whedon was tasked with writing the fourth installment. There was just one problem: Ellen Ripley was dead. She had gone out in Alien 3 in spectacular fashion, falling into molten metal while clutching a chest-bursting Alien queen. Not exactly sequel-friendly.

The Newt Clone Idea

Whedon’s initial solution? Not Ripley, but Newt. His early concept centered on a clone of Newt, the fan-favorite child survivor from Aliens, who (along with Hicks) had been unceremoniously killed off in Alien 3, a decision fans never forgave. This new version of Newt would have enhanced DNA and elite combat skills. Whedon even wrote a 30-page treatment with five different endings, including one set on Earth.

The studio passed. They feared audiences wouldn’t accept an Alien film without Ripley.

Alien: Resurrection

Bringing Ripley Back (With a Price Tag)

The idea of cloning Ripley came from longtime franchise producers Walter Hill and David Giler. Ironically, both of them were hesitant about making the film at all. But there was an even bigger obstacle: Sigourney Weaver didn’t want to return. Until she received what she famously described as a “dump truck full of cash.” She was paid $11 million to reprise her role.

To her credit, Weaver was intrigued by the concept: a Ripley clone infused with both human and Alien DNA, creating internal conflict about where her loyalties truly lay.

With the script locked and Weaver on board, the search for a director began. The list of candidates was surprisingly stacked:

  • Danny Boyle (Shallow Grave, Trainspotting) — Passed after early meetings
  • Peter Jackson (Lord of the Rings) — Not interested
  • Bryan Singer (The Usual Suspects) — Declined
  • David Cronenberg (The Fly) — Famously said he doesn’t even make sequels to his own films

Enter Jean-Pierre Jeunet

Eventually, the job went to French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Jeunet, known for Delicatessen and The City of Lost Children. He was shocked to even be offered the role and initially thought making a fourth film was a bad idea. Still, he accepted:

  • $70 million budget
  • Full creative control
  • An interpreter on set (he spoke very little English)

He brought in key collaborators, including:

  • Cinematographer Darius Khondji
  • Effects supervisor Pitof
  • Production designer Nigel Phelps (Batman, Judge Dredd)

Casting the Crew of the Betty

Alongside Weaver, the film assembled a memorable cast:

  • Winona Ryder as Call (who signed on immediately, before reading the script)
  • Ron Perlman
  • Brad Dourif
  • Michael Wincott
  • Dan Hedaya
  • Gary Dourdan
  • Dominique Pinon (a Jeunet regular)

Ryder later said she didn’t care if her character died in the first scene, she just wanted to be in an Alien movie.

Alien: Resurrection

Designing the Creatures

Amalgamated Dynamics returned to design the Xenomorphs, making them:

  • More aggressive
  • Sharper in design
  • Shot from harsher, more threatening angles

The Newborn Hybrid

The film’s strangest addition was the human-Alien hybrid. Originally, it looked more human, even incorporating features inspired by Sigourney Weaver, but it was scrapped for resembling the creature from Species too closely. The final version included:

  • Eyes
  • A nose
  • More emotional expression

The “Too French” Problem

Jean-Pierre Jeunet initially pushed the design much further. The hybrid was going to have:

  • Pronounced genitalia
  • A sexual dynamic with the Ripley clone

20th Century Fox shut it down quickly. Even Jeunet later admitted it was “too much, even for a Frenchman.” Probably the right call.

Production Challenges

Filming took place in Los Angeles from October 1996 to February 1997, making this the first Alien film not shot in England. But soundstage space was limited due to other major productions filming at the same time:

  • The Lost World: Jurassic Park
  • Titanic
  • Starship Troopers

As a result, many scenes reused the same hallways dressed differently.

The Infamous Underwater Scene

The film’s most dangerous sequence? The underwater escape. It required:

  • 2 weeks of training before filming
  • 2 additional weeks on set
  • A massive tank filled over several days (with milk added for visual texture)

Multiple Near-Death Incidents

  • Winona Ryder had a panic attack due to a childhood near-drowning
  • Ron Perlman knocked himself unconscious underwater
  • Leland Orser was left without oxygen when his diver stepped away
  • Creature performer Tom Woodruff Jr. had extremely limited visibility and air

The sequence took three weeks to shoot and nearly cost lives.

Alien: Resurrection

Sigourney Weaver’s Impossible Shot

One of the film’s coolest moments wasn’t CGI. Sigourney Weaver practiced for weeks to make a backward basketball shot. Despite skepticism from Jeunet, she pulled it off either on the first try or after multiple attempts, depending on who you ask.

Ron Perlman’s reaction? Completely genuine. He broke character laughing.

Weaver later ranked it as one of the best moments of her life.

Release and Reception

Alien: Resurrection hit theaters on November 26, 1997.

