New Photo - Inside It: Welcome to Derry premiere's shocking cliffhanger: 'It's our Red Wedding'

The stars and creators dig into how &34;the entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the end of episode 1.&34; Inside It: Welcome to Derry

The stars and creators dig into how "the entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the end of episode 1."

Inside It: Welcome to Derry premiere's shocking cliffhanger: 'It's our Red Wedding'

The stars and creators dig into how "the entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the end of episode 1."

By Nick Romano

Nicholas Romano author photo

Nick Romano is a senior editor at ** with 15 years of journalism experience covering entertainment. His work previously appeared in *Vanity Fair*, Vulture, IGN, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

October 26, 2025 10:00 p.m. ET

It: Welcome to Derry Season 1 Episode 1 Clara Stack and Amanda Christine

Lilly (Clara Stack) and Ronnie (Amanda Christine) on 'It: Welcome to Derry'. Credit:

Brooke Palmer/HBO

- The stars and creative team of *It: Welcome to Derry* pull back the curtain on that shocking bloodbath of a premiere episode cliffhanger.

- "The entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the end of episode 1," co-creator and co-showrunner Jason Fuchs teases.

- Stars Clara Stack and Amanda Christine discuss filming that intense movie theater sequence: "That was a big shocker."

**This article contains spoilers from *It: Welcome to Derry* episode 1.**

Jason Fuchs, a co-creator of HBO's *It: Welcome to Derry*, has already seen the fans theorizing online around who will or won't survive the first season of the eight-episode prequel series. "But I don't think anyone's expecting so few characters to survive the pilot," he says.

The premiere episode was indeed a bloodbath. The opening scene followed a troubled young boy named Matty (Miles Ekhardt) as he attempted to hitchhike out of Derry, only to find himself trapped in a car with the "It" entity, which took the form of good samaritans, a white Christian family unit. Though the camera didn't show Matty's ultimate fate, the flying demon baby lurching at him, followed by his lone pacifier shooting out of the window, suggest he didn't make it.

By the end of the hour, the death toll climbs significantly. Four years after that opener, Matty's classmates Lilly (Clara Stack), Ronnie (Amanda Christine), Phil (Jack Molloy Legault), Teddy (Mikkal Karim-Fidler), and Susie (Matilda Legault) team up to find out what happened to him.

The five child actors featured prominently in much of the show's marketing campaign, giving the impression that they would form the new Loser's Club. Yet their mission leads them back to the Capitol Theater, where It's flying devil baby form leaps out of a screening of *The Music Man* and devours the children except for for Lilly and Ronnie.

Jack Molloy Legault, Matilda Legault, Clara Stack, Mikkal Karim-Fidler in IT: Welcome to Derry Season 1 - Episode 1

Jack Molloy Legault, Matilda Legault, Clara Stack, and Mikkal Karim-Fidler on 'It: Welcome to Derry'.

Brooke Palmer/HBO

"We love it," Barbara Muschietti, a co-creator on the series with Fuchs and her filmmaker brother, Andy Muschietti, remarks to **. "It's our Red Wedding."

Andy, who directed the *It: Welcome to Derry* premiere, acknowledges, "This is strategically a devastating event to set the audience into that sense of 'nothing is safe in this world.' We kind of trick the audience into thinking that these are the new Losers. Well, guess what? I guess they're all dead."

'It: Welcome to Derry' stars introduce the Hanlon family and horrors of the 1960s (exclusive)

It: Welcome to Derry Jovan Adepo as Leroy Hanlon, Blake Cameron James as Will Hanlon

'It: Welcome to Derry' star Stephen Rider initially lost out on Mike Hanlon movie role

Stephen Rider attends the premiere of HBO Original Series

Like the entity itself, *It: Welcome to Derry* is a show that only grows more powerful by invoking fear within its viewers. The team took their cues from the source material. Stephen King's *It* novel opens in a similar manner with the introduction and then swift death of poor Georgie Denbrough, as seen in the beginning of the Muschiettis' 2017 *It* movie.

The bloodbath cliffhanger came out of a mini writer's room that assembled in secret, consisting of the Muschietti siblings, Fuchs, and Brad Caleb Kane (co-showrunner on the series with Fuchs). In the original pilot script, penned by Fuchs, all the kids lived, and that's the starting point the HBO executives were expecting to hear when the team later convened to pitch the entire season.

Jack Molloy Legault, Matilda Legault in IT: Welcome to Derry Season 1 - Episode 1

Jack Molloy and Matilda Legault on 'It: Welcome to Derry'.

Brooke Palmer/HBO

"It was a product of that mini room experience where we decided, 'What if *this* happened?'" Fuchs recalls. "So the network didn't know that was going to happen in the context of the pitch. We had a wall with headshots of child actors who would've played the kids in [episode] 101. Andy theatrically stood up as I was pitching. I got to the part where all of them, other than Lilly and Ronnie, being eaten. Andy pulled the paper down, and there was a whole other group of kids [headshots] under there. I'll never forget seeing their faces and feeling like, 'If we can replicate their reaction in the room with audiences at home, we'll have a really interesting, exciting, satisfying way to end episode 1.'"

HBO getting on board with the premiere twist was "a huge relief," Barbara admits, "because we went in [thinking] that will be the fight for us, we're gonna have to fight to keep on pushing the horror and push the jump scares. It was the opposite."

