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Wednesday, March 4, 2026

The Strangers: Chapter 3 is getting a digital release soon

Director Renny Harlin shot an entire trilogy of Strangers movies at the same time, and while there was a point when it looked like Lionsgate might be releasing all three of the movies within 2024, but that idea was clearly pushed aside. The Strangers: Chapter 1 (read our review HERE) reached theatres back in May of 2024, and The Strangers: Chapter 2 (read that review HERE) didn’t come along until September of 2025. Thankfully, the wait for The Strangers: Chapter 3 wasn’t as long, as Lionsgate brought the film to theatres on February 6, 2026. (Our review is HERE.) And if you’re waiting for the digital release, that wait is also almost over!

What’s the synopsis?

Madelaine Petsch (Riverdale) stars in this trilogy and is joined in the cast by the likes of Richard Brake (31), Froy Gutierrez (Cruel Summer), Rachel Shenton (All Creatures Great and Small), Gabriel Basso (Hillbilly Elegy), and Ema Horvath (The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power). The Strangers: Chapter 1 centered on Petsch’s character as she drives cross-country with her longtime boyfriend (Gutierrez) to begin a new life in the Pacific Northwest. When their car breaks down in Venus, Oregon, they’re forced to spend the night in a secluded Airbnb, where they are terrorized from dusk till dawn by three masked strangers. Lionsgate plans from there to expand the story in new and unexpected ways with its sequels. Here’s the synopsis for Chapter 3This final chapter delves into newer and darker territory, the franchise’s darkest descent yet — a ruthless thriller with scares that deliver. The Strangers: Chapter 3 closes the trilogy with a full-circle reckoning that expands the mythology of the iconic masked killers. Madelaine Petsch returns as Maya for the Final Girl’s long-awaited vengeance, delivering a final chapter that fans won’t want to miss. Tethered by a frightening conclusion, Maya and the Strangers are locked on an unavoidable, unforgiving collision course — a showdown that proves they’re far from strangers now.

Enhanced with additional photography

Harlin has said The Strangers: Chapter 1 “is close to the original movie in its set-up of a young couple in an isolated environment in a house and a home invasion happening for random reasons.” Then Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 “explore what happens to the victims of this kind of violence and who the perpetrators are of this kind of violence. Where are they coming from and why?“ Harlin has also said that viewer feedback was taken into account when they were making changes and enhancing the sequels in the additional photography process. The financial success of Chapter 1 allowed for Harlin and his cast and crew, who had completed principal photography on the trilogy in just 52 days, to go back for 8 days of additional photography on Chapter 2 and 15 days of additional photography on Chapter 3

The new film has been rated R for strong bloody violence and language.

Deleted Strangers

Up to this point, the only strangers we’ve ever known have been Scarecrow (a.k.a. Man in the Mask or Baghead), Dollface, and Pin-Up Girl. Solomon told Dread Central, “There were actually in the original version, two new Strangers that were actually shot and fully in the movies. One was called Ghost Skull. The other one was Witch Face. We filmed them. They’re going to be included in the extras.

Those “extras” are expected to be on a “supercut” release that will combine the three films in the trilogy into one epic film. The supercut might receive a short theatrical run before moving on to Premium VOD and physical media.

Digital Release

Amazon lets us know that The Strangers: Chapter 3 will be receiving a digital release this Friday, March 6th. The UHD digital version is available for pre-order at THIS LINK for $19.99.

Will you be watching the digital release of The Strangers: Chapter 3? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

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Maggie Gyllenhaal says WB showed concern over extreme scenes in The Bride; “You cannot have Frankenstein lick black vomit off the Bride’s neck”

The Bride

Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride is set to hit theaters this week. The first reactions to the gothic romance started trickling in on social media a few days ago, following the film’s world premiere in London. The film is tracking soft, so it’s not currently projected to be a monster at the box office. However, it could be the kind of welcome shake-up for mainstream movies if it lives up to its hype.