  • Budget: $70 million
  • Box office: $161 million
  • Shortest runtime in the franchise
  • First Alien film with zero Oscar nominations

The Whedon vs. Jeunet Feud

Joss Whedon was extremely critical of the final product: “Everything I wrote was shot… just wrong.”

Jeunet fired back, saying Whedon was great at making films for “American geeks and morons.” Not exactly a friendly collaboration.

Legacy of Alien: Resurrection

While often considered a step down from Alien and Aliens, the film has gained appreciation over time. It returned to a more action-driven, fan-service-heavy approach, especially compared to later entries by Ridley Scott. More importantly, it marked:

  • The final appearance of Ripley
  • A lasting expansion into comics, games, and merchandise

Love it or hate it, Alien: Resurrection carved out a strange, unforgettable place in the franchise.

And now you know what happened to Alien: Resurrection.

A couple of previous episodes of this show can be seen below. For more, check out the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel—and don’t forget to subscribe!

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Sunday, April 5, 2026

Dear Horror Writers: It’s Time to Stop Relying on Colossally Stupid Protagonists

Michael

There’s a massive difference between a horror protagonist making a bad decision under pressure and a horror protagonist acting like they completely forgot how survival works.

One is human. The other is just lazy bullshit screenwriting. And lately, way too many horror movies are leaning hard on that second option.

This is all brought on because I recently watched Dolly with my wife, and let me say this right up front. Fabianne Therese acts her ass off in this flick and does absolutely everything she can to sell what the script asks of her. But she isn’t the problem, the problem is her character, Macy. Macy keeps making choices that are so bafflingly stupid they stop feeling like genuine character behavior and start feeling like pure screenwriting desperation.  At one point, my wife got so pissed off, she started doomscrolling instead of watching the movie.  

That right there is exactly where my patience with this trope officially ran out.

This isn’t just a Dolly problem. It’s a horror problem, and has been for decades. It’s one of the genre’s laziest and most frustrating habits. Instead of creating real suspense through atmosphere, character, or situation, too many movies now lean on protagonists making one outrageously dumb decision after another just to keep the plot moving.

I already know the defense. People panic, human beings are flawed, and fear scrambles your brain. In reality, if a masked killer was chasing us, most of us probably wouldn’t be as smart as we are watching from our seats. Panic can absolutely cause people to misread a situation or fumble something important. But screenwriters cash this in like a blank check. 

Audiences deserve more credit than that. Honestly, human beings deserve more credit than that. We’re built to survive. Fight or flight isn’t just some catchphrase we throw around. It’s hardwired right into our DNA.

Look, I know it takes a hell of a lot more effort to write smart characters, but it also leads to significantly better movies. I’m begging you to stop relying on colossally stupid protagonists.  There’s only so much a viewer can take before the illusion completely shatters

To prove my point, here are five times characters made incredibly dumbass choices just so the writers could get to the next scene.

5. The Strangers Trilogy

The new Strangers trilogy relies entirely on its protagonist constantly crashing cars, blowing escapes, and wandering right back into danger. At a certain point, the suspense dies and you are just pissed off. Madelaine Petsch deserves better.

4. Tarot (2024)

The supernatural horror film Tarot, starring Jacob Batalon and Avantika, has gotten a digital release and is available for rent or purchase

A group of friends finds a spooky tarot deck, and the main character immediately ignores her own golden rule to never use someone else’s cards. Once the curse starts, the whole group actively ignores explicit warnings and practically walks right into their own deaths just so the plot can happen. Check out our own Tyler Nichols review here.

3. Speak No Evil (2022)

Speak no evil

A family finally escapes a terrifying situation at a remote house and drives away to safety. When their kid realizes they left a stuffed bunny behind, instead of saying tough shit, the parents actually turn the car around and go back to the psycho house. You lose all sympathy right there.

2. Scream (2022) & Scream 7 (2026)

David Arquette and Nick Stahl star in the recently wrapped true crime serial killer thriller Green River Killer

Oh Dewey, how they did you dirty. Dewey is a seasoned cop who survived four massacres, yet he walks directly into stab range of a knocked out Ghostface and then looks down at his ringing phone. Then in Scream 7, Mindy, a smart character who knows her shit, randomly lures everyone to a local bar away from safety just so the writers can get a cool set piece. It takes you completely out of the movie.  I will say, though, I personally loved the movie (call me out on it, I don’t give a shit).

1. I Know What You Did Last Summer

The absolute GOAT of dumb choices. Helen Shivers fights like hell, outsmarts the killer, and makes it out to an alley just inches away from a safe, crowded parade. Instead of running into the crowd, she just stops, turns around, and waits for the killer to catch up and murder her. She did all the hard work and the script just decided it was time to die. Absolute bullshit.

The list could go on.