The idea for the demon baby, specifically, came from Andy. Season 2 is set in 1962, within a decade marked by the Cuban Missile Crisis, post-World War II sentiments, the Civil Rights Movement, and the rumblings of the Cold War.

"It was very important to pay attention to the fears of the era," the filmmaker explains. "There was a pretty widespread panic of nuclear attacks and the effects of radiation and mutations in childbirth. There's all these things that I can only imagine what being a child in those years would be like, how your imagination would be spun into horror very fast, not in a good way. Also in pop culture, a lot of horror movies from the late '50s are very tied to the horror of radiation."

So, technically, It's first form on the series isn't a demon baby. "It's a mutant baby that [is] malformed by radiation," he points out.

It: Welcome to Derry Season 1 Episode 1 Clara Stack

Lilly (Clara Stack) on 'It: Welcome to Derry'.

Brooke Palmer/HBO

"That was a big shocker, especially when we got the scripts," Christine remembers of her initial reaction to the material. "We were just like, 'Whoa! *This* is how we're ending things? Okay, let's get into it!' So it was definitely really fun to really endeavor also into my character, being the first time I've witnessed Pennywise and really felt him be present. That ending scene was just iconic. It's a shocker."

The crew brought a giant monster baby head to set for the younger actors to react to, while Andy would make distorted baby noises to help set the scene.

For Stack, the other sole survivor, "Honestly, it was so much fun to film," she says. "Personally, I love filming action-packed horror sequences like that. There were so many cool things about it. I loved learning the blocking of me ducking into the chairs and climbing out and running out with Ronnie and getting drenched in blood and getting to scream and cry. It was all so much fun."

Amanda Christine in IT: Welcome to Derry Season 1 - Episode 1

Ronnie (Amanda Christine) on 'It: Welcome to Derry'.

Brooke Palmer/HBO

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

Looking ahead, Fuchs teases, "The entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the end of episode 1, this massacre of the Capitol Theater. You'll see in episode 2 the way the aftershocks of that play out." But more importantly, he hopes the shock factor will be strong enough to cut through the media noise and catch the attention of the viewers at home, including those who prefer to scroll on their phones with the TV on in the background.

"We know that we're telling, in some ways, a story that is familiar," he says. "We're going back to a town people have seen, we're going back to a character, Pennywise, that people are now familiar with over the course of two films, and we're gonna have kids in danger. But the question was, How do you then still surprise the audience? How do you communicate that from the very beginning of the season? How do you really pull the rug out from under the audience and go, 'All bets are off, the rules don't apply, anything is possible'?"

The fact that *It: Welcome to Derry* is set in 1962, a time in the Maine suburb that even King readers don't know much about from the original novel, afforded them a lot of freedom. "Not all these characters are canon from the book," Fuchs notes. "We can do some pretty unexpected, exciting things."

*It: Welcome to Derry* episodes will arrive weekly on HBO and HBO Max Sunday nights at 9 p.m. ET/PT.**

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Inside It: Welcome to Derry premiere's shocking cliffhanger: 'It's our Red Wedding'

The stars and creators dig into how &34;the entire story of the season is set in motion by what happens at the...
New Photo - Sydney Sweeney blames the press for Glen Powell dating rumors despite the pair previously claimin...

&34;Truly the tabloids and journalists just created it and kept going,&34; Sweeney says. Sydney Sweeney blames the press for Glen Powell dating rumors despite t

"Truly the tabloids and journalists just created it and kept going," Sweeney says.

Sydney Sweeney blames the press for Glen Powell dating rumors despite the pair previously claiming to 'lean into it'

"Truly the tabloids and journalists just created it and kept going," Sweeney says.

By Mekishana Pierre

Mekishana Pierre author photo

Mekishana Pierre

Mekishana Pierre is a news writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2025. Her work has previously appeared on *Entertainment Tonight* and Popsugar.

EW's editorial guidelines

October 27, 2025 2:11 p.m. ET

Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney attend Columbia Pictures' "Anyone But You" New York Premiere at AMC Lincoln Square Theater on December 11, 2023 in New York City.

Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney at 'Anyone But You' New York premiere. Credit:

Dia Dipasupil/Getty

It's been two years since Sydney Sweeney and her *Anyone But You* costar Glen Powell sent media outlets spinning with their headline-making press run that churned out wild speculations that the pair had an affair while shooting their rom-com — speculation that the star is now claiming was entirely generated by the press themselves.

While reflecting on the gossip fueled by her and Powell's chemistry both on and offscreen with *Variety*, Sweeney refuted the idea that the rom-com's stars leaned into the mystery shrouding their relationship.

Glen Powell (L) and Sydney Sweeney promote the upcoming film "Anyone But You" at the Sony Pictures Entertainment presentation during CinemaCon, the official convention of the National Association of Theatre Owners, at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace on April 24, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada

Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney promoting 'Anyone But You' during CinemaCon on April 24, 2023.

Ethan Miller/Getty

"Honestly, the press did it themselves. There was no leaning in, per se," she insisted to the outlet. "Truly the tabloids and journalists just created it and kept going. Even if we were just standing next to each other, it was 'They're standing two inches apart!'"

The *Christy *star chalked the hysteria up to people appreciating how she and Powell "genuinely care for each other and have a love and respect for one another."

She added, "I love being with him. And I think people just truly saw a really beautiful pairing."