The film stars Jessie Buckley as The Bride and Christian Bale as Frankenstein’s Monster. “A lonely Frankenstein travels to 1930s Chicago to seek the aid of a Dr. Euphronius in creating a companion for himself,” reads the official synopsis. “The two reinvigorate a murdered young woman and the Bride is born. She is beyond what either of them intended, igniting a combustible romance, the attention of the police and a wild and radical social movement.“

The concern

The early reactions talk about how bold the movie is and how its content is totally unhinged. According to Variety, after the studio held test screenings, Warner Bros. had requested that Gyllenhaal tone down the intensity of the violence. Gyllenhaal explained, “There’s sexual violence. There’s violence. Because it’s a big studio movie, we tested and tested it. We had big screenings in malls, where people came to see it, which I had never been a part of as an actress or a director before. So fascinating. And one of the things that they brought up was the violence: Is it too violent? And I was talking about it with a girlfriend of mine, who said — and she wasn’t being reductive — ‘I wonder if you had been a man making this movie, if you would have had the same response.’”

Gyllenhaal made it a point not to desensitize the extreme scenes during filming, so the uneasy response is just what she aimed for. Warners “asked to take some” of the violence out of the movie during test screenings. She reveals, “So what you’re seeing is even a little bit pulled back from what was originally in the movie.”

Gyllenhaal also explained how she wanted to have gravity with the deaths in the film, “One of the things that was important to me is that everybody who is killed, is hurt — we, at least for a moment, get to know them. There’s the Stormtrooper version of killing people, where they have white masks on and you don’t know who they are. And then there’s the version where every single death has a consequence and a cost — every single one.”

The understanding

As The Bride comes from a big studio with more general audience appeal than something like A24, the savvy director still realized that she could compromise with Warners. “Yeah, it was difficult, but not in a bad way. It was just very new for me,” Gyllenhaal told The Times. “I loved working with Pam Abdy, who runs Warner Bros. with Mike De Luca. She understood me and understood what I was saying. And there would be times where she would be like: ‘Maggie, you cannot have Frankenstein lick black vomit off the Bride’s neck. It’s just too much. You can’t do it.’ But she understood why I wanted it.”

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SOULM8TE: film set in the M3GAN universe earns an R rating for strong violence, gore, and more

Last April, Blumhouse Productions spent some time in the spotlight during the Universal panel at the CinemaCon event in Las Vegas, and JoBlo’s own Chris Bumbray was there to witness an early preview of SOULM8TE, which is “a new movie in the M3GAN universe” that was set to reach theatres on January 2, 2026… but then, M3GAN 2.0 underperformed and SOULM8TE was dropped from the release calendar. We still don’t know when the movie is going to make its way out into the world – but now we know that it’s rated R.

Background

The M3GAN movies and SOULM8TE come from the recently merged companies Atomic Monster (headed up by James Wan) and Blumhouse Productions (headed up by Jason Blum).

James Wan, his wife Ingrid Bisu, and Rafael Jordan (Salvage Marines) crafted the story for this one, with Jordan writing the first draft of the screenplay. Kate Dolan (You Are Not My Mother) is directing the film and has done her own rewrite of the script. 

SOULM8TE will show us what happens when a man acquires an Artificially Intelligent android to cope with the loss of his recently deceased wife. In an attempt to create a truly sentient partner, he inadvertently turns a harmless lovebot into a deadly soulmate. 

The film stars Evil Dead Rise actress Lily Sullivan, Claudia Doumit of The Boys, and David Rysdahl, whose credits include Fargo season 5, The Family, No Exit, Black Mirror, Oppenheimer, and Booger. Rysdahl is playing the man, while Sullivan plays the android. Details on the role Doumit will be playing have not been revealed.

James Wan and Jason Blum are producing SOULM8TE, while Michael Clear and Judson Scott of Atomic Monster serve as executive producers with with Ingrid Bisu and M3GAN cast member Allison Williams. Alayna Glasthal is the executive leading the project for Atomic Monster.

Preview

Bumbray reported, “Seems similar to Companion. Centers on a sexbot that becomes so obsessed with her “owner” that she kills anyone close to him and goes on a murder spree. Looks more violent (and kinkier) than M3GAN but has the same humor. When a woman she’s about to kill says ‘Women aren’t supposed to be pitted against each other,’ she answers, ‘Don’t start that girl power shit with me.’

The film has been described as “Fatal Attraction with robots.”

Rating

The Motion Picture Association ratings board has announced that they’ve given SOULM8TE an R rating for strong violence, gore, sexual content, graphic nudity, and language. This sets it apart from both of the M3GAN movies in a major way, because those were PG-13.

Are you interested in SOULM8TE, and are you glad to hear that it’s rated R? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

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The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Mike

Freddy Krueger may haunt our nightmares with his disgusting skincare routine and likely foul-smell omission, but that doesn’t mean the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise doesn’t feature beauty. Below is my completely classy list of the most beautiful women in the franchise.