Look, I’m not asking for full on realism.  We watch these things as a form of escapism.  Horror thrives on pressure and taking people to the absolute edge.

Screenwriters, this is your assignment:  let your characters fight, think, adapt, and be resourceful. Then show me that it still wasn’t enough. Do the harder thing and write villains who can beat smart people. Aim a little higher, is all I’m asking.  Don’t give us anymore reasons to watch a silly reel on IG or TikTok during your film.

What character moments come to mind for you?  Let us know in the comments!

The post Dear Horror Writers: It’s Time to Stop Relying on Colossally Stupid Protagonists appeared first on JoBlo.


Friday, April 3, 2026

Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day answers questions posed by Close Encounters of the Third Kind

The combination of director Steven Spielberg and UFOs has previously brought us Close Encounters of the Third KindE.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, and War of the Worlds. (Not to mention Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.) This year, Spielberg returns to the subject matter with his latest event film, Disclosure Day, which is set to reach theatres on June 12th – and cast member Emily Blunt says the new film answers questioned that were posed in Close Encounters of the Third Kind!

Cast and Synopsis

The official press release for Disclosure Day reads:

Universal Pictures is proud to release a new original event film created and directed by Steven Spielberg. The film stars SAG winner and Oscar® nominee Emily Blunt (Oppenheimer, A Quiet Place), Emmy and Golden Globe winner Josh O’Connor (Challengers, The Crown), Oscar® winner Colin Firth (The King’s Speech, Kingsman franchise), Eve Hewson (Bad Sisters, The Perfect Couple) and two-time Oscar® nominee Colman Domingo (Sing Sing, Rustin).

Based on a story by Spielberg, the screenplay is by David Koepp, whose previous work with Spielberg includes the scripts for Jurassic Park, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, War of the Worlds and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Combined, those films earned more than $3 billion worldwide. Koepp also wrote the script for 2025’s Jurassic World Rebirth.

Disclosure Day is produced by five-time Academy Award® nominee Kristie Macosko Krieger (The Fabelmans, West Side Story) and by Spielberg for Amblin Entertainment. The executive producers are Adam Somner and Chris Brigham. 

Spielberg has said that he made this film because “I’ve always been fascinated with things that cannot be explained. When I was just a little kid, I remember developing a real curiosity about the sky at night, and what’s happening up there. And, also, not the possibility, but the guarantee that there is life off this planet.

Answers

There has been speculation that Disclosure Day could be some kind of secret follow-up to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Speaking with Empire, Blunt said, “There are definitely questions posed by Close Encounters that are answered in Disclosure Day.

Empire also confirmed that Blunt’s character is “Margaret Fairchild, a journalist who career-pivots into weather presenting; where, as the Disclosure Day trailers show, she’s at the centre of a bizarre on-air incident, vocalising in unsettling seemingly-inhuman clicks. Margaret is swept into the orbit of Josh O’Connor’s Daniel Kellner – a cyber-security expert who’s stumbled upon highly-classified knowledge, placing a target firmly on his back. Also caught in the crossfire is Eve Hewson’s Jane Blakenship, Daniel’s girlfriend, facing her own fallout from his quest for the truth. Hot on Margaret and Daniel’s tail is Colin Firth’s antagonist, Noah Scanlon – leader of Wardex, contracted by the government to keep the biggest secret in the cosmos, well, secret. As sinister as Scanlon is, he’s a man with a job to do, with major consequences if he fails. Also fresh out of Wardex – with a different agenda – is Colman Domingo’s Hugo Wakefield, an advocate for disclosure.

To read what the actors had to say about their characters, click over to Empire.

Are you looking forward to Disclosure Day, and are you interested to see how it answers questions posed in Close Encounters of the Third Kind? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

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White Elephant: Kathryn Newton and Nick Jonas to star in holiday horror film from Tucker & Dale director

Kathryn Newton has already worked with the Radio Silence production company on two genre movies, Abigail and Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, and now Deadline reports that she’s staying in the Radio Silence business by signing on to star in the holiday horror flick White Elephant, which is part of Radio Silence’s partnership with Project X. Called RSPX, this partnership is “oriented around inventive and engaging horror and thriller projects.”

Newton is joined in the cast by Nick Jonas (Power Ballad).

Logline

Eli Craig, whose previous credits include Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, Little Evil, and Clown in a Cornfield, will be directing White Elephant from a script by JT Billings. Craig has also done his own rewrite on the script.

Here’s the logline: Eight friends. One prize. Zero trust. Their annual festive holiday gift exchange spirals into a cutthroat game of Christmas carnage.

Behind the Scenes

MRC is financing the project. Spencer Berman and Nick Jonas are producing White Elephant for Powered By Jonas, along with William Sherak, Paul Neinstein, and James Vanderbilt for Project X, plus Tyler Gillett and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin. Executive producers include Newton, Billings, Ryan McDonough, Amanda Drake, Scott Levine, and Chad Villella.

