Sunday, 15 March 2026

REVIEW: Scream 7 (2026 Film) - Starring Neve Campbell, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, David Arquette, Matthew Lillard and Courteney Cox

Review by Jon Donnis

The long running slasher saga returns with Scream 7, a direct follow up to Scream VI and the seventh entry in the famous horror franchise. This time the story pulls the focus back toward Sidney Prescott, placing her once again at the centre of a new Ghostface killing spree. The result is a film that feels very familiar, sometimes almost deliberately so, but it still delivers an entertaining and suitably violent experience for fans who know exactly what they are signing up for.

The film opens with a classic style prologue set in Woodsboro. Two Stab obsessed fans decide to visit the old home of Stu Macher after hearing rumours that he might have survived the events of the original killings. It is a curiosity that ends in brutal fashion when Ghostface appears and murders the pair before setting the house on fire. The sequence feels like a clear nod to the history of the series and immediately sets the tone for the film. It is violent, tense and unapologetically tied to the past.

The story then moves to Pine Grove, Indiana, where Sidney Prescott has attempted to build a quiet life far away from the horrors that once defined her. She runs a coffeehouse, is married to police officer Mark Evans, and spends her days raising her children. Among them is her teenage daughter Tatum, named after Sidney's late best friend Tatum Riley. For a brief moment the film allows Sidney the illusion of peace, though anyone familiar with the franchise will know that it cannot last.


The return of Ghostface shatters that calm. Sidney receives a chilling call from the killer who claims to be an older and scarred Stu Macher. Whether that claim is genuine or not becomes part of the mystery, but the threat is immediate. The killer reveals that he is standing outside a theatre where Sidney's daughter and her classmates are rehearsing. Sidney races there with the police, but the attack has already begun. Two students are murdered before Ghostface disappears into the night.

From that point onward the story unfolds in the familiar rhythm of suspicion and escalating violence that the series is known for. Tatum becomes the central target of the new attacks, which creates a strong emotional hook for the story. Sidney is no longer just protecting herself. She is trying to prevent her daughter from experiencing the same trauma that shaped her own life.

The biggest strength of the film is the return of Neve Campbell as Sidney Prescott. Campbell remains the heart of the series and her presence instantly grounds the story. She plays Sidney with the calm determination of someone who has endured years of violence yet refuses to be defined by it. Even when the plot becomes chaotic, her performance keeps the emotional focus intact.


The supporting cast provides solid backup throughout the film. Isabel May takes on the role of Tatum and carries much of the tension once the attacks begin to circle around her group of friends. Jasmin Savoy Brown and Mason Gooding return as the Meeks Martin twins, survivors of previous Ghostface attacks who once again find themselves caught in the middle of the carnage. Meanwhile Courteney Cox appears once more as Gale Weathers, the determined reporter who has spent years documenting the bloody history of these murders.

The film does not hold back when it comes to violence. Several of the kill scenes are particularly intense, with Ghostface stalking characters through houses, streets and dimly lit interiors before striking with brutal efficiency. The gore is present and the tension is handled well during these moments, reminding audiences why the Ghostface killer remains such a memorable horror figure.


Where the film struggles slightly is in its lack of originality. Scream 7 clearly understands what its audience expects and it rarely attempts to move beyond that formula. The structure of the story, the suspects and even the eventual revelations follow patterns that long time fans of the series will recognise almost immediately. Nothing here feels wildly new or experimental.

That cautious approach makes the film feel safe at times. The story relies heavily on nostalgia and familiar franchise ideas rather than taking bold risks. For devoted fans that nostalgia can be enjoyable. Seeing the story circle back toward earlier events in Woodsboro gives the film a sense of continuity. At the same time it also highlights how little the formula has changed.


The running time of one hour and fifty minutes occasionally stretches the pacing as well. Some scenes linger longer than necessary while the characters attempt to figure out who might be behind the mask. The tension eventually builds towards a violent and chaotic final confrontation, but the middle portion of the film can feel slightly drawn out.

Despite those issues, Scream 7 remains an entertaining slasher film. It delivers the suspense, the gore and the returning characters that audiences expect from the series. The emotional core provided by Sidney's relationship with her daughter adds weight to the story, and Neve Campbell's performance reminds viewers why Sidney Prescott remains one of horror cinema's most enduring survivors.