Before anyone calls HR, relax. This isn’t a Dream Warriors Joey situation. We can appreciate a beautiful woman without being degenerates. This is a celebration of the best Elm Street heroines, beautiful inside and out.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Heather Langenkamp as Nancy | Wes Craven’s New Nightmare

There was never any doubt that one of the greatest final girls in horror history would make this list. The only question was: which version?

Today, we’re going with “final boss Nancy,” Heather Langenkamp in Wes Craven’s New Nightmare.

Playing herself in this ultra-meta sequel, she’s ridiculously gorgeous and just as resourceful, strong, and grounded as Nancy became in the original films. Honestly, this might be one of the rare cases where the real-life version is somehow even more awesome than the character she played.

She’s also a fiercely protective mom to little Dylan (played by Miko Hughes), which only elevates her status further.

While her Dream Warriors return was great, this grown-up Nancy is peak Nancy. Let’s just say her taste in men improved over time.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Tina Gray & Kris Fowles | A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984 & 2010)

This one’s a two-for-one.

First, original Tina Gray, played by Amanda Wyss in A Nightmare on Elm Street. She remains one of the most shocking opening kills in horror history. The movie sets her up with major Final Girl energy, only to rip it away in spectacular fashion.

In another universe, Tina survives and carries the franchise. I see it. She had the goods.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Then there’s Kris Fowles (aka remake Tina), played by Katie Cassidy in A Nightmare on Elm Street. Though renamed, she serves the same narrative role… and once again, it’s a brutal fate.

Cassidy had major franchise potential. Unfortunately, she was stuck in a remake that never reached the heights of the original. Not her fault. You deserved better, Kris-Tina.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Lisa Webber | A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge

Lisa Webber, played by Kim Myers in A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge, is a real one.

She helps Jesse clean his room. She sticks by him when he runs away from her own pool party. She even stands by him when he shows up covered in blood confessing to multiple murders. Okay, maybe that’s when you call someone.

Still, Lisa survives one of the meanest versions of Freddy ever put on screen. She literally frees Jesse from Freddy’s control with a kiss. Is it ridiculous? Yes. Does it work? Also yes.

Name another final girl who defeated Freddy with nothing but determination and lip gloss.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Kristen Parker | A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors

From the moment we meet Kristen, played by Patricia Arquette in A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, she feels real.

There’s vulnerability there; wide-eyed fear that slowly transforms into strength. Her arc from frightened teen to empowered dream warrior is one of the franchise’s strongest character journeys.

Soft but never weak. Nervous but never powerless.

Also, let’s be honest; 80s cool never looked better.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Taryn White | Dream Warriors

Taryn, played by Jennifer Rubin, may not have the most screen time, but she leaves a mark.

A troubled teen at Westin Hills Psychiatric Hospital, she transforms in her dreams into the “beautiful and bad” warrior she always believed she could be.

Her demise is one of Freddy’s most brutal kills. Tragic, yes, but unforgettable. Taryn deserved better. Still, she went out iconic.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Debbie Stevens | A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

Debbie, played by Brooke Theiss in A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, arrives rocking giant 80s hair and a leather jacket like she just stepped out of a music video.

She’s athletic, confident, and refreshingly kind, something that doesn’t always happen in slasher films. The Elm Street kids were often more likable than your average horror group, and Debbie is a prime example.

Her gym-themed death scene is grotesque and unforgettable. She deserved better. But she went down as one of the franchise’s most memorable kills.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Yvonne Miller & Greta Gibson | A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child

Another twofer.

Yvonne Miller (Kelly Jo Minter) and Greta Gibson (Erika Anderson) both shine in A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child.

Yvonne has one of the rare distinctions in this franchise: she survives. Even after a hot tub nightmare involving a warped diving board, she makes it out alive.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Greta, on the other hand, suffers one of the most disturbing deaths in the series: force-fed in a grotesque dream sequence. She’s stylish, warm, and stuck with an overbearing mother from hell.

Greta absolutely deserved better.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Lori Campbell | Freddy vs. Jason

In Freddy vs. Jason, Monica Keena brings Lori Campbell to life.

Yes, the dialogue gets questionable at times. But Lori holds her own against both Freddy and Jason Voorhees, which is no small feat.

She delivers one of the film’s most memorable lines:
“Welcome to my world, bitch.”

And she means it.