Filming is already underway.

Newton has previously said that she enjoys working with Radio Silence because “they’re just so collaborative. They really listen and hear you and I think what I really like about them is they let me be a bit weird.

Newton

It should be noted that the horror and thriller sections of Kathryn Newton’s filmography stretches beyond her Radio Silence collaborations, as she also had roles in the films Paranormal Activity 4, A Housekeeper’s Revenge, DreamQuil, Freaky, and Lisa Frankenstein (where she played the title character), and the TV shows Supernatural and The Society.

Are you glad to hear that Kathryn Newton is continuing to work with Radio Silence, and that Nick Jonas and Eli Craig are also getting involved this time around? Share your thoughts on White Elephant by leaving a comment below.

A holiday horror movie that’s directed by Eli Craig and has Kathryn Newton in a lead role sounds like it will be right up my alley, so I look forward to seeing how White Elephant is going to turn out.

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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Clip from Renny Harlin’s Deep Water shows the beginning of a shark attack sequence

Back in 2023, we heard that Gene Simmons of the rock band Kiss would be launching a new production company with Gary Hamilton (so the company is appropriately called Simmons/Hamilton Productions), and the first project they had given the greenlight was a shark thriller called Deep Water – with Deep Blue Sea director Renny Harlin attached to take the helm of the film! That film has since made its way through production, and Magenta Light Studios, the distributor behind Strange Darling, is planning to give it a theatrical release on May 1, 2026. With that date right around the corner, a clip has dropped online to show us the start of a shark attack sequence! The clip is called “Shark in the Water,” and you can check it out in the embed above.

Cast and Synopsis

Scripted by Pete Bridges and Shayne Armstrong & SP Krause, Deep Water centers on an eclectic group of international passengers whose plane, en route from Los Angeles to Shanghai, is forced to make an emergency landing in shark-infested waters. The terrified group is forced to work together and overcome their differences if they hope to escape their sinking plane and the frenzy of sharks drawn to the wreckage.

The film stars Aaron Eckhart of Harlin’s The Bricklayer, Sir Ben Kingsley (Gandhi), Molly Wright (Netflix’s True Spirit), Angus Sampson (Mad Max: Fury Road), Kelly Gale (Plane), singer and actor Li Wenhan, who is a member of the Chinese-Korean K-Pop group UNIQ, and Nashi (Creation of the Gods I: Kingdom of Storms).

Statements

Magenta Light Studios’ Bob Yari has said that Deep Water does an incredible job of bringing adventure, suspense and intensity to the screen including one of the most nerve-wracking plane crash scenes ever witnessed on film. It is the kind of movie that is made for the big screen and we are excited to bring it to audiences in theaters this year.

Harlin added, “Deep Water represents the kind of movie I’ve dreamed of making since I grew up loving the ’70s disaster movies. Spectacular action and unforgettable characters who didn’t leave a dry eye in the movie theater. Bob Yari and his Magenta Light team have been the biggest supporters of this project since the beginning, and I’m proud to have a wide theatrical release for a movie that deserves to be seen and heard on the biggest possible number of screens across the country.

Are you looking forward to Deep Water? Watch the clip, then let us know by leaving a comment below.

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WTF Happened to Martin Scorsese’s Cape Fear?

Jake

New York, New York, The King of Comedy, After Hours, Bringing out the Dead, you name it – the peerless Martin Scorsese has no shortage of minor key masterpieces that often go overshadowed by his all-time cinematic classics. But when it comes to his most successful unmined gems, it’s hard to escape the stylish Hitchcockian homage of Cape Fear, a studio venture that became the first Scorsese film to cross the $100 million threshold at the box office. Although commercial success hardly motivates Scorsese as it does some other mainstream filmmakers, Cape Fear’s success was all the sweeter considering that it was made at Universal Studios, where Scorsese’s controversial biblical epic The Last Temptation of Christ notoriously led to death threats three years earlier. 

Vowing to return the favor for Universal blessing Christ’s international release, Cape Fear was the first in a two-picture deal Scorsese agreed to with the studio. Yet, stubbornly reluctant to make the film for several years, Scorsese finally relented and agreed to make Cape Fear at the insistence of Robert De Niro, who was hellbent on playing Max Cady, and the great Steven Spielberg, who was originally set to make Cape Fear himself. Believe it or not, Scorsese was lined up to direct Schindler’s List, but agreed to trade projects with Spielberg, as they aligned better with each filmmaker’s lifelong sensibilities. But that’s just scratching the surface. With the film turning 35 this November – Come out, come out wherever you are – it’s only right we find out what the f*ck happened to Cape Fear!

