Tag: c-robert-cargill

  • Movie Review: ‘Black Phone 2’

    Ethan Hawke as the Grabber in 'Black Phone 2', directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Ethan Hawke as the Grabber in ‘Black Phone 2’, directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Opening in theaters October 17 is ‘Black Phone 2,’ directed by Scott Derrickson and starring Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw, Jeremy Davies, Demián Bichir, Miguel Mora, and Arianna Rivas.

    tERLaWd8vTuSTpFXPV8ux3

    Related Article: ‘The Black Phone’s Scott Derrickson to Make New ‘Night of the Hunter’ Movie

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Finn (Mason Thames) and The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in 'Black Phone 2', written and directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Finn (Mason Thames) and The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in ‘Black Phone 2’, written and directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    2022’s ‘The Black Phone,’ directed by Scott Derrickson from a script by him and C. Robert Cargill (based on a short story by Joe Hill), was a fresh, supernaturally-slanted take on the serial killer trope, told through the lens of Derrickson’s own childhood memories of growing up in a working-class Denver, Colorado neighborhood in the 1970s. It featured Derrickson’s uncanny ability to craft scenes filled with menace, as well as genuinely harrowing work from Ethan Hawke as the child killer known as the Grabber and Mason Thames as his latest victim.

    Although ‘The Black Phone’ was a self-contained story, Derrickson and Cargill have found a way to extend the narrative with ‘Black Phone 2,’ which also brings back Hawke, Thames and Madeleine McGraw as the sister of Thames’ character. Leaning more heavily into the supernatural, and wearing influences like the ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ films and ‘The Shining’ more outwardly, the slow-burning ‘Black Phone 2’ strains at times to force its narrative forward but still delivers an often-frightening and gorier new chapter of the story.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Ethan Hawke and director Scott Derrickson on the set of 'Black Phone 2'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Ethan Hawke and director Scott Derrickson on the set of ‘Black Phone 2’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    It’s four years since Finney ‘Finn’ Blake (Thames) was held captive by the Grabber (Hawke), finally killing him and escaping with the help of calls from the murderer’s previous, dead victims on a disconnected rotary phone in the Grabber’s basement lair. Still plagued by trauma from his encounter, Finn at first does not want to hear that his younger sister Gwen (McGraw) is having psychic dreams – just like their mother, who ended her own life – in which she sees three dead, mutilated boys at a Christian youth camp called Alpine Lake.

    After learning from their father (Jeremy Davies, more dazed this time around) that their mother worked at the camp years ago, Gwen insists that she and Finn – along with their friend Ernesto (Miguel Mora, returning from the first film but this time as his doomed character’s brother) — head up there to find out what happened to the boys before the dreams drive her mad. Snowed in with the camp’s manager (Bichir), his niece (Rivas) and a pair of administrators, the group are besieged not just by Gwen’s ever more vivid dreams but physical manifestations as well – and increasing signs that the Grabber himself is reaching out from beyond the grave to take revenge on Finn and Gwen.

    The lonely, windswept, snowbound camp, its buildings’ big picture windows looking out on absolute darkness at night, is a highly effective setting for ‘Black Phone 2.’ Derrickson wrings the most atmosphere out of that, but saves his most unnerving moments for Gwen’s dreams, which are filmed in Super 8 (another Derrickson trademark that goes back to ‘Sinister’). The grainy, faded look adds a layer of unreality to the dreams that is hard to shake, especially as the movie’s spirits begin to appear. As in the first film, the director also knows how to get maximum terror out of a ringing phone and a static-filled line – two things that are often more unsettling than most of us want to admit.

    (L to R) Director Scott Derrickson and Madeleine McGraw on the set of 'Black Phone 2'. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Scott Derrickson and Madeleine McGraw on the set of ‘Black Phone 2’. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Some of the characters – like Finn, Gwen, and Bichir’s Armando, are well-drawn and given more depth, while others, like the Blakes’ now-sober but dazed dad, get the short end of the stick. Perhaps more controversially, Derrickson and Cargill’s script provides the Grabber with more of an origin story this time, while also explicitly making him into a supernatural being. The story also labors to tie the Blakes and the Grabber together in a more unified way. Whether that makes the universe of the film smaller and less mysterious is a matter of debate, but it makes the script more contrived this time around.

    The film also bends the grounded vibe of its predecessor to allow for events in dreams to affect the physical world, which brings this narrative closer to that of ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ and its well-loved ‘Dream Warriors’ threequel. It’s not an entirely successful gambit, but it doesn’t detract from the still-heartfelt and genuinely terrifying story at hand.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Finn (Mason Thames), Ernesto (Miguel Mora) and Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) in 'Black Phone 2', directed by Scott Derrickson. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Finn (Mason Thames), Ernesto (Miguel Mora) and Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) in ‘Black Phone 2’, directed by Scott Derrickson. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Although he arguably has less screen time here, Ethan Hawke is still skin-freezing as the Grabber, bringing an intensity to the role that makes him one of the more striking horror creations of the past decade.

    But the movie belongs to Mason Thames and especially Madeleine McGraw, both older and wiser – and a masterstroke for Derrickson to get them both back. Finn and Gwen are suffering from PTSD in their own way, and both actors offer up a raw portrait of two kids deeply suffering from trauma. In the end, it’s McGraw’s emotional, complex performance that stands out the most, marking her as an actor to watch.

    The supporting cast is capable in all respects, but Demián Bichir also deserves mention: his customary warmth, earthiness, and humanity bring depth and empathy into a character that could have easily been one-dimensional.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) and Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) in 'Black Phone 2', directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) and Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) in ‘Black Phone 2’, directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    ‘Black Phone 2’ doesn’t just recycle the first film, like many horror sequels, and while not every new direction it takes works, the film is still a mostly gripping and unsettling affair. Scott Derrickson remains a master of sustaining a mood of dread throughout, and gets the most out of those truly eerie dream sequences.

    If the story twists itself to get to where the filmmakers want it to go, and the logic of the movie wobbles from time to time, it makes up for those flaws with some truly great performances, the director’s use of space, shadow, and texture, and the ominous netherworld in which it’s set. If the ‘Elm Street’ movies had kept playing it straight, they might have ended up here.

    ‘Black Phone 2’ receives a score of 80 out of 100.

    (from left) Finn (Mason Thames) and The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in 'Black Phone 2', directed by Scott Derrickson. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (from left) Finn (Mason Thames) and The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in ‘Black Phone 2’, directed by Scott Derrickson. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘Black Phone 2’?

    In 1982, four years after the events of ‘The Black Phone,’ Finney Blake is trying to deal with the trauma of his experience with the now-dead Grabber. Meanwhile, his sister Gwen starts having terrifying visions of mutilated children and nightmares that include a ringing phone.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Black Phone 2’?

    • Mason Thames as Finney Blake
    • Madeleine McGraw as Gwen Blake
    • Ethan Hawke as the Grabber
    • Demián Bichir as Armando
    • Miguel Mora as Ernesto Arellano
    • Jeremy Davies as Terrence Blake
    • Arianna Rivas as Mustang
    • Anna Lore as Hope
    • Graham Abbey as Kenneth
    • Maev Beaty as Barbara
    The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in 'Black Phone 2', directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    The Grabber (Ethan Hawke) in ‘Black Phone 2’, directed by Scott Derrickson. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Other Scott Derrickson Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Black Phone 2’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Scott Derrickson Movies on Amazon

    2HS3XXUh
  • Miles Teller Starring in ‘The Gorge’

    Miles Teller plays Lt. Bradley "Rooster" Bradshaw in 'Top Gun: Maverick'
    Miles Teller plays Lt. Bradley “Rooster” Bradshaw in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.

    By any reasonable metric, both writer/director Scott Derrickson and actor Miles Teller have had a very good summer.

    Derrickson might have departed Marvel’s ‘Doctor Strange’ sequel a couple of years ago over creative differences about the superhero sorcerer’s next outing, but he pivoted to an adaptation of a Joe Hill short story, and ‘The Black Phone’ proved to be a big success for the director and Universal.

    Starring Ethan Hawke as a masked, child-snatching terror, the horror movie (co-written with Derrickson’s regular creative partner C. Robert Cargill) earned $150 million globally off the back of a strict, Blumhouse-provided $25 million budget.

    As for Teller, the Netflix thriller ‘Spiderhead’ might not have moved the needle all that much, even with Chris Hemsworth starring as a dodgy scientist experimenting on prisoners. Yet he also co-starred alongside Tom Cruise in the summer’s biggest hit, ‘Top Gun: Maverick’, which crossed the $1.42 billion mark worldwide after several release date delays – which proved to be the right call.

    So why wouldn’t they team up? And that’s exactly what’s happening.

    Derrickson has been toying with the idea of a new project at Skydance called ‘The Gorge’ for some time now. Riding high at the top of his to-do list, he’s still been wavering since his interest was announced back in March, so the Skydance team has been quick to work with him to secure a lead.

    Pictured: Jake Cannavale as Caesar, Juno Temple as Bettye McCartt and Miles Teller as Al Ruddy of the Paramount+ original series THE OFFER. Photo Cr: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+ ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    As for Teller, he was enjoying some time off after a busy promotional schedule for ‘Spiderhead’, ‘Maverick’ and Paramount+ series ‘The Offer’, but soon agreed to star for Derrickson in the new movie.

    While a lot about the film remains a mystery, we do know that ‘The Gorge’ began life as a spec script by ‘The Tomorrow War’ writer Zach Dean, which Skydance bought last fall and has been developing ever since.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, it’s best described as a high-action, genre-bending love story about two young people, who despite the corrupt and lethal world they operate in, find a soulmate in each other during a dangerous assignment.

    As for what the title refers to? If you hit the dictionary, a gorge is defined as “a narrow valley between hills or mountains, typically with steep rocky walls and a stream running through it.” That sounds a more likely setting for a high-action event movie than the other definition, “to eat a large amount greedily.”

    We can more likely imagine Teller as an action hero trying to survive a wilderness adventure while falling in love than sitting at a table chowing down on food.

    More details will surely follow, but it’s a fair call that Derrickson (and Cargill, who is also among the producers) have worked on the script even before Teller saw it.

    Expect to hear more about casting on this one soon as it sounds like a top priority for all involved.

    Ethan Hawke as The Grabber in 'The Black Phone.'
    Ethan Hawke as The Grabber in ‘The Black Phone,’ directed by Scott Derrickson.
    oz7SoV2CAyuALN1TUrlS21