In the end Scream 7 feels very much like a film made for fans of the franchise. It does not attempt to reinvent the series and it rarely pushes the story into new territory. What it does offer is a familiar and bloody return to the world of Ghostface, packed with nostalgia and anchored by a strong central performance.

It may not reach the heights of the very best entries in the saga, but it is still a solid and enjoyable addition to the series. I would score Scream 7 a respectable 7 out of 10.

Out in cinemas now

Saturday, 14 March 2026

REVIEW: Redux Redux (2026 Film) - Starring Michaela McManus

Redux Redux

Review by Jon Donnis

Redux Redux arrives with a high concept and the nerve to see it through. Written and directed by Kevin and Matthew McManus, this 2026 American science fiction thriller hinges on a brutal, intimate idea. A mother discovers a way to cross parallel universes and uses it for one purpose. To hunt down and repeatedly kill the man who murdered her daughter.

Michaela McManus takes on the role of Irene Kelly with a performance that does most of the heavy lifting. Irene has turned grief into routine. In universe after universe she tracks Neville, a seemingly ordinary restaurant cook who is anything but, and executes him with cold determination. The repetition is the point. Each jump is another attempt to claw back control in a cosmos that took everything from her.


The film's multiverse mechanics are present, but wisely kept from overwhelming the human story. Irene's machine allows her to slip between realities, though the technical detail is sketched rather than laboured over. The focus stays on what that power does to a person. In one world she saves a teenage runaway, Mia, from becoming Neville's next victim. That rescue shifts the film's centre of gravity. What begins as a revenge thriller slowly becomes something more reflective, even tender.

Stella Marcus gives Mia a wary resilience that plays beautifully against Irene's brittle intensity. Their uneasy alliance grows in fits and starts. There are gunfights, narrow escapes and a tense detour involving smugglers who want something far darker than cash in exchange for help. Yet the most compelling moments come when the action quietens and the two sit with their shared trauma. The sci fi tone holds best not when the film tries to outline the rules of its technology, but when these characters find a strange comfort in one another's pain.


Jeremy Holm's Neville is chilling precisely because he is not exaggerated. He feels plausible. That plausibility gives weight to Irene's obsession and keeps the stakes grounded even as the story hops across realities. A later turn into a universe where events unfolded very differently adds a reflective edge, without tipping into sentimentality or easy answers. The McManus brothers show real ambition here. They are interested less in spectacle and more in the emotional cost of endless second chances.

Visually, Redux Redux does show its indie roots. The scale is modest and some of the effects carry the faint roughness of a low budget production. Sets are sparse, locations limited. Yet there is a certain charm in that restraint. The stripped back aesthetic suits a story that is fundamentally about isolation. Paul Koch's agile synth score adds texture and momentum, lending the film a propulsive energy that belies its means.


There are moments where the script brushes up against exposition that feels slightly on the nose. A few exchanges about how the machine works lack the elegance found elsewhere. Still, these are minor stumbles in a film that largely trusts its audience. It is a clever and ambitious take on the multiverse, one that keeps its attention on the heart of the matter rather than getting lost in cosmic minutiae.

Above all, Redux Redux is character driven. Its approach to revenge is surprisingly humane. It asks whether vengeance, even across infinite worlds, can ever truly heal anything. McManus carries the film with a performance that is fierce, wounded and ultimately moving.

For an indie production, this feels remarkably assured. I wish Hollywood would put this kind of thought and effort into its big budget releases. As it stands, Redux Redux is one of the strongest independent releases of 2026 so far. I would comfortably give it a 9 out of 10.

Out Now on Digital

Thursday, 12 March 2026

Interview with Laura Ellen Wilson - Starring in upcoming films Clown Motel 3, Skate to Hell and The Black Sheep


We recently caught up with one of our favourite actors, the awesome Laura Ellen Wilson, to find out what she has been upto, and what is next.

Check out our exclusive interview below.

1. You grew up in the United Kingdom before eventually moving to the United States. What was your upbringing like, and when did you first realise that acting was something you wanted to pursue seriously?

I was born and raised in Chorley, Lancashire as an only child - until I was about 16, then my parents became foster carers! We fostered children mainly aged 6 and under and that was a lot of fun! We were a fairly active family - my dad and I trained in Kung Fu together and we’ve always had dogs, so weekend hikes were a thing too.