It’s actually a remake

A well-funded remake of the 1962 Southern Gothic psycho-thriller starring Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum, Cape Fear’s screenplay was adapted by Wesley Strick. Although the original movie took cues from John D. MacDonald’s 1957 novel The Executioners, Strick used James R. Webb’s screenplay for the first film as a blueprint for the remake. At the time, Steven Spielberg was developing the project at Amblin Entertainment for himself to direct. However, realizing the material was too dark and violent for his brand of cinema, Spielberg passed the project to Martin Scorsese, knowing that Cape Fear was better suited to Scorsese’s cinematic corpus. Spielberg also saw the mainstream commercial potential of Cape Fear, which would empower Scorsese and enable him to secure funding for his future films.

But Scorsese took convincing. After reading Wesley Strick’s script three times while making Goodfellas, Scorsese hated it more each time and detested how happy the cheerful Bowden family was more interested in seeing them in a state of misery. It took one year to talk Scorsese into directing the film, with 24 revisions to the screenplay made before the cameras rolled. In addition to the enhanced rewrites, Robert De Niro was obsessively adamant about portraying southern-fried serial rapist and religious fanatic Max Cady and badgered Scorsese until he agreed to collaborate on the film. To persuade the filmmaker, De Niro ran scenes as Cady with married couple Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates playing Sam as Danielle. Once agreeing to direct, Cape Fear marked the seventh time De Niro and Scorsese worked together, in what is arguably the most famous actor-director duo of all time. 

Another reason Scorsese took convincing was that he was preparing to direct Schindler’s List. However, when he decided not to make the Holocaust drama, he traded the project with Spielberg and eventually agreed to direct Cape Fear for Universal. Despite deliberately taking his personal name off the credits, Spielberg produced behind the scenes for Amblin Entertainment in the company’s first R-rated feature. 

Assembling a killer cast

Once the script was polished to Scorsese’s standard, the casting phase began. With De Niro lined up to play Max Cady, Scorsese originally wanted Harrison Ford to portray the morally vexed lawyer, Sam Bowden. However, Ford was only interested in playing the psychotic Cady and flat-out refused to take the safer, more straightforward role. Scorsese had De Niro personally call Ford to persuade him to participate, but Ford ultimately declined. Other actors briefly considered included Warren Beatty, Jeff Bridges, James Caan, Kevin Costner, Richard Gere, Mel Gibson, Dennis Quaid, Christopher Reeve, and Robert Redford.

Nick Nolte, with whom Scorsese had worked in a short segment of New York Stories in 1989, was eager to play the ethically challenged Sam Bowden and convinced the director to cast him instead. For what it’s worth, when Spielberg was attached as director, he envisioned Bill Murray as Max Cady, which would have been pretty radical, to say the least.

De Niro’s transformation

Due to the height difference between the 5’9” De Niro and the 6’1” Nolte, efforts were made to put the two actors on equal footing to create a fairer fight for Cady and Bowden. For instance, Nolte lost significant weight to appear more slender than his typical tough-guy appearance. Meanwhile, De Niro spent eight months beefing up and gaining approximately 25 to 30 pounds of muscle to bolster Cady’s strapping physique, reducing his body fat to 3 or 4% by sticking to a strict diet regimen, doing 600 crunches daily. 

As for his sinister southern drawl, De Niro adapted Cady’s distinct dialect after playing a character from Arkansas in Roger Corman’s Bloody Mama in 1970. De Niro prepared for the role and perfected the thick regional accent by taking dialogue from the script to various southern towns and asking locals to recite lines into a tape recorder. Scorsese was so terrified of De Niro’s wicked way of speaking that the actor would routinely telephone the director and torment him with creepy voice messages as Cady on his answering machine.  

Further showing his devotion to the role, De Niro paid a dentist $5,000 to mangle his teeth to suit Cady’s poor, criminal background. After the film wrapped, he paid the same dentist $20,000 to restore his pearly whites. As for Cady’s pious tattoos, they were made of vegetable dye, which washes off after a few months. Also, before filming, De Niro studied predatory sex crimes and serial rapists to prepare for the role, going so far as to improvise the mortifying moment when Cady bites Lori Davis in bed. Taking full ownership of the character, De Niro also helped costume designer Rita Ryack select Max’s touristy wardrobe. 

Despite their combative characters, De Niro and Nolte got along quite well while making Cape Fear. Such was not the case for Peck and Mitchum while filming the 1962 original. Even so, Scorsese cast Peck in his final theatrical film role as Cady’s lawyer, Lee Heller, and cast Mitchum as Lieutenant Elgart in the remake. Mitchum was a last-minute replacement for George C. Scott, who agreed to play Elgart but had to bow out due to pressing health concerns. Meanwhile, Martin Balsam, who played Police Chief Mark Dutton in the original, plays the judge in the remake. Scorsese also wanted Tellly Savalas to return, but it didn’t materialize.

