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From Stephen King survival to body-horror and monster mayhem to revenge on repeat, this week’s streamers deliver a brutal summer sampler.

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This week’s lineup is a strange little buffet of suffering, survival, and the horror of a rigged system.

We’ve got a classic monster resurrected as bleak body horror, a found-footage monster-as-metaphor mashup, a dystopian Stephen King nightmare, an emotional sci-fi revenge thriller, and one very bloody corporate bonding exercise. The common theme? Pain makes monsters of us all. Ain’t it fun?

Before we get to this week’s picks, two quick streaming notes:

Previously recommended as a PVOD pick, Daniel Goldhaber’s Faces of Death lands on Shudder July 10.

This smart, nasty reimagining swaps the original’s pseudo-snuff infamy for a digital-age nightmare about online voyeurism, viral violence, and trauma as content. If you skipped the rental, it’s well worth catching now that it’s streaming.

Finally, my favorite time of year is almost here: Shark Week. To celebrate, every Fresh Screams column in July will include one sharktastic streaming recommendation.

We’re kicking things off with the most obvious—and most essential—choice: the Jaws franchise (1-4), now streaming exclusively on Peacock. The original remains the gold standard for aquatic terror, while the sequels offer plenty of deeply watchable shark nonsense.

 Use the Quick Guide below for the fast fright fix, or take the long walk through this week’s full lineup. 

QUICK GUIDE

Best OverallBest Deep DiscoveryBest Guaranteed Good Time
The Long Walk — A brutal, emotionally devastating Stephen King adaptation that turns survival into state-sponsored spectacle. (HBO Max)
Redux Redux — A lo-fi sci-fi revenge thriller with a killer hook, strong emotional stakes, and a refreshingly strange approach to grief. (Hulu)
Lee Cronin’s The Mummy — A nasty, body-horror-heavy monster reimagining that trades classic adventure for peeling skin, leaking fluids, and family annihilation. (HBO Max)

1. Lee Cronin’s The Mummy (HBO Max – July 3, 2026)

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy is a brutal, mean-spirited supernatural horror film that reframes the classic monster mythos as an intense domestic nightmare. Produced by horror heavyweights James Wan and Jason Blum, this standalone reimagining leans heavily into gnarly effects and possession mechanics.

The story follows foreign correspondent Charlie Cannon (Jack Reynor) and his wife, Larissa (Laia Costa), whose lives were shattered eight years earlier when their young daughter, Katie, vanished without a trace while Charlie was on assignment in Egypt. The broken family is suddenly upended when Katie (played as a teenager by Natalie Grace) is miraculously found alive in the wreckage of a crashed airplane.

Katie is discovered wrapped in ancient parchments and sealed inside an old sarcophagus. When she is brought back to their suburban home, her parents attempt to force a sense of normalcy. But it becomes increasingly undeniable that the girl who returned is not the daughter they lost.

Moving away entirely from the staples of previous cinematic mummies, Cronin shifts the focus to uncompromising visual and bodily horror.

The film fixates on the physical breakdown of the flesh: peeling skin, leaking fluids, and the brittle, desiccated texture of a body drying out from the inside. The mummy becomes a walking canvas of physical and spiritual decay, treating the ancient curse as a nasty parasitic infection.

While it will likely turn off monster-movie purists by deviating from nearly every foundational element of The Mummy franchise, hardcore horror fans should delight in the film’s relentless commitment to gruesome, practical special effects.

Cronin brings the same splattery, mean-spirited kinetic energy that defined Evil Dead Rise, delivering sequence after sequence of genuinely unsettling, skin-crawling physical mutation.

Natalie Grace is exceptional as the returned Katie. Relying on subtle, dead-eyed stares, eerie bodily contortions, and a complete absence of warmth, her performance anchors the movie’s thick atmosphere of dread.

Tune in if you dug Cronin’s take on the Evil Dead franchise and appreciate aggressive body horror, unrelenting gore, and a bleak, nihilistic fracturing of family dynamics.


Pair it with: Bite (2015) for a skin-crawling double feature of parasitic transformation. Screening these films back-to-back offers an absolute masterclass in wet, sticky practical effects, shifting from peeling skin and leaking fluids to full-blown biological horror.