I had always had a flair for the dramatic and put on solo performances for my parents (god bless them for putting up with that!) for as long as I can remember! I found myself seriously interested in performing at around 13 years old and started taking acting classes and performing in school plays. Studying Musical Theatre at College was really the turning point for me and solidified that this was the world I wanted to be in. Instead of being one of the only ones in school that liked performing, I found myself surrounded by lots of likeminded people and it was the best atmosphere.

2. Every actor has a moment when performing stops being a hobby and becomes a real career path. What was the turning point for you when you decided to fully commit to acting?

Upon finishing college with a Musical Theater degree, I went on to work in Hotels and on Cruise Ships as a singer/dancer for several years. In between overseas contracts, I would take roles in local student films, just to see if I enjoyed that side of performing. After a couple of years of doing this, I decided that once I ‘retired’ from working abroad (25 is the average age of retirement for a professional dancer - I know, crazy!) I would throw myself into acting on screen. In 2016, I unexpectedly had to hang up the dancing shoes and drop the mic due to an injury. In an effort to keep the momentum going and not let my injury hold me back, I threw myself completely into the acting world in 2017.

That injury and that decision have brought me to where I am today, without a shadow of a doubt. A year later, I got extremely lucky and landed the lead role in a book-to-screen adaption called Monster. The author, Matt Shaw, was also directing and as he already had an established fan base (and it was his first film), the public interest went crazy. The moment I got that role and realised just how big this was going to be, THAT was the moment I knew I wanted to do this forever.
3. Much of your work has been within the horror genre. What is it about horror that appeals to you as a performer, and what do you think the genre allows actors to explore that other genres might not?

I would say around 90% of my work has been within the horror genre. Horror is such a popular genre and the most produced by indie film, so that definitely tracks. I’ve always been a horror lover, from my first horror film, Jaws, which I watched when I was about 6! I remember understanding it was all ‘fake’ and I was just so intrigued as to how they made it look so real. It just so happens that my first feature was a horror and was premiered at a horror festival and I made contacts with more directors and producers of the genre at that time.

I can’t speak for all actors but for me, I really get into character when I put the costume on. It just so happens that costumes in horror sometimes also involve special effects, makeup and fake blood and that is so much fun. You can really dig deep and bring those emotions out and as an actor, you crave more than just a simple scene of dialogue. The drama, the horror, the screams, fake blood, kill scenes etc. You certainly don’t get that in a rom-com!
4. You have appeared in films such as Friday the 13th: Vengeance, Chained, Monster, A Coven of Evil and Introspectum Motel. Looking back at those projects, is there one experience that stands out the most to you?

I’ve had fantastic experiences with each of my films and I’m so grateful for that. There are 2 which really stand out though.

Monster stands out above all as it was my first lead and my first feature film and I got to travel with the movie to different film festivals. The movie had its official screening at Crypticon Seattle, a horror convention in the US and it was my first experience of bringing my film to America and also my first time at a horror convention. It was such an incredible ride and we won several awards which made it even more impactful. The 2nd experience would be taking on the role of Trinity in Friday the 13th: Vengeance, as it was my first project as an actor in America, which was a dream. The director actually watched the screening of Monster at Crypticon Seattle and after the film finished, he straight up offered me the role. Working with so many of the original franchise alumni was so surreal, in the best way possible!

5. Independent horror productions often have a very different atmosphere compared with large studio films. What has your experience been like working within the independent horror scene?

I couldn’t love working in independent horror more! It is such a collaborative process and everyone becomes a family very quickly. Typically, we are all living together either on location or at an airbnb close by. We work, play, eat and sleep (not like that!!) together for the duration of the shoot so like a family, we see the best and worst sides of each other and become close within a matter of days. Independent horror often involves long days, sometimes 18+ hours and usually at night so when one of the team is falling behind, we all come together and bring them back up. We also make decisions as a team like, an extra hour in bed tomorrow, but we work twice as hard etc, so it’s a really inclusive process. I always wrap a new project with a new family!
6. You have several upcoming projects including Clown Motel 3, Skate to Hell and The Black Sheep. What can audiences expect from these films and from the characters you portray?

These 3 projects were all ‘firsts’ for me, in a way. In Clown Motel 3, I play Sergeant Gunny and it was my first time playing a real bad-ass military woman. I’d been longing to play a bad-ass for some time and it was just a dream come true. There’s drama, action and a whole load of clowns!! We shot at the official Clown Motel in Tonopah, Nevada in the desert too, which was amazing! Skate to Hell was my first venture into horror/comedy and it was an experience for sure. 