The new episode of WTF Happened to This Horror Movie looks back at Martin Scorsese's 1991 version of Cape Fear.

Past the cool cameos that connect to the movie’s predecessor, casting Sam’s soon-to-be 16-year-old daughter Danielle proved to be far more painstaking. Several young actresses auditioned for the role, most famously including Drew Barrymore and Reese Witherspoon. Nicole Kidman aggressively lobbied for the role despite being 23 at the time, but Scorsese wanted someone younger. Actresses who were offered but declined the role included Jennifer Connelly, Winona Ryder, Tiffany Thiesen, Christina Applegate, and Alyssa Milano, who was pressured by her Who’s the Boss costar Tony Danza to decline.

Others considered for Dani included Shannen Doherty, Bridget Fonda, Jodie Foster, Helen Hunt, Diane Lane, Demi Moore, Sarah Jessica Parker, Molly Ringwald, Meg Ryan, and Brooke Shields. Of course, looking back, it’s hard to envision anyone other than Juliette Lewis playing Dani in her sole Oscar-nominated career performance. 

As for Leigh Bowden, Diane Keaton discussed the part with Scorsese and De Niro before the great Jessica Lange won the role. 

With a superb ensemble locked in place, Scorsese had all the studio support needed when allotted a $35 million production budget. Cape Fear commenced principal photography on November 19, 1990, and wrapped on March 17, 1991. Although the story is set in the fictional New Essex, North Carolina, the 17-week shoot took place primarily in Savannah, Georgia, and South Florida, with the Bowdens’ sprawling manse filmed in Fort Lauderdale and the boat scenes partially filmed in Jupiter. 

To achieve the sweltering veneer of the sweaty south, Scorsese hired the outstanding cinematographer and accomplished horror director Freddie Francis, who famously shot The Innocents, The Elephant Man, Glory, and many others. Although Robert Richardson auditioned to light and lens Cape Fear, Scorsese went with Francis, but hired Richardson for his next film, Casino, in the first of seven career collaborations. 

For the Bowden abode, Scorsese instinctively knew he wanted their home to be flanked by towering oak trees, shrouded with dangling Spanish moss, providing the perfect dark hideout for Cady towards the end of the film.

For the first time in Scorsese’s career, he opted to film Cape Fear in a widescreen 2.1:39 format. The director had previously avoided shooting on such a format out of worry that home video pan-and-scan transfers would ruin the imagery of his films. By the 1990s, Scorsese knew that movies would receive widescreen home video releases and opted for a wider frame in Cape Fear.

Striking a balance

Beyond the technical format, Scorsese and Francis purposely emulated the filmmaking style of the master of suspense, Alfred Hitchcock, as was the original 1962 version directed by J. Lee Thompson. For instance, the opening title credits were designed by the great Saul Bass, one of Hitch’s longtime collaborators. Some of the titles were recycled from unused titles for the ending of Bass’s 1974 sci-fi film Phase IV.

The opening scene itself visually mirrors and sonically echoes the beginning of Vertigo, with a red-black image fading over a woman’s face, cued to Cape Fear’s haunting original score by Bernard Herrmann. Although Elmer Bernstein was hired to arrange the music, he was instructed to rework Herrmann’s score from the 1962 version of Cape Fear. Much to Scorsese’s pleasant surprise, Bernstein suggested adding an unused piece of music from Herrmann’s score for Hitchcock’s 1966 spy thriller, Torn Curtain, to Cape Fear. The result is less of a musical homage to the original and more of an elevated adaptation. 

Now, back to Lori Davis, played by Scorsese’s then-girlfriend, Ileana Douglas. One of the most memorable scenes in the film comes when Max meets Lori at a bar and uses his seductive charms to woo her into bed. First off, the entire scene was reportedly improvised. As originally written, Lori was supposed to panic and freak out when Cady cuffs her in bed. However, Douglas had the idea for Lori to start hysterically laughing and playing along during the scene, making her grisly fate far more unnerving. In addition to listening to the dulcet tones of Etta James to relax her performance, Douglas’ turn as Davis was partially based on the 1986 Central Park murder of Jennifer Levin at the hands of Robert Chambers, dubbed the “Preppy Murderer.”

Speaking of unscripted ad-libs, the moment when Max begins laughing maniacally in the movie theater was improvised. The scene initially called for Max to blow cigar smoke through the crowd. However, De Niro genuinely began to crackle uncontrollably when watching footage from Problem Child, and Scorsese kept it in the film.

Immediately afterward, the Bowdens visit an ice cream shop where Cady arrives and pays their tab in an act of intimidation. Although this scene was filmed early in the shoot, the shop owners complained that they were losing business for three days from the locals who witnessed De Niro’s menacing performance. 

