Discover Trending Search Saved Menu
Weapons
Weapons — Last night at 2:17 AM, every child from Mrs. Gandy's class woke up, got out of bed, went downstairs, opened the front door, walked into the dark ...and they never came back.
2025 7.5 535.1K views saved
Active recipe:

Weapons

2025 7.5 535.1K views saved
Weapons

When all but one child from the same class mysteriously vanish on the same night at exactly the same time, a community is left questioning who or what is behind their disappearance.

Countries: US
Languages: English, Spanish
Runtime: 2hrs 9min
Status: Released
Release date: 2025-08-04
Release format: Streaming — Sep 08, 2025
Comments
Remington
@remington-rookie 2 months ago

This and "Bring Her Back" are tied for my movie of the year so far. Absolutely fantastic film with no flaws in my opinion. Smart writing, a killer cast, and a super fun mysterious story structure make for one of the most engaging horror movies I've seen in a while. You never really quite know where the story is going until it shows it's cards. The final sequence had everyone in my theater going crazy. A perfect blend of horror and comedy, truly. I didn't even expect much from this based on the marketing, but wow, I'm so happy I showed up day 1 to see this in theaters. Do yourself a favor and see it as soon as possible, avoid all spoilers and go in blind. If you liked Barbarian, you're sure to love this. Can't wait for his Resident Evil movie next! 10/10.

17
Remington
@remington-rookie 2 months ago

This and "Bring Her Back" are tied for my movie of the year so far. Absolutely fantastic film with no flaws in my opinion. Smart writing, a killer cast, and a super fun mysterious story structure make for one of the most engaging horror movies I've seen in a while. You never really quite know where the story is going until it shows it's cards. The final sequence had everyone in my theater going crazy. A perfect blend of horror and comedy, truly. I didn't even expect much from this based on the marketing, but wow, I'm so happy I showed up day 1 to see this in theaters. Do yourself a favor and see it as soon as possible, avoid all spoilers and go in blind. If you liked Barbarian, you're sure to love this. Can't wait for his Resident Evil movie next! 10/10.

17
Felipe
@heyflp 2 months ago

Zach Cregger comes back with “Weapons,” proving that the success of “Barbarian” wasn’t a fluke, but the result of a filmmaker who knows exactly how to build terror and surprise from the simplest premises. This time, the starting point is deeply disturbing: an unexplained event where 17 children walk out of their homes in the middle of the night, arms stretched out as if they were playing airplane, and vanish. The image alone carries a haunting weight, but Cregger’s script refuses to spoon-feed answers or lean on obvious symbolism, even if you can catch echoes of real-life tragedies or metaphors for recent times, like the pandemic. Instead, the film operates in that strange space between the unexplainable and the instinctive, digging into the emotional and social ripple effects of a collective trauma.

The real power of “Weapons” lies in its fragmented narrative, split into chapters centered on different characters, each one revealing new pieces of a puzzle the audience never fully sees. Justine Gandy (Julia Garner), a teacher left reeling after all her students suddenly vanish, embodies the weight of suspicion and social hostility, becoming the target of veiled accusations and community paranoia. Garner nails the feeling of someone burdened by guilt without having done anything wrong, trying to survive in a space where logic dissolves and fear takes over. Instead of following a conventional investigation path, Cregger uses Justine as a doorway into a mosaic of perspectives.

The scope widens when the story shifts to Archer Graff (Josh Brolin), a father devastated by one of the disappearances. Brolin’s restrained grief and emotional toughness contrast sharply with the more chaotic energy of other characters like police officer Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), addict James (Austin Abrams), and principal Marcus (Benedict Wong). Each storyline adds not only new bits of information but also distinct tones, from suffocating tension to sharp humor, keeping “Weapons” unpredictable and alive. Cregger leans into a “Tarantino-style” construction, where repeated events from new angles aren’t cheap tricks but deliberate tools to underline that, in a crisis, everyone believes they own their version of the truth.