The Hottest Women of the A Nightmare on Elm Street Franchise

Nancy Holbrook | A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)

Finally, we have Nancy Holbrook, played by Rooney Mara in A Nightmare on Elm Streetthe remake.

This version of Nancy is quiet, introspective, and tough. The micro-nap concept added a cool new wrinkle to Freddy’s abilities, allowing him to slip into the real world in terrifying bursts.

Mara’s Nancy stabs, slashes, and ultimately turns the tables, even delivering her own version of the iconic line:

“You’re in my world now, bitch.”

Love the remake or hate it, she showed up ready for war.

Final Thoughts

That’s my list. There are many like it, but this one is mine.

Share your favorites in the comments, and maybe write your local congressperson to ask what’s happening with this franchise these days.

Sleep tight.

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Monday, March 2, 2026

Godzilla Minus Zero Will Receive A Worldwide IMAX Release

One of the biggest surprises in recent years was the impact Takashi Yamazaki’s Godzilla Minus One made worldwide. I think it was tempting for non-Godzilla devotees to write it off as just another Godzilla movie (although the faithful would wonder what exactly is wrong with that), but it ended up being perhaps the greatest installment of the franchise to date. It earned critical raves (with even Steven Spielberg hailing it), and the box office was outstanding, grossing a huge $57 million in North America. It also won a well-deserved Academy Award for Best Visual Effects, beating out movies with budgets that eclipsed it by hundreds of millions. As such, the sequel, Godzilla Minus Zero, is a major event.

Befitting how anticipated the movie is, word leaked today that Toho and their North American subsidiary, GKIDS, are giving the film a global IMAX release. Godzilla Minus One came out on IMAX screens in Japan and eventually played a limited run in North America in that format, but it looks like it will be getting a more robust IMAX release right off the bat. It hits North American theaters on November 6th, which is only three days after its Japanese release.

Judging by the release schedule, it looks like it might have a two-week run, with The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping set for a November 20th IMAX release. It may also have to share screens with WB’s The Cat in the Hat, which is listed for an IMAX release as well (it’s not unusual for films to share IMAX screens).

IMAX has become an increasingly sought-after format for distributors, far outpacing other premium options. There’s even shaping up to be a bit of an IMAX battle toward the end of 2026, with Avengers: Doomsday and the third Dune movie both having been shot with IMAX in mind. However, they both open on December 18th, and Dune is rumored to have an exclusive window.

Are you excited to see Godzilla roar on IMAX screens this November? Let us know in the comments!

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Trailer unveiled for Pinnochio: Unstrung, starring Robert Englund and Richard Brake

Made on a budget of less than $100,000, director Rhys Frake-Waterfield’s movie Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey earned more than $6 million during its global release in early 2023, so not only did the sequel Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey 2 have a substantially higher budget, that success opened the door to an entire cinematic universe that will consist of at least one more Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey sequel and other horror movies inspired by children’s stories, like Peter Pan’s Neverland NightmareBambi: The Reckoning, and Pinocchio: Unstrung. (Along with the crossover Poohniverse: Monsters Assemble.) A release date for Pinocchio: Unstrung has not yet been announced, but the movie is coming soon – so soon that a trailer has arrived online! You can watch it in the embed above.

FX and Story

As we’ve previously heard, Todd Masters of MastersFx, who worked on the 2019 Child’s Play remake, headed up the animatronics and puppetry. The Prosthetics Studio, which has worked on the Star Wars and Harry Potter franchises, will be providing the practical gore.

Frake-Waterfield directed Pinocchio: Unstrung. The story follows young James as he learns of his grandfather Geppetto’s deadly secret: Pinocchio. Cameron Bell, Jessica Balmer, Jack Art Gray, and Peter De Souza-Feighoney star alongside A Nightmare on Elm Street‘s Robert Englund and Rob Zombie regular Richard Brake.

Statements

Brake previously had this to say about the project: “Not only is the script dark, twisted and gory, it’s also at times very funny. Todd Masters and his team have created incredible practical effects. Audiences are in for a crazy ride.” Masters added, “I’ve forever loved the original and demented story from the 1880s. So I was excited to join this production, to bring this little puppet to life — with all practical FX. This version is still a little puppet’s pursuit to becoming a boy… but the way he becomes one, is extremely gnarly… and frankly, very fun.

Frake-Waterfield said, “Our movie flips everything you know about Pinocchio on its head. We have an incredibly talented cast and crew working on this. We are heavily relying on practical effects for all of the deaths and creature work. I can’t wait for the world to meet Pinocchio.