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

It's an interesting change of tune to what both celebrities claimed when speaking to how the frenzy of speculation was actually intended when conceptualizing the marketing plan.**

Speaking with *the New York Times* back in April 2024, Powell reasoned that "fun and chemistry" are necessary to sell rom-coms, which the duo have in spades. "That's people wanting what's on the screen off the screen, and sometimes you just have to lean into it a bit -- and it worked wonderfully," Powell added, before he gave credit to his costar for leading the charge. "Sydney is very smart."

Sydney Sweeney, Glen Powell flirtatiously tease their upcoming rom-com

Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney at CinemaCon 2023

Glen Powell honored by Sydney Sweeney as one of EW's 2024 Entertainers of the Year

EW Entertainers of the Year 2024: Glen Powell by Sydney Sweeney

Sweeney, who executive produced *Anyone But You* alongside ex-fiancé Jonathan Davino through her Fifty-Fifty Films company, proudly gushed about being intimately involved with the marketing strategy to the point that she "probably [kept] everybody over at Sony marketing and distribution awake at night because I couldn't stop with ideas."

She continued, "I was on every call. I was in text group chats. I wanted to make sure that we were actively having a conversation with the audience as we were promoting this film, because at the end of the day, they're the ones who created the entire narrative."**

The "leaning in" didn't just happen via loving glances on the red carpet or cheeky videos of Powell dipping a giggling Sweeney in his arms; it came in *Saturday Night Live* skits that featured the two as clandestine lovers meeting up behind the back of Sweeney's beau, and an opening monologue in which Sweeney referred to her former longtime partner only for the camera to pan to an unsuspecting Powell.**

The rumors of an affair weren't helped by the breakup of Powell and his ex-girlfriend Gigi Paris, who revealed during a June episode of influencer Emma Klipstein's *Too Much *podcast that the pair's relationship began to fall apart six months before their official split in April 2023 partially over the speculation surrounding Powell and Sweeney's friendship.

Gigi Paris and Glen Powell attend the 80th Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton on January 10, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California.

Gigi Paris and Glen Powell attending the 80th Annual Golden Globe Awards.

Amy Sussman/Getty

During her podcast appearance, Paris told Klipstein: "I had two options. I could either pretend like I was going along with everything and have everyone wonder, like, 'Are they hooking up? Is she okay with this?' Or stand up for myself and say, 'No, I'm actually not okay with this, and I'm walking away.' So that's what I decided to do ... I was shattered."

She later added, "The bare minimum of any relationship is to have your partner's back. Where are you when you just need to stand up and say, 'No, I would never cheat on my girlfriend. I wouldn't do that.' That's all that needed to be said. And that wasn't said ... Never once."

The model griped that the acting duo later "came out to say it was all a PR scheme," which she said was a priority "at the expense of our relationship."**

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Sydney Sweeney blames the press for Glen Powell dating rumors despite the pair previously claimin...

&34;Truly the tabloids and journalists just created it and kept going,&34; Sweeney says. Sydney Sweeney bl...
New Photo - The 21 best horror movies on Amazon Prime Video for a solid scare

From arthouse fare to gory classics, Amazon Prime Video is rich in horror content. The 21 best horror movies on Amazon Prime Video for a solid scare

From arthouse fare to gory classics, Amazon Prime Video is rich in horror content.

The 21 best horror movies on Amazon Prime Video for a solid scare

From arthouse fare to gory classics, Amazon Prime Video is rich in horror content.

By Ilana Gordon,

Ilana Gordon

Ilana Gordon is an entertainment, culture, and comedy writer originally from Connecticut. She currently lives in Los Angeles.

EW's editorial guidelines

Randall Colburn,

Randall Colburn author photo

Randall Colburn

Randall Colburn is a writer and editor at **. His work has previously appeared on *The A.V. Club, The Guardian, The Ringer*, and many other publications.

EW's editorial guidelines

James Mercadante,

Kevin Jacobsen,

and Chris Snellgrove

on October 31, 2025 6:51 a.m. ET

Kang-ho Song as Park Gang-Doo in 'The Host'; Shauna Macdonald as Sarah in 'The Descent'; Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter in 'Nosferatu'

Kang-ho Song as Park Gang-Doo in 'The Host'; Shauna Macdonald as Sarah in 'The Descent'; Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter in 'Nosferatu'. Credit:

Magnolia Pictures; Alex Bailey/Lionsgate; Focus Features

Despite its grisly reputation, the horror genre is every bit as malleable as comedy or drama. What tickles the funny bone or bruises the heart is subjective; so, too, is what chills the spine. Our list of the best horror movies on Amazon Prime Video has something for everybody, from gory classics to found footage indies to slow-burning arthouse horror.

Here are 21 of the scariest films streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

10 Cloverfield Lane (2016)

Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Michelle and John Goodman as Howard Stambler in '10 Cloverfield Lane'

Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Michelle and John Goodman as Howard Stambler in '10 Cloverfield Lane'. Michele K. Short/Paramount Pictures

Released eight years after the first *Cloverfield* movie hit theaters, *10 Cloverfield Lane* takes a more psychological — and minimalist — approach to the sci-fi horror franchise. Michelle (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) awakens after a car accident to find herself injured and chained to a wall inside a bunker. Her captor (or savior, depending on who you ask), Howard (John Goodman), explains that Earth has been attacked, the outside world is poisonous and uninhabitable, and the only way to survive is to remain in the bunker with him and his fellow doomsday roomie, Emmett (John Gallagher Jr.) for the next few years.

Slowly, Michelle begins to adapt to life underground — until she discovers clues that suggest that Howard may not have been honest with her about the world's circumstances. The second of three films in the franchise — with *The Cloverfield Paradox* following in 2018 — *10 Cloverfield Lane* is only tangentially related to its predecessor, but the film's lean cast and terse plot make it an entertaining addition to the series. *—Ilana Gordon* * ***

Where to watch *10 Cloverfield Lane*: Amazon Prime Video**

**EW grade: **B**

**Director: **Dan Trachtenberg **

**Cast: **Mary Elizabeth Winstead, John Goodman, John Gallagher Jr., Bradley Cooper **

47 Meters Down (2017)

Claire Holt as Kate and Mandy Moore as Lisa in '47 Meters Down'

Claire Holt as Kate and Mandy Moore as Lisa in '47 Meters Down'. Entertainment Studios Motion Pictures

When two sisters (played by Mandy Moore and Claire Holt of *Pretty Little Liars*) decide to vacation in Mexico to decompress from a recent break up, they don't expect to spend their time battling great white sharks and the depths of the ocean. But such is the plot of *47 Meters Down*, a women versus nature horror drama with teeth to spare. Moore and Holt carry the majority of the film on their wetsuited shoulders as they writhe in a shark cage at the bottom of the ocean, always aware of the Chekhovian device that is their quickly depleting supply of oxygen.

*47 Meters Down* doesn't present as a typical thriller; there are no (human) villains, no supernatural elements or vengeful spirits. The film stays in its "nature is terrifying enough" lane, ultimately producing, as one EW critic writes, "a lean and mean (and mostly un-gory) shark thriller clocking in at an efficient and slightly threadbare 89 minutes." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *47 Meters Down*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Johannes Roberts

**Cast: **Mandy Moore, Claire Holt

American Psycho (2000)

Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman in 'American Psycho'

Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman in 'American Psycho'.

Bret Easton Ellis' 1991 best-seller looks unrecognizable in Mary Harron's cinematic adaptation of the controversial novel. Starring Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman, a yuppie investment banker whose only real passions are consumerism, dining out, and committing murder, this black comedy and horror fusion satirizes the mass-consumption and performative lifestyle that was a hallmark of the 1980s culture and economy.

Luckily for viewers, the film version of *American Psycho* presents the best aspects of the novel without luxuriating in book Bateman's fevered misogyny. EW's critic writes that the film is elevated by Bale's interpretation, noting, "He keeps Patrick lurching blindly toward humanity, until we see a self being born in a man who, paradoxically, was too selfish to have one." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *American Psycho*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Mary Harron

**Cast: **Christian Bale, Justin Theroux, Josh Lucas, Bill Sage, Chloë Sevigny, Reese Witherspoon, Samantha Mathis, Matt Ross, Jared Leto, Willem Dafoe

Black Box (2020)

Phylicia Rashad as Dr. Lilian Brooks and Mamoudou Athie as Nolan Wright in 'Black Box'

Phylicia Rashad as Dr. Lilian Brooks and Mamoudou Athie as Nolan Wright in 'Black Box'. Everett Collection

The mind is a terrible thing to waste, and in the horror sci-fi film *Black Box*, mind games run rampant. Nolan Wright is a single father suffering from amnesia after surviving a car crash that killed his wife. Struggling to remember how to perform basic tasks both at work and in his personal life, Nolan reaches out to a neurologist who deems him a perfect candidate for her experimental black box treatment.

Repeated journeys into his mind force Nolan to battle the monsters in his memories, but the deeper he delves, the more he suspects that his past is not what it seems. A Blumhouse Television production full of twists, turns, and traumas that push Nolan to horrifying realizations, *Black Box *questions how much control we have over our minds, and the lengths to which people will go to keep their loved ones alive. *—I.G.* * *

Where to watch *Black Box*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director:** Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour Jr.

**Cast:** Mamoudou Athie, Phylicia Rashad, Amanda Christine, Tosin Morohunfola, Charmaine Bingwa

Black Christmas (1974)

Olivia Hussey as Jess Bradford in 'Black Christmas'

Olivia Hussey as Jess Bradford in 'Black Christmas'.

This slasher classic still holds up as one of the most chilling horror films of all time. A group of sorority sisters' good tidings of comfort and joy are interrupted by repeated profane phone calls, leading to one of them being murdered in the attic. This kicks off a horrifying series of events as they try in vain to get the police to determine the source of the call while they are picked off one by one. There have been two attempts at remaking *Black Christmas* in the 21st century, but neither has approached the level of paranoia and dread of the '70s original. —*Kevin Jacobsen*

Where to watch *Black Christmas*: Amazon Prime Video**

**Director: **Bob Clark

**Cast:** Olivia Hussey, Keir Dullea, Margot Kidder, John Saxon

Carnival of Souls (1962)

Candace Hilligoss as Mary Henry in 'Carnival of Souls'

Candace Hilligoss as Mary Henry in 'Carnival of Souls'. Everett Collection

After an accident pushes their car off the road, Mary (Candace Hilligoss) awakens on the banks of a river in Kansas with no memory of how she got there or of what happened to her friends. Puzzled and shaken, Mary proceeds with her plans to move to Salt Lake City, where she's been hired as the new organist at a local church. But no matter where Mary goes, mysterious events, creepy people (including one played by the film's director, Herk Harvey), and sinister spirits seem to follow. And none of the oddities that pepper the movie's 78-minute runtime will prepare you for the twist at the end.