Okay, so it’s impossible to talk about Cape Fear without addressing that sizzling yet inappropriate auditorium scene between Max and Dani. Originally written as a chase scene, Scorsese instinctively knew it had to be more of a calculating seduction. At the time of filming, De Niro was 47, and Lewis was 17. Despite the 30-year age gap, a searing sexual energy developed between the two actors, with Lewis reportedly developing a crush on her co-star while filming the scene. De Niro came up with the idea of putting his thumb in the girl’s mouth as they drew closer. Somewhat shockingly, the scene only required three takes, using two cameras to get it right. The first take filmed is the one used in the movie. 

Many firsts for Scorsese

In addition to being his first film shot in widescreen, Cape Fear marked the first time Scorsese used digital effects in a motion picture. For example, the scene where Max sits on the Bowdens’ backyard wall as fireworks light up the sky behind him was filmed using a green screen. 

Another moment that was not included in the script was Max and Leigh’s first encounter outside the Bowden abode. Originally, Leigh was not to face off with Max until the climactic boat ride on the Cape Fear River. It was Jessica Lange’s wise idea to have the characters meet earlier in the story, making the climax hit even harder. 

Now, it’s no exaggeration to say one of the scariest scenes in the film comes when Cady sneaks into the Bowden’s house undetected, kills the housemaid, then dresses in her outfit to murder private eye Claude Kersek (played by Joe Don Baker). Also a product of an impromptu script revision, Steven Spielberg’s brilliant idea was to have Cady don the housemaid’s clothing as he strangles Kersek with piano wire.

Another bone-chilling moment occurs when Cady is shown secretly hitching a ride beneath the Bowdens’ Jeep Wagoneer. After travelling for miles and releasing himself from the chassis, for whatever reason, Driving Miss Daisy star Esther Rolle appears in a brief cameo as the woman who spots Cady while watering the dracaenas. Perhaps it’s a subtle play on words, with Max steering the family’s travels toward doom worthy of being called Driving Miss Bowden. After all, both Daisy and Bowden, a breed of lily, are types of flowers. 

Now for the unforgettable finale that ascends to biblical proportions of allegorical grandeur. Thanks to the seamless cutting by Scorsese’s longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker, it’s nearly impossible to tell that the final swamp and river scenes were filmed in two different places across the country. For instance, the climactic swamp scene was filmed in John U. Lloyd State Park in Dania Beach, South Florida, and the Everglades National Park. When a tropical depression halted filming for four days, the production team waited for the storm to pass so it could make the required amount of rain.

Religious subtext

As for the very end, when Cady and the Bowden family slug it out as the boat capsizes, the sequence was filmed on a Hollywood soundstage. Not only did the production build two full-size mock-ups of the boat to simulate its sinking, but the epic battle was filmed in a 90-foot water tank that took four weeks to complete. The imperceptible combo of using a practical location with an artificial set amplifies the movie’s surreal ending, which hints at a far deeper biblical subtext than Cape Fear has ever been credited for.

For example, many wrongly believed that Cady was spouting pure gibberish as he floated down the river and began to sink to his demise. On the contrary, Cady was speaking in tongues, elated at the prospect of finally ascending to heaven. Given what transpires before the finale, there’s an immortal, almost supernatural quality to Cady since converting to a devout religious fanatic in prison and becoming a born-again Christian. 

Indeed, rebirth is one of the film’s major religious themes. In prison, Cady mentions reading the Bible and being reborn as an instrument of God. Upon release, Cady tells Bowden to brush up on a biblical story about a man punished by God, warning that the Lord took everything away from him, even his children. Cady is alluded to himself, as he is the one who puts Bowden through hell on Earth. 

Never mind the biblical quotes he tattoos on his body and the religious iconography festooning his prison cell, Cady surviving and brushing off that vicious attack orchestrated by Bowden reinforces his wraith-like existence. Even Kersek says, “That son of a bitch could survive a nuclear strike,” reinforcing Cady’s superhuman physiology. In the finale, Cady withstands scalding water thrown in his face and is impervious to grabbing a lit flare with his bare hand. 

Other religious clues include a bumper sticker on Cady’s car that reads, “You’re a VIP on Earth. I’m a VIP in Heaven,” and Bowden mentioning a Force Majeure – an act of divine intervention – on the payphone en route to the Cape Fear River. The real Force Majeure comes when a biblical storm pounds the boat, washes Cady away, and allows Leigh and Dani to escape unharmed. Moments later, just as Cady aims a gun at Bowden, another rip-roaring tidal wave washes the gun from Cady’s clutch, pulling him into the abyss while spitting Bowden onto the riverbank. As Cady sails away to his own demise, he couldn’t be more ecstatic about the prospect of ascending to heaven. 