Are you interested in Pinocchio: Unstrung? Take a look at the trailer, then let us know by leaving a comment below.

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Behind the Madness of The People Under the Stairs: Wes Craven’s 1991 Cult Classic

Cody

There’s no doubt that the late Wes Craven was one of our great masters of horror… but he did make some weird movies on occasion. Sometimes he’d deliver an undisputed classic like The Hills Have Eyes, A Nightmare on Elm Street, or Scream. Then, sometimes you’d get a strange one like Deadly Friend, Shocker, or Vampire in Brooklyn. And let’s not forget the dog flashback in The Hills Have Eyes Part 2.

One of his oddies-but-goodies is the 1991 film The People Under the Stairs. Where did this crazy story come from? What was Craven’s biggest concern during post-production? And what was the important character moment that got cut? We’ll dig up the answers to those questions and more as we find out what happened to The People Under the Stairs.

The Inspiration Behind the Story

Craven could never be accused of being a superficial filmmaker with nothing to say. He gave deep thought to all of his projects. He was mindful of themes and subtext. Like A Nightmare on Elm Street, this film was inspired by a newspaper article he read in the late 1970s. While a respectable couple was away on vacation, neighbors saw someone breaking into their home. When the police arrived, they didn’t find any burglars inside – but they did find the couple’s children, who had been imprisoned in the house their entire lives.

Craven explained to Cinefantastique magazine that he was intrigued by the idea that “beneath the surface of apparent normalcy can be found strange aberrations of behavior: two people that appear to be well-behaved can still, in secret, perform atrocities on their own children.” Neighbors thought outsiders, burglars, were bringing depravity into their decent world… but the depravity had been there all along, hidden behind locked doors.

The People Under the Stairs

The Story of The People Under the Stairs

Craven wrote a screenplay about a young boy named Poindexter, though his tarot-reading sister has given him the nickname Fool. His family is poor and facing eviction from their apartment in the ghetto, so Fool is roped into a robbery scheme by his sister’s friend Leroy and his criminal associate Spenser. They plan to break into the landlord’s mansion and steal an extremely valuable coin collection. But once they reach the mansion, they find that it’s a very strange place.

The doors are electrified. The windows are covered with screens, padlocked from the outside. There’s a boy living in the walls. And a group of tortured cannibals locked in the basement.

The owners of the mansion are a bizarre pair of siblings. They call each other Mommy and Daddy, and they’ve been trying to adopt the perfect child. Boy children always disappoint them in some way. They see or overhear something they weren’t supposed to, or they talk back. So Daddy cuts out the bad parts and tosses them into the basement. One of them, called Roach, has managed to escape into the walls. With his Rottweiler Prince by his side, Daddy hunts him through the house, carrying a shotgun and wearing a leather bondage outfit. Only a girl child named Alice has managed to stay in Mommy and Daddy’s good graces, sort of, by not seeing, hearing, or speaking evil.

Leroy and Spenser are taken out of the picture early on, leaving Fool to try to find a way out of this seemingly inescapable house. At least he has the help of Alice and Roach… and when he learns just how twisted Mommy and Daddy are, he begins to feel sympathy for the people under the stairs as well.

Writing and Filming Challenges

Craven worked on the script for years, writing and rewriting. The problem was, he couldn’t figure out how to get Fool to the mansion quickly enough. In early drafts, which sported the title The Puzzle, he wouldn’t reach the house until sixty or even eighty pages in. Fittingly, the answer finally came to him in a dream. A lucid dream that allowed him to go over the story multiple times. In the finished film, it only takes Fool eleven minutes to get to the mansion, and he’s trapped inside by the twenty minute mark.

After he finally cracked the script, getting the movie made turned out to be fairly easy. He had a two-picture deal with the production company Alive Films and distributor Universal Pictures, and full creative control on the movies he made under this deal. Shocker had been the first, and the executives quickly gave him the green-light to make The People Under the Stairs the second. Filming began in March of 1991, less than a year and a half after Shocker was released.

The People Under the Stairs

Cast and Characters


The main children roles of Fool, Alice, and Roach went to Brandon Adams, A.J. Langer, and Sean Whalen, each of them turning in strong performances that make you care about their characters. There’s also:

  • Kelly Jo Minter as Ruby, Fool’s sister
  • Bill Cobbs as Grandpa Booker
  • Ving Rhames as Leroy
  • Jeremy Roberts as Spenser
  • Yan Birch as the Stairmaster (often mistaken for Dave Pirner of Soul Asylum)
  • Wendy Robie and Everett McGill as Mommy and Daddy

Craven lifted Robie and McGill right out of the cast of Twin Peaks. Their characters are so off-the-wall, they feel like the actors were still in David Lynch mode when they reported to this set.