On a technical level, “Weapons” is razor-sharp. Larkin Seiple’s cinematography injects energy without flashiness, placing the camera in unexpected spots that capture the physicality of each scene, while Joe Murphy’s editing keeps the rhythm uneven, flipping between oppressive silence and bursts of movement. Together, they create a visual language that sustains tension without falling into over-stylization, keeping the audience locked in. At the same time, Cregger understands that horror can coexist with moments of spontaneous humor, not as cheap comic relief, but as a natural human reaction to the absurd and the terrifying.

In the climax, “Weapons” delivers a final sequence that is pure unease, leaving the audience unsettled yet fascinated. It works both as a sensory experience, a roller coaster ride between nervous laughter and Shock, and as an open-ended piece about fear, paranoia, and social distrust. Cregger once again proves he can handle modern horror without leaning on clichés or easy answers, delivering something that’s brutal, entertaining, and deeply unsettling all at once. “Weapons” doesn’t just want to scare you; it wants to provoke, challenge, and stick with you long after the last frame.

2
ElectricGypsy
@electricgypsy 3 weeks ago

I really enjoyed it, knew absolutely nothing about it before watching.

1
decatur555
@decatur555 1 month ago

Sometimes a film that gets too much hype loses its ability to surprise. With Weapons, the opposite happened: after all the buzz, I expected to be tired of it, yet it kept me glued to the screen until the very end. That doesn’t happen often, especially with a horror film that dares to break the mold.

What Zach Cregger sets up is bold: an original idea pushed to the limit, told in chapters that gradually come together like a twisted, absorbing puzzle. Not everyone will enjoy the bloodier side—there are gore scenes that could have been toned down without weakening the story—but that rawness is part of the experience.

The cast is another strength. Josh Brolin and Julia Garner, along with a solid ensemble, carry a story that blends horror, drama, and even dark humor. The mix might sound odd, but on screen it works, keeping the tension alive at all times.

Visually, the film has real personality. It plays with the macabre and the poetic, with atmospheres that feel like a dark fairytale. The direction knows when to tighten the rope and when to release it, making each twist land like a punch.

In the end, Weapons is one of this year’s standout films. It may be too much for some, but it’s as unsettling as it is fascinating. A wild, disturbing, and surprising ride that cements Cregger as one of today’s most interesting horror voices.

1
PapiWarbucks
@papiwarbucks 1 month ago

Absolute masterpiece, I really enjoyed the story building from different character’s perspectives. This kept us as an audience learning piece by piece and still not having answers. Loved the plot and cinematography- the humor also worked very well.

1
Niko Laus
@niko1987 1 month ago

So brilliant. One of the best movies this year.

1
Quentin
@quintennyson 2 months ago

I really did love this. I went in knowing very little, i hadn't watched trailers. All i knew was Austin Abrams was in it and so i went opening night. The movie was great, austin was phenomenal but that did not surprise me. I found myself deeply emotional over Benedict Wong's character. Truly the two of them were the standout performances to me, though Alden Ehrenreich and Amy Madigan were also quite strong performances to me.

The film walks the line between horror with comedic moments and horror comedy, and i think it does both aspects really well. I love the concept and i thought it was a strong execution. I enjoyed the cinematography a lot and the score was really effective. The moments of narration were kinda meh, but it got information across that i dont think we'd get another way. I really enjoyed the non-linear storytelling, i think it was done well and was really effective.

1
Renato de Souza Dias
@soujirouseta 1 month ago

Awesome movie!!! The new masterpiece of horror!!!

0
Duarte Silva
@duartesilva 1 month ago

I loved every minute of it. The way it explored different perspectives through its characters was beautifully done, and watching everything come together in the end was mind-blowing. Easily one of the best films I’ve seen this decade.

0
Enyse.Enyse
@enyseenyse 1 month ago

One of the best horror I've seen in years (beside Terrifier trilogy, hehe)! And the end was very very satisfying.

0
Recommendations
two-tone-background No results found! Please adjust your filters or try again.