Watching *Carnival of Souls* today feels like witnessing a slew of Easter eggs before they've even happened, as many a genre filmmaker has been inspired by the haunting imagery, gothic music, and ending that continues to baffle even decades later. An EW critic writes, "More than just scary, it's arrestingly *odd*, with a bats-in-the-belfry 3-a.m. loneliness that you plug into like a private dream." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Carnival of Souls*: Amazon Prime Video

**EW grade: **A–

**Director: **Herk Harvey** **

**Cast: **Candace Hilligoss, Sidney Berger** **

The Deep House (2021)

Camille Rowe as Tina in 'The Deep House'

Camille Rowe as Tina in 'The Deep House'.

Epix/Everett Collection

Set in France, *The Deep House* follows two American YouTubers (James Jagger and Camille Rowe) as they travel the country, searching for haunted houses. But after discovering a mansion submerged in a lake, the couple finds themselves launched into the deep end of some nasty supernatural business.

Haters of deep water, satanic imagery, and sustained suspense need not apply: *The Deep House *runneth over with all three. But lovers of slow-moving, found footage films with unique settings (a significant portion of the action takes place underwater) will find much to love about this ambitious horror movie. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *The Deep House*: Amazon Prime Video

**Directors: **Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury

**Cast: **James Jagger, Camille Rowe

The Descent (2005)

Shauna Macdonald as Sarah in 'The Descent'

Shauna Macdonald as Sarah in 'The Descent'. Alex Bailey/Lionsgate

Subtlety is all good and fine, but sometimes we want a scary movie whose thrills are delightfully down to earth. Such is the case in *The Descent*, a film that literalizes the trope of characters descending into danger, seeing our adventurous protagonists (a group of women on a girls' trip) encounter creepy critters deep underground.

EW's critic writes, "Made with a connoisseur's love of muck, blood, inky darkness, and equal parts elegance and ewwww, *The Descent* raises the level of the post–*Blair Witch*, post–*Open Water* horror game." Ultimately, this movie is a triumph for trading the claustrophobic terrors of a cabin in the woods film for the even more constrained carnage of a cave. *—Chris Snellgrove*

Where to watch *The Descent*: Amazon Prime Video

**EW grade:** A–

**Director:** Neil Marshall

**Cast: **Shauna Macdonald, Natalie Mendoza, Alex Reid, Saskia Mulder, Nora-Jane Noone, MyAnna Buring

Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (2018)

Park Ji-hyun as Ji-hyun in 'Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum'

Park Ji-hyun as Ji-hyun in 'Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum'.

Well Go USA/Courtesy Everett Collection

YouTubers will do a lot of questionable things for views, but in *Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum*, one channel's livestream ends with more of its participants dead than alive. A South Korean found footage horror film set in the Gonjiam Psychiatric Hospital, the movie follows a web series creator and the six people he recruits to explore the abandoned building. Drawn to room 402, the former intensive care unit, the group encounters supernatural entities they can't explain and danger they can't escape.

Based on the real-life Gonjiam Psychiatric Hospital — a South Korean asylum that was considered one of the country's most haunted buildings before it was demolished in 2018 — the film starts off slow, but will have you lunging for the lights by the time the ending arrives. *—I.G.*****Where to watch *Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum*: Amazon Prime Video******Director: **Jung Bum-shik******Cast: **Wi Ha-joon, Park Ji-hyun, Oh Ah-yeon, Moon Ye-won, Park Sung-hoon, Yoo Je-yoon, Lee Seung-wook, Park Ji-a**

Goodnight Mommy (2014)

Susanne Wuest as Mother in 'Goodnight Mommy'

Susanne Wuest as Mother in 'Goodnight Mommy'. Radius

There is no shortage of creepy twins in horror ("Come play with us, Danny!"), and the most terrifying example from recent memory is in Austria's *Goodnight Mommy*, which premiered in 2014 at the Venice International Film Festival and was released theatrically a year later. A psychological horror story, *Goodnight Mommy* follows twin 9-year-old boys who begin to question their mother's identity after she returns from intensive cosmetic surgery as a seemingly different person than the parent they once knew. The boys commit to ousting the imposter and finding the location of their real mother, but their investigation leads to truths too horrifying to process.

In 2015, EW predicted an "inevitable remake," and in 2022, the film gods provided. Feel free to watch both versions, but definitely start with the original. —*I.G.*

Where to watch *Goodnight Mommy*: Amazon Prime Video

**EW grade: **A

**Directors: **Veronika Franz, Severin Fiala

**Cast: **Susanne Wuest, Elias Schwarz, Lukas Schwarz

Hell House LLC (2015)

Danny Bellini as Alex Taylor in 'Hell House LLC'

Danny Bellini as Alex Taylor in 'Hell House LLC'.

The subpar sequels have somewhat sullied the reputation of Stephen Cognetti's *Hell House LLC*, a low-budget mockumentary about a haunted house attraction where tragedy strikes. That's too bad. *Hell House LLC* is supremely creepy, centering on a group of friends who scoop up an old, abandoned hotel in the hopes of remaking it into a profitable haunt only to find out that something evil lurks in the basement.