2. The Monster Project (Found TV – July 3, 2026)

Directed and co-written by Victor Mathieu, The Monster Project is a high-concept, frenetic found-footage horror film that blends the gritty aesthetic of a gonzo internet documentary with classic monster-movie mythology.

Jamal and his best friend, Bryan, a recovering addict, are a pair of aspiring Los Angeles filmmakers who run a fringe YouTube channel dedicated to tracking down supernatural phenomena. Desperate to engineer a viral hit that will secure their financial future, they post an online casting call seeking real-life individuals who claim to be monsters.

They secure three eccentric interviewees: Shira, a young tattoo artist who claims to be a blood-drinking vampire; Steven, a troubled man who believes he carries a generational werewolf curse; and Nyoka, a catatonic Japanese woman allegedly possessed by a powerful demonic entity. Alongside their crew members, including Bryan’s ex-girlfriend Lily, they isolate themselves inside a sprawling rented mansion in the remote hills on the night of a total lunar eclipse.

The cynical filmmakers assume their subjects are merely suffering from severe psychological delusions. But as the eclipse hits its peak, the three interviewees simultaneously transform into their true, monstrous forms, turning the mansion into a multi-layered, claustrophobic deathtrap.

For a micro-budget independent found-footage feature, the practical effects and makeup work are impressive.

The cinematic transformations—particularly Steven’s shift into an aggressive, snarling werewolf and Nyoka’s gravity-defying demonic possession—deliver a surprising level of visceral intensity.

The first half of the film does a solid job with character building. The individual interviews are deeply unsettling, creating an atmosphere of dread before the mayhem takes over.

Once the total eclipse occurs around the 45-minute mark, the film quickly shifts gears into a heart-pounding, real-time survival nightmare. The multi-camera setup helps create a chaotic, fast-paced maze that feels like an immersive first-person survival horror video game. It’s thrilling, but it will frustrate those who detest the infamous shaky-cam syndrome of found footage.

There are deeper themes being explored, including the toxic nature of exploiting trauma for clicks and addiction as a structural metaphor for monstrosity. But don’t watch this popcorn flick for depth; it shines brightest in its embrace of chaotic practical effects and monster-mash violence.

Tune in if you love high-octane creature-feature found footage and blood-soaked midnight escapism.


Pair it with: As Above, So Below (2014) for a killer double feature where victims find themselves trapped in a literal manifestation of guilt. One film delivers flashy monster mayhem, while the other takes viewers on a claustrophobic, deeply atmospheric descent into the psychological hell of the Paris Catacombs.

3. The Long Walk (HBO Max – July 10, 2026)

The Long Walk brings Stephen King’s famously unadaptable 1979 dystopian novel to the screen, earning critical acclaim and box-office success thanks to its unflinching tension and strong emotional core.

Set in an alternate, economically devastated 20th-century United States ruled by a totalitarian military regime, the story revolves around the annual televised title event. Fifty teenage boys, chosen by lottery, must walk nonstop southward from the Canadian border. Falling below the required pace or stepping off the road three times results in on-the-spot execution by armed military escorts.

The sole survivor of this grueling gauntlet wins a massive cash prize and a single wish of their choice.

Our primary protagonist is Raymond Garraty (Cooper Hoffman), a decent young man from Maine who enters the walk with a secret, radical motive. Along the way, Ray forms a deep bond with Peter McVries (David Jonsson), an optimistic walker who serves as the group’s moral center. As the days bleed together and the physical and mental toll strips away their numbers, the boys must balance survival instinct against their dwindling humanity.

Much like director Francis Lawrence’s previous work on The Hunger Games, the film offers a grim look at the commercialization of suffering.

The state uses the televised slaughter of its own youth to enforce patriotism, distract from economic despair, and instill a ruthless work ethic among a beaten-down populace.

The film is carried by the exceptional performances of Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson. Their natural camaraderie deepens the impact of the heartbreak and horror. To that end, the film pulls no punches regarding the physical reality of the marathon. The terror is generated by watching the boys battle blisters, cramps, sleep deprivation, and basic biological needs while knowing that a single stumble can result in a graphic, point-blank execution.

Visually striking and emotionally riveting, The Long Walk honors the spirit of King’s classic novel while delivering a visceral survival thriller.