While present enough to notice in the theatrical cut, the religious theme is accentuated in the nine minutes of deleted footage from the film. One deleted scene shows Leigh on the telephone asking Sam why they never put a security alarm system in the house. In the background, Leigh’s artwork sketches are prominently displayed, featuring three distinct images. The first image appears to be a scarab of some kind. In ancient religions, the scarab represents “The dawn, resurrection, and the daily rebirth of the sun.” Another image appears to depict the crest of a wave, with the third resembling a large boat with rocks in the water. Both hint at the biblical riverboat finale. 

Another deleted scene features Dani and the housekeeper, Graciela (played by Zully Montero), sharing a conversation in the garden. The visuals evoke the Garden of Eden, with Dani mentioning how all she wanted was “for time to just stop” while spending summers on the houseboat on the Cape Fear River. Eden has been described as a state of “timelessness” and an “eternal day,” reinforcing the religious themes.

An additional deleted scene involves Leigh brushing Dani’s hair in her bedroom and them discussing cutting their hair short. This alludes to the ancient practice of Tonsure, an act of cutting one’s hair as a symbol of religious devotion. 

One of the best subliminal visual references to the religious theme comes in another deleted scene where Dani speaks to Cady on the telephone in her bedroom at night. As she sits up in her bed, the white frilly pillowcase behind Dani is precisely framed to make them appear like angel wings. A symbol of innocence and goodness, the devilish Cady tries to corrupt, tempt, and seduce Dani.

The evidence only becomes more compelling from there. The best deleted scene that underscores Cady’s rebirth comes in an extended conversation he has with Sam on the street at night. As Cady tells Sam that his wife spurned and remarried a plumber, he states the following:

So on the way to New Essex, I stopped off, and I paid the little woman a visit. Waited till the man of the house is out unclogging drains, and then I barred her, took her to a little old cozy motel, and I applied her with spirits, and I made her pose real creative like in front of a Polaroid camera.”

Not how the word “spirits” acts as a double entendre. Not only did Cady booze his ex-wife up before viciously assaulting her, but he also put the wrath of God on her for her so-called sins. 

Cady continues:

And there was this certain beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate full of sores. And Lazarus begs for food, but the rich man wouldn’t give him anything. He only sent his dogs out to lick his wounds. One day, both men died. Lazarus went to heaven a rich man, and the rich man went to hell. And when the rich man was in hell, he looked up at Heaven, and he saw Abraham and Lazarus, and he asked Abraham if he could have Lazarus dip the tip of his finger in water, for he was tormented in death-flame.”

Perhaps too on-the-nose to be kept in the film, this wicked monologue by Cady highlights every religious theme in the movie. Cady likens himself to Lazarus’ biblical resurrection and ascension to heaven, compares Sam to the rich man who will end up in hell, and alludes to the Cape Fear River and the burning flare at the end by mentioning water and the death-flame. The point here is that, despite playing like a conventional Hollywood thriller, Scorsese encoded Cape Fear with far more subtle and complex religious subtext that the film rarely gets credited for. 

Scorsese’s biggest hit (at the time)

Among Scorsese’s most critically and commercially successful movies, Cape Fear was the first film of his to gross over $100 million at the international box office. The film turned its $35 million budget into a monstrous $182 million moneymaker, giving Scorsese the creative leeway to make The Age of Innocence, Casino, Kundun, and other less commercially viable projects. Cape Fear also earned two Academy Award nominations, including one for Juliette Lewis in a supporting role and the most recent lead acting nod for Robert De Niro to date. 

Nearly 25 years after its release, Cape Fear was ranked #13 on Tate of Cinema’s list of the “30 Great Psychopath Movies That are Worth Your Time,” and GamesRadar+ listed Max Cady among the “50 Creepiest Movie Psychopaths.” 

The legacy doesn’t end there. In 2023, it was announced that Scorsese and Spielberg will executive-produce a Cape Fear TV adaptation for Apple TV+. The great Javier Bardem has been cast as Max Cady, with Patrick Wilson and Amy Adams set to play Thomas and Amanda Bowden, respectively. The pilot, directed by Morten Tyldum, is slated to premiere on June 5, 2026. 

So yeah, that’s essentially what the f*ck happened to Cape Fear 25 years ago. The film was originally slated to be directed by Steven Spielberg before he recommended Martin Scorsese. It took one year to convince Scorsese to make the movie, with De Niro lobbying hard to play Max Cady. In addition to the Hitchcockian precision and subtextual religious themes with which the movie operates, the improvisational acting and impromptu script changes led to some of the most unforgettable moments. In sum, if Cape Fear is minor-key Scorsese, it hits all the right notes to become a bona fide psycho-thriller classic. 

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