*Hell House LLC* is indie horror at its best, eliding fireworks and burdensome lore in favor of subtle, peripheral scares that encourage rewatches (or, at the very least, lots of rewinding). Even customary scares, like a mannequin's head that turns when the camera's not looking, are rendered fresh in a setting that's clearly as eerie in real life as it is on film. *—Randall Colburn*

Where to watch *Hell House LLC*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Stephen Cognetti ** **

**Cast: **Ryan Jennifer Jones, Danny Bellini, Gore Abrams, Jared Hacker, Adam Schneider, Alice Bahlke

The Host (2006)

Kang-ho Song as Park Gang-Doo in 'The Host'

Kang-ho Song as Park Gang-Doo in 'The Host'.

Magnolia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Bong Joon Ho decided to make a monster movie for his third feature film, and with *The Host*, he succeeds in crafting a terrifying family drama. The trouble begins when an American scientist instructs his South Korean assistant to dispose of dirty chemicals into the Han River, thus creating a monster. Years later, said monster emerges from the water to terrorize the people of Seoul and kidnap a teenage girl.

*The Host *follows the members of the girl's multi-generational family as they hunt the creature down. A monster movie that editorializes on themes like pandemics (at the time: SARS), health care, government bureaucracy, consumerism, and American-Korean relations, EW's critic suggests that *The Host* "should become the hip, thinking-person's monster movie of choice." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *The Host*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Bong Joon Ho

**Cast:** Song Kang-ho, Byun Hee-bong, Park Hae-il, Bae Doona, Go Ah-sung

Lake Mungo (2008)

Marcus Costello as Jason Whittle in 'Lake Mungo'

Marcus Costello as Jason Whittle in 'Lake Mungo'.

Given that everything natural on the continent is designed to kill you, Australia seems an ideal setting for a scary movie. But in the psychological horror film *Lake Mungo* — set in Ararat, Australia — the fear isn't born from external foes, but rather from the terror required to succumb to the depths of human feeling. *Lake Mungo* begins with the accidental drowning of 16-year-old Alice Palmer. Upon returning home, her brother Matthew believes he sees Alice's ghost, but further investigation from the Palmer family reveals that Alice was seeing premonitions of her death.

Far from providing closure, the family begins to realize that the more they learn about Alice's personal life, the less they understand about what happened to her. Shot in mockumentary style and incorporating elements of found footage, *Lake Mungo* is, at its core, a horror movie about human behavior and navigating grief. *—I.G.***

Where to watch *Lake Mungo*: Amazon Prime Video******Director: **Joel Anderson ******Cast: **Talia Zucker, Rosie Traynor, David Pledger

Let the Right One In (2008)

Lina Leandersson as Eli in 'Let the Right One In'

Lina Leandersson as Eli in 'Let the Right One In'.

Magnet Releasing

Vampire movies don't work without blood, but the Swedish vampire drama *Let the Right One In* also offers up an equal helping of heart. Set in 1982, pre-teen Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant) lives in a suburb of Stockholm and struggles to stand up to the bullies who harass him at school. But when pale and mysterious Eli (Lina Leandersson) moves in next door, Oskar finally has someone to talk to.

Eli and Oskar connect on a level neither has experienced before — but Oskar doesn't know Eli is a vampire. Offered up by an EW critic as a contender for best vampire movie of 2008, *Let the Right One In*, the critic writes, "is like a Scandinavian *Twilight* minus the teen-steam schmaltz, packing in great gooey scares while tracing the friendship between a picked-on 12-year-old boy and a girl who hungers for the red stuff." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Let the Right One In*: Amazon Prime Video

**EW grade:** A

**Director: **Tomas Alfredson

**Cast: **Kåre Hedebrant, Lina Leandersson, Per Ragnar, Ika Nord, Peter Carlberg

Master (2022)

Regina Hall as Gail Bishop in 'Master'

Regina Hall as Gail Bishop in 'Master'.

Amazon Studios/Everett

Mariama Diallo's directorial debut hones in on the insidious world of academia, exposing the unsettling paradigm where colleges promote a faux sense of diversity to mask their racist underpinnings. At the elite New England university of Ancaster, longtime faculty member Gail Bishop (Regina Hall) ascends to the position of the campus' first Black master. In this newfound role, Gale makes it her mission to protect first-year student Jasmine Moore (Zoe Renee) from anonymous bigoted pranks that seem to emanate from an otherworldly presence.

Though the film is saturated with macabre visuals, the real horror of *Master *lies within the shameful reality that "things will just continue as before," according to EW's critic — who wrote, "Any tale set at a place like Ancaster, its hateful baubles still gathering dust on shelves, would need to resemble some kind of ghost story." *—James Mercadante*

Where to watch *Master: *Amazon Prime Video

**EW grade**: A–

**Director: **Mariama Diallo

**Cast:** Regina Hall, Zoe Renee, Amber Gray, Ella Hunt, Talia Ryder

Nosferatu (2024)

Lily-Rose Depp stars as Ellen Hutter in 'Nosferatu'

Lily-Rose Depp stars as Ellen Hutter in 'Nosferatu'.

Courtesy of Focus Features

Robert Eggers finally got to direct the story he's always wanted to remake with this haunting gothic horror drama. Based on 1922's *Nosferatu*, which was itself an unofficial interpretation of Bram Stoker's *Dracula*, the Victorian-set film follows a woman named Ellen (Lily-Rose Depp) who has an abnormal psychic connection with a faraway vampire, Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård).

Things escalate when Ellen's husband, Thomas (Nicholas Hoult), accepts an opportunity to sell Count Orlok a manor in town, and the parasitic vampire's arrival spells doom for the townsfolk. Unsettling and graphic with an undeniably dark romantic draw, *Nosferatu* is one of the most elegantly made horror films in recent years. —*K.J.***

Where to watch *Nosferatu*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Robert Eggers

**Cast:** Lily-Rose Depp, Nicholas Hoult, Bill Skarsgård, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Emma Corrin, Ralph Ineson, Willem Dafoe

Sleepaway Camp (1983)

Felissa Rose as Angela Baker in 'Sleepaway Camp'

Felissa Rose as Angela Baker in 'Sleepaway Camp'. United Film Distribution Company

In the indie horror classic *Sleepaway Camp, *camp is established in both setting and tone. A film known for its out of left field final plot twist, this low-budget slasher follows an unknown killer as they terrorize the young occupants of a summer camp in upstate New York in the 1970s.

The film was derided by critics upon its release, but in the decades since, *Sleepaway Camp *has been given its flowers and is recognized as a cult classic. Modern viewers have debated the effectiveness of the movie's queer themes, but genre enthusiasts agree that the best way to watch *Sleepaway Camp* is to go into the viewing with limited information. *—I.G.***

Where to watch *Sleepaway Camp*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Robert Hiltzik

**Cast: **Mike Kellin, Katherine Kamhi, Paul DeAngelo, Jonathan Tiersten, Felissa Rose, Christopher Collet, Karen Fields

Suspiria (2018)

Dakota Johnson as Susie Bannion (center) in 'Suspiria'

Dakota Johnson as Susie Bannion (center) in 'Suspiria'. Alessio Bolzoni/Amazon Studios

In a creative pivot, director Luca Guadagnino followed up his hit *Call Me by Your Name* with *Suspiria*, a period retelling of Dario Argento's 1977 horror classic that features the incomparable Tilda Swinton playing three different characters (one of whom is male), Dakota Johnson, and new-era scream queen Mia Goth.

When a sheltered young woman named Susie (Johnson) travels to Germany and joins an exclusive dance company, she encounters a whole different kind of company in the coven of witches who run the place. EW's critic highlights some of "the incredibly effective sequences in the film, including one showstopper in which Susie auditions for the lead part in a piece while, in a nearby studio, one of her fellow dancers is violently whipped around like a rag doll, her joints contorting like a possessed Swiss Army knife." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Suspiria*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Luca Guadagnino** **

**Cast: **Dakota Johnson, Tilda Swinton, Mia Goth, Angela Winkler, Chloë Grace Moretz** ****

The Taking of Deborah Logan (2014)

Jill Larson as Deborah Logan in 'The Taking of Deborah Logan'

Jill Larson as Deborah Logan in 'The Taking of Deborah Logan'. Millennium Entertainment

Before helming horrors such as *Insidious: The Last Key* (2018) and *Escape Room* (2019), Adam Robitel poured his heart into his directorial debut, a film that quietly first dropped on Netflix sans any marketing or hype, yet swiftly attracted a million viewers in its opening weekend. The top half of this found-footage horror forces you to confront your own mortality when meeting Deborah Logan (Jill Larson)  — worn down by Alzheimer's disease and unable to care for herself  — and her attentive daughter (Anne Ramsey) through the investigative lens of aspiring documentarians.

However, as the film sinks its teeth into the second act, the filmmakers uncover something far more sinister lurking beyond Deborah's condition. Marked by a heart-rending yet horrifying performance from Larson, *The Taking of Deborah Logan* crafts a story where characters and their struggles feel achingly real while generating a fraught atmosphere that doesn't rely on over-the-top special effects or ominous music to scare the living hell out of you. *—J.M.*

Where to watch *The Taking of Deborah Logan*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director:** Adam Robitel

**Cast:** Jill Larson, Anne Ramsay, Michelle Ang, Ryan Cutrona

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)

Gunnar Hansen as Leatherface in 'The Texas Chain Saw Massacre'

Gunnar Hansen as Leatherface in 'The Texas Chain Saw Massacre'. Everett Collection

One of the forebears of the horror genre, *The Texas Chain Saw Massacre* built the sadistic road map followed by many modern films — the *Saw* and *Hostel* franchises among them. A movie that prompted eight sequels, and inspired 2022's *X*, this '70s torture film only needs a chainsaw and a face mask sewn from human skin to drive its viewers into spasms of terror.

Following a group of young hippies who visit an old family farmhouse and end up encountering the home's murderous next-door neighbors, EW calls *The Texas Chain Saw Massacre* the "template for modern horror." As EW's critic writes, "What *Chain Saw* channeled, far more than any other horror film of its time, was the dementia, the terrifying insanity, of violence. It made you feel like you were really experiencing what it was like to be murdered." *—I.G.***

Where to watch *The Texas Chain Saw Massacre*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director:** Tobe Hooper**

**Cast:** Marilyn Burns, Paul A. Partain, Edwin Neal, Jim Siedow, Gunnar Hansen

We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)

Tilda Swinton as Eva and John C. Reilly as Franklin in 'We Need to Talk About Kevin'

Tilda Swinton as Eva and John C. Reilly as Franklin in 'We Need to Talk About Kevin'.

Everett Collection

Parenting is the ultimate horror story, and in the thriller *We Need to Talk About Kevin*, a writer named Eva (Tilda Swinton) reflects on how raising her psychopathic son Kevin (Ezra Miller) ruined her life. Kevin and Eva's relationship is fraught from birth, but as Eva struggles to get her husband (John C. Reilly) to recognize their child's emotional issues, Kevin's urges become increasingly more violent.

Miller's performance as the manipulative, destructive Kevin is, as EW's critic writes, "the best thing in the movie," and in a conversation with EW, Swinton says the film "has as much to do with the business of bringing up children as *Rosemary's Baby *had with the practical business with being pregnant." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *We Need to Talk About Kevin*: Amazon Prime Video

**Director: **Lynne Ramsay

**Cast: **Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller** ****

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The 21 best horror movies on Amazon Prime Video for a solid scare

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New Photo - RuPaul's Drag Race top 4 reunite to spill scalding tea on season 13's wildest moments

Gottmik, Kandy Muse, Rosé, and Symone hold a mini reunion to talk sprained ankles and a special performance of Tina Burner's boy band single. RuPaul's Drag Race

Gottmik, Kandy Muse, Rosé, and Symone hold a mini reunion to talk sprained ankles and a special performance of Tina Burner's boy band single.

RuPaul's Drag Race top 4 reunite to spill scalding tea on season 13's wildest moments

Gottmik, Kandy Muse, Rosé, and Symone hold a mini reunion to talk sprained ankles and a special performance of Tina Burner's boy band single.

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

April 29, 2021 1:00 p.m. ET

Don't let the smooth taste fool you: *RuPaul's Drag Race* season 13 isn't over yet!

*EW's BINGE* podcast recapping the Emmy-winning reality competition series returns (below and on Spotify) with a surprise episode looking back at season 13's wildest moments. Top 4 contestants Symone, Kandy Muse, Gottmik, and Rosé set sail with hosts Joey Nolfi and Jillian Sederholm aboard the S.S. Muse — Kandy's brand new boat — to ride the waves of nostalgia as they look back on the longest-ever season of the show.

After Symone reveals the contents of the McDonald's bag she secured following her snatching of the series' 13th crown, the queens dive deep into all of the gagatrondrizing bits, from Gottmik's impact on the trans community, the story behind Rosé's sprained ankle, and where their careers are headed next.

Highlights from this episode include:

- Gottmik discussing their impact on the way trans men see themselves in media

- Kandy and the queens reflect on the fallout from *the* Tamisha fight

- The disconnect between the queens' feelings on Kandy and the fans' feelings on Kandy

- Symone on playing Harriet Tubman for *Snatch Game*

- Symone addressing Elliott's use of the word "aggressive" when discussing her drag

- A special guest performance by Tina Burner's boy band 5th Ring (and the queens react)

- Rosé dishes on what went through her mind during Tina's infamous makeover

- Reactions to the roast and Utica's intent with her controversial jokes

- Gottmik dishes on working with Paris Hilton and her reaction to the *Snatch Game*

- The queens hilariously respond to Utica and Olivia Lux's dating rumors

- Symone reveals the iconic last-minute decision to do her Whitney Houston performance with a handkerchief (and where she got the rag from)

- Rosé reveals the story behind her sprained ankle (Denali is involved!)

- The queens look ahead and muse on Kandy's pitch for a dating show

RuPaul's Drag Race

'RuPaul's Drag Race' season 13 top 4 reunion gets all the tea on EW's BINGE podcast. World of Wonder/VH1 (4)

So, grab one of Symone's Diana Ross breasts as a floatation device and hitch a ride on the S.S. Muse, because *EW's BINGE* podcast is back, back, back again. Listen to our full *RuPaul's Drag Race* season 13 recap reunion with Symone, Kandy Muse, Gottmik, and Rosé above. The full episode is also available on Spotify now!

***Subscribe to EW's BINGE podcast for full recaps of all 13 seasons of *RuPaul's Drag Race*, featuring exclusive interviews with the season 13 top four, Jaida Essence Hall, Trixie Mattel, Katya, Peppermint, Bianca Del Rio, Bob the Drag Queen, Sasha Velour, and more.***

**Related content: **

- In *RuPaul's Drag Race* winner Symone, a star is born: 'I want to rule the world'

- RuPaul's *Drag Race España* cast revealed: Buenos días, divas!

- 8 moments that prove Jaida Essence Hall's *RuPaul's Drag Race* reign is forever

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

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RuPaul's Drag Race top 4 reunite to spill scalding tea on season 13's wildest moments

Gottmik, Kandy Muse, Rosé, and Symone hold a mini reunion to talk sprained ankles and a special performance of Tin...
New Photo - Rosé reveals a dance with Denali led to her RuPaul's Drag Race finale ankle injury

EW's BINGE podcast returns with a RuPaul's Drag Race season 13 reunion between Rosé, Gottmik, Kandy Muse, and Symone. Rosé reveals a dance with Denali led to he

EW's BINGE podcast returns with a RuPaul's Drag Race season 13 reunion between Rosé, Gottmik, Kandy Muse, and Symone.

Rosé reveals a dance with Denali led to her RuPaul's Drag Race finale ankle injury

EW's BINGE podcast returns with a RuPaul's Drag Race season 13 reunion between Rosé, Gottmik, Kandy Muse, and Symone.

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

April 30, 2021 10:30 a.m. ET

Rosé's confidence never snapped across *RuPaul's Drag