The Rottweiler Prince was played by four dogs: Brutus, Bubba, Schultz, and Zeke. It’s not clear which dog was used for which scene, but their combined efforts made Prince a memorable menace.

The house used for the mansion exterior can be found in Los Angeles, but the interiors were all built on set, and Craven had a specific vision for them. For him, the interior of the mansion represented the human mind, with madness depicted in the different spaces within the house. “The outside seems quite normal, and the first floor seems luxurious and appropriate, yet the farther in you go, the more unexplained or bizarre.” If that weren’t enough, he also said the house and its occupants represent “the whole society of the United States.”

The people under the stairs, howling and trying to crawl up through cracks in the foundation, represent the thoughts of insane people. They try to suppress these thoughts, but they can’t be contained. Fool and other children escaping from the insane parents’ house represent the next generation liberating itself from the madness of a previous generation. Craven considered the film to be a positive social statement about minorities and children who have been oppressed by adults finding their freedom. Like we said, he was a deep thinker.

The People Under the Stairs

Post-Production Concerns

Once The People Under the Stairs was in post-production, Craven started worrying. He had some bad experiences with the MPAA ratings board before, and he was certain they were going to give him a rough time with the film. It’s about child abuse. It has underage children in terrifying situations. The NC-17 rating had just been created, and he feared they were going to slap that rating on his movie. All that worrying was over nothing. The MPAA only objected to one bit of KNB-supplied gore: a shot of Daddy biting into a human liver. Once Craven snipped that out, they gave the movie an R.

Test screening audiences encouraged Craven to make two more cuts. Originally, there was an epilogue in which Ruby gives Fool a fresh tarot card reading and reveals that, since he has undergone a rite of passage, his nickname will now be upgraded from Fool to King. But viewers didn’t want to sit through another dialogue scene after the climactic action, so that character moment was removed. Daddy was also supposed to return for an ending jump scare, but Craven decided to take that out. He had done plenty of ending jump scares in his career, and he was tired of them. It also implied that the door was open for a sequel, and he had no intention of making one. It’s better off that way.

Release and Reception

The People Under the Stairs is a very unique horror film that stands alone, telling a complete story with a satisfactory ending. Craven brought his story to the screen with a specific type of insanity and dark humor that couldn’t be replicated. Moviegoers saw the charm of it when it reached theatres on November 1st, 1991… an unusual release date, coming in right after Halloween. That didn’t stop it from being the number one movie its opening weekend. It was made on a budget of six million dollars, and earned just under that in its first three days. It remained in the box office top ten for an entire month, ending its theatrical run with over thirty-one million dollars.

A good number of critics gave it positive reviews, admiring its sense of humor and socially conscious subtext. It has been called a parody of conservatism and a satire of late capitalism. Other descriptions include “creepy,” “disturbing,” “deranged,” and “surprisingly funny.” In fact, some felt that Craven went too far with the humor.

Legacy and Remakes

This may not be one of his most popular movies, but it is a respected entry on his filmography. And it has never lost its place in the pop culture consciousness over the decades. Mommy and Daddy’s house has inspired a Halloween Horror Nights maze at Universal Studios Florida. The film was featured on the drive-in movie screen in the Twister…Ride it Out attraction. It has remained in viewing rotations thanks to DVD and special edition Blu-ray releases… And in the late 2000s, when he was producing remakes of The Hills Have Eyes and The Last House on the Left, Craven considered giving The People Under the Stairs the remake treatment as well.

It didn’t happen as a feature film, but in 2015 it was announced that Craven was rebooting The People Under the Stairs as a TV series for Syfy. Sadly, he passed away just four months after the announcement, so that project was scrapped. In 2020, Universal brought in Jordan Peele and Win Rosenfeld of Monkeypaw Productions to produce a remake… but that still hasn’t gone into production.

Maybe we’ll see a new take on the concept someday. In the meantime, the 1991 film still holds up as a one-of-a-kind cult classic. Inspired by a horrific real-life case and guided by a dream, Craven brought us an entertaining movie with its own vibe. He made some weird stuff… but sometimes weird is exactly what you’re looking for.

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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