My scene was with Eric Roberts so of course, the pressure was on but watching the movie at the premiere in Las Vegas earlier this year, the entire cast absolutely nailed it. My scenes were in a homeless shelter and the chaos in those scenes were just hilarious. 

The Black Sheep was my first role as a ‘bitch’! I’ve only ever played protagonists and have been dying to play an antagonist for such a long time. Playing a real mean girl was fun, but the actress I was mean to was so lovely and at times I felt really awful about it!! Let's just say my character, Elizabeth, gets what's coming to her.

7. You have also been cast in Campout Nightmare which is set to begin filming in Pennsylvania. What attracted you to the project and what are you most excited about going into production?

I’m a huge fan of the slasher genre and when I saw the casting online, I was instantly attracted to it. The fact that my character isn’t within the action scenes, but is the sole survivor of the previous attack many years ago and am trying to educate the ‘youngsters’ on what really happened, I was especially drawn to. A huge plus is that my good friend Joe Bob Briggs (The Last Drive In, Monstervision) is also in it too! 
8. Acting can take you to many different places and introduce you to a wide range of people and creative teams. What have these experiences taught you about yourself as an actress?

The amount of difficulty I’ve faced, being in such an over-saturated industry, is trying to stand out from the crowd. Especially since I am in a very popular age group and have blonde hair and blue eyes - there are a lot of us!! I think the main lesson I’ve learned is to not take myself too seriously and to go with the flow. There is no set path for an actor - some go to drama school, some have no training and others stumble into the industry by accident. Never compare yourself to others and be happy for your friends when they win!

9. For readers who may be discovering your work for the first time, what kind of roles or stories do you find yourself most drawn to?

I am very drawn to stories that require the audience to think. The stories that really require attention to detail and if you look away or get distracted for a moment, you miss something pivotal. I’m also really drawn to the stories that keep you thinking about it for hours or days after you’ve watched it. As far as characters go, I’m quite open. I am more drawn to storylines within the movie, but I do like either first kill roles or final girl roles.

10. Looking ahead to the future, what hopes or ambitions do you have for the next stage of your acting career?

My immediate ambition is to continue working within the United States. I have had an abundance of incredible opportunities since moving here and made some wonderful friends and I am so not done with that yet! 

My 3 year plan is to hopefully work on TV. I haven’t done any TV work yet and would love to work my way up to a Guest Star or even a Recurring role. I love the zombie/apocalypse/survival genre like The Walking Dead, La Brea or The 100 so being in something like that would quite literally be a dream come true. There is a lot of work to be done before that happens and right now, I’m really enjoying just going with the flow and seeing where current opportunities can take me!

A huge thanks to Laura Ellen Wilson for joining us for this interview, definitely given us plenty to look forward to. 

Thank you.


Wednesday, 11 March 2026

PREVIEW: Power Ballad (2026 Film) - Starring Paul Rudd and Nick Jonas

Power Ballad

Preview by Jon Donnis

Lionsgate UK has released the first trailer and artwork for Power Ballad, a new music-driven comedy drama from writer and director John Carney. The film arrives in UK and Irish cinemas on 29 May 2026, bringing together an unusual pairing of performers in a story about ambition, friendship, and the complicated business of creative credit.

Paul Rudd leads the film as Rick, a once popular wedding singer who now finds himself well past his moment in the spotlight. His routine life on the gig circuit takes an unexpected turn when he crosses paths with Danny, played by Nick Jonas, a former boy band star whose own career has begun to fade. A shared love of music sparks an easy connection between the two men during a late night jam session, the kind of casual collaboration that feels more like therapy than work.

Things begin to unravel when Danny turns one of Rick's songs into a breakout hit that launches his own comeback. The success that follows brings Danny back into the public eye, but it also leaves Rick watching from the sidelines as his music gains attention without the recognition he feels he deserves. Faced with the uncomfortable gap between authorship and fame, Rick decides to chase the credit that has slipped through his fingers, even if doing so threatens the relationships and stability he still has.

The film comes from John Carney, whose previous work includes Sing Street and Once, two projects known for weaving music naturally into their storytelling. Power Ballad appears to follow that same tradition, using performance and songwriting not simply as background decoration but as the emotional core of the story.