Tune in if you like hauntingly beautiful dystopian nightmares that balance nerve-shredding tension with a profound exploration of friendship and humanity under fire.


Pair it with: Battle Royale (2000), Kinji Fukasaku’s legendary Japanese masterpiece. Together, they form the definitive double feature on how totalitarian regimes weaponize youth survival for institutional control.

4. Redux Redux (Hulu – July 10, 2026)

Redux Redux—also known contextually as Find. Kill. Repeat.—is an emotionally grounded science-fiction revenge thriller.

The story centers on Irene Kelly (Michaela McManus), a deeply broken mother whose life was shattered when her teenage daughter, Anna (Grace Van Dien), was brutally murdered by a restaurant cook and serial predator named Neville (Jeremy Holm). Unable to cope with the loss, Irene discovers a way to alter her reality using a crude, coffin-like universe-hopping machine stowed in the back of a rental van.

Driven by an absolute obsession with vengeance, Irene travels through a sequence of parallel universes to track down and kill Neville’s alternate but terrifyingly similar selves over and over again.

Her repetitive cycle of multidimensional murder is interrupted when she crosses paths with Mia (Stella Marcus), a runaway teenager targeted by Neville in another dimension. As the two travel together through a string of hostile timelines, Irene is forced to confront her addiction to revenge and decide whether she can save her own humanity for another’s sake.

It’s a wonderfully inventive, lo-fi genre mashup about trauma and self-destructive cycles.

McManus is stellar as the stoic vigilante mother. She balances icy, single-minded resolve with buried but fragile vulnerability. The relationship between Irene and Mia is compelling and easy to care about.

The film may frustrate viewers who crave concrete answers around its strange universe-hopping mechanics. Redux Redux isn’t remotely concerned with the “how” or “why,” only with what happens when the possibility of revenge on loop is offered to someone hollowed out by grief.

An original and uncompromising take on revenge and the relentless loop of maternal grief, Redux Redux is both mind-bending and heart-wrenching.

Tune in if you desire an atmospheric and satisfying blend of grounded psychological thrills, gritty vigilante justice, and sci-fi strangeness.


Pair it with: You Were Never Really Here (2017), Lynne Ramsay’s intense psychological thriller. Both films follow a traumatized protagonist who channels internal agony into brutal violence against abusers. This pairing creates a stunning emotional parallel: the battle between past pain and hope for the future.

5. Rental Pick: Corporate Retreat (Premium VOD)

Corporate Retreat is a blood-soaked horror-satire that takes the cutthroat, competitive warfare of the modern tech sector and drop-kicks it into a literal battleground for survival. Billed as an extreme modern hybrid of The Menu and Saw, it’s a critical punching bag. Yet it still offers some fun for fans of pulverizing, popcorn-munching nastiness.

The doomed outing follows the way-too-young executive leadership team of a high-growth tech startup as they embark on a mandated corporate bonding trip to a secluded, high-end desert compound.

Soon, the executives find themselves drugged and trapped inside a sprawling, high-tech maze overseen by a vengeful mastermind who wants to help them see the light.

Forced into a series of horrific, trap-heavy games designed by special effects veteran Gary J. Tunnicliffe, the executives discover that the path to enlightenment is paved with blood, sacrifice, and sadism.

The message here is about as subtle as a jaw-splitting Saw trap.

But the heavy-handed commentary about corporate psychopathy, alongside the world’s most unlikeable characters, can’t completely sink this sadistic ship.

That’s largely thanks to a phenomenal, sinister performance by Alan Ruck as the chillingly cheerful billionaire founder. The cast also includes the always-exceptional Rosanna Arquette, though she is downsized far too soon.

The biggest draw, of course, is the practical splatter, and Tunnicliffe delivers as the Chief Gore Officer. The set pieces are exceptionally brutal, and the body horror is delightfully visceral.

The pitch-black humor and wicked satire make the whole bloody affair a hoot.

Tune in if you enjoy white-collar survival horror films, biting dark comedies, practical trap mechanics, or watching horrible people suffer in stomach-turning ways.


Pair it with: Severance (2006), the brilliant British horror-comedy that turns a corporate team-building retreat into a hunting ground for a band of psychotic killers. It makes a fantastic thematic companion, using the same setup of performative corporate bonding colliding with sudden, violent survival horror.

 

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