“Weapons” is a bold, twisted, genre-bending ride—parts mystery, dark comedy, and nightmare fuel—with a killer setup and an explosive finale.
Following the runaway success of Barbarian, Zach Cregger returns with Weapons—a bold, ambitious, and delightfully twisted genre-bender that cements him as one of horror’s most exciting voices.
It’s the product of a filmmaker deeply in love with the genre, tossing a sink full of tropes, homages, and collective nightmares into a blender, spiking it with deliciously dark humor, and serving it with a side of creeping mystery and devious narrative twists.
The film opens with a gripping, deeply unnerving setup that immediately pulls you in, spinning a mystery-chiller that tightens its grip until it explodes in a dazzling, kinetic, and shock-filled finale. Structured as six interlocking chapters told from different perspectives, Weapons keeps viewers constantly guessing and continuously on edge.
Reminiscent of last year’s sleeper indie hit Strange Darling, this non-linear, subversive storytelling approach scatters clues like breadcrumbs, ensuring the journey is as thrilling as the payoff.
By the time the pieces fall into place, the film erupts into a balls-to-the-wall climax that’s jaw-dropping, fiercely funny, and ferociously satisfying.
Cregger demonstrates complete command over tone.
He masterfully blends palpable tension, moody atmosphere, sharp jump scares, and laugh-out-loud moments of camp. One moment, Weapons plunges you into bleak terror; the next, it lets you cackle at its absurdity without ever dulling the edge of the horror.
Humor diffuses the tension just enough to make the scares hit harder, and the film’s gleeful weirdness never tips into outright parody.
While Weapons is a crowd-pleasing thrill ride first and foremost, it doesn’t exist in a thematic vacuum. Beneath the playful exterior lurks a harrowing undercurrent: innocence lost, homes shattered, communities in chaos—consumed by crippling confusion and blame politics.
It’s the senselessness of tragedy in deceptively safe suburbs that thought themselves untouchable. A haunting dream of an assault rifle and an empty classroom speaks volumes without the film ever becoming heavy-handed.
Cregger trusts the audience to connect the dots. Whether you choose to peel back the layers or simply enjoy the rollercoaster, the film delivers.
The craft on display is impressive.
Cregger makes full use of his larger budget to stun with striking cinematography, an unnerving score, and meticulously staged practical effects that pack a punch. Early chapters are steeped in slow-burn dread and shadowy atmosphere, while the final act trades in that quiet unease for visceral thrills and giddy chaos.
The ensemble cast brings humanity to the chaos. Julia Garner is excellent as a flawed but compelling teacher, thrust into the horrifying role of prime suspect when her entire class—save one child—disappears under mysterious circumstances. She’s prickly, rough around the edges, but ultimately someone easy to root for.
Josh Brolin is stellar as a grieving father, delivering a potent mix of fear, rage, sorrow, and dogged determination. Meanwhile, the scene-stealing Austin Abrams provides strong comedic relief as a hapless addict, while the supporting players round out a cast that keeps the sprawling narrative grounded in real emotion. A standout performance in the film’s final acts is worthy of all the praise, but saying too much here would spoil the fun.
It’s bold, ambitious, and delightfully off-the-beaten-path: as much David Lynch as it is Stephen King, with the gonzo spirit that made BARBARIAN such a sensation.
At two hours, the film never drags.
It’s far funnier than you might expect, yet it never undercuts the sustained sense of dread or the sharpness of its violence. The film weaponizes suburban complacency, revealing the horror that lurks behind pristine fences in places where “this sort of thing just doesn’t happen.”
By the time the credits roll, Weapons has delivered a hypnotic, inventive, and explosively entertaining experience that horror fans will be hard-pressed not to be bowled over by.





















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Mickey Oddsman wrote:
Stephanie Malone wrote:
I couldn’t agree more. It was so unique, entertaining, and memorable. I had an absolute blast with this one.
Barry wrote:
Stephanie Malone wrote:
Thanks so much for your kind words. I’m glad you loved it as much as I did!