Alongside Rudd and Jonas, the cast includes Peter McDonald, Marcella Plunkett, Havana Rose Liu, and Jack Reynor. Carney co wrote the screenplay with Peter McDonald, and the production team brings together Anthony Bregman, John Carney, Peter Cron, Rebecca O'Flanagan, and Robert Walpole.

Power Ballad is presented by Lionsgate in association with 30WEST and Fís Éireann / Screen Ireland. The film is a Likely Story and Distressed Films production, created in association with Treasure Entertainment.

Running for 98 minutes and carrying a 15 certificate in the UK and a 15A in Ireland, Power Ballad promises a warm but slightly bittersweet look at the fragile line between artistic passion and personal pride when it arrives in cinemas on 29 May 2026.


Saturday, 7 March 2026

REVIEW: The Bride! (2026 Film) - Starring Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale

Review by Jon Donnis

Maggie Gyllenhaal's The Bride! is not a quiet reinterpretation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein myth. It is loud, strange, ambitious and often chaotic, a Gothic romance that jumps between horror, crime drama, social satire and something closer to dreamlike fantasy. Inspired by the 1935 film Bride of Frankenstein and Shelley's original novel, the film pushes the story into unexpected territory. It opens with Mary Shelley herself speaking from the afterlife, determined to tell a story she never managed to write while alive. From there the narrative leaps into 1936 Chicago, where possession, mob violence and scientific resurrection quickly collide.


The plot centres on Ida, a woman murdered by the henchmen of mob boss Lupino, only to be dug up and revived through experimental reanimation by scientist Dr. Cornelia Euphronius at the request of Frankenstein's monster. The monster, who soon earns the nickname Frank, hopes she will become his companion. Ida awakens with no memory of her life, though flashes of knowledge spill out in strange bursts. Frank convinces her that she is his lost bride. What follows is a bizarre road story across America, as the pair drift from Chicago to New York, leaving bodies behind them while discovering an awkward kind of companionship.

Jessie Buckley dominates the film from the moment she appears. Her performance is huge, fearless and completely committed, shifting between Ida, the reborn Bride and the ghostly presence of Mary Shelley herself. Buckley devours every scene with a kind of theatrical intensity that suits the film's strange tone. Christian Bale matches her with a surprisingly tender take on the monster, playing Frank less as a creature of rage and more as a lonely figure desperate for connection. Their chemistry is unusual but compelling, and it anchors a film that often threatens to spin off in several directions at once.


Gyllenhaal's direction leans heavily into visual spectacle. The film is packed with striking imagery, bold costume design and elaborate set pieces that blur the line between Gothic horror and surreal fantasy. Some sequences, such as the nightclub dance that spirals into a trance like frenzy, are mesmerising to watch. The film constantly shifts genre and mood, mixing gangster storylines with monster movie mythology and moments of dark humour. At its best, this wild mashup of influences gives The Bride! a distinctive energy that feels refreshingly unpredictable.

That same ambition also creates problems. The film tries to juggle so many ideas that it occasionally loses its footing. The pacing becomes uneven, jumping from one concept to another without always giving them room to breathe. Certain stylistic choices feel excessive, particularly the heavy use of handheld camerawork which can become visually exhausting. The tone also drifts in and out of focus, with scenes of Gothic romance sitting awkwardly beside sudden bursts of violence or social commentary.


The running time of two hours and six minutes does not help matters. While the performances remain strong throughout, the story begins to feel overstuffed as it moves toward its conclusion. By the final stretch the narrative pushes toward an ending that feels forced, as if the film struggles to tie together the many threads it introduced earlier. It is not disastrous, but it does underline the sense that the film is reaching beyond what it can comfortably hold.

Even with its flaws, The Bride! remains an intriguing piece of work. Beneath the madness sits a clear theme of empowerment and identity, reframing the Frankenstein myth through a different lens. Gyllenhaal's film is chaotic, bold and defiantly strange. It does not always succeed, yet it is rarely dull, and the performances from Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale alone make the journey worthwhile.

The Bride! is ultimately an imperfect but fascinating film. It reaches high, sometimes stumbles, yet more often than not it lands on something memorable. For all its tonal chaos and structural issues, the film hits more than it misses.

Score: 7 out of 10.

Out Now in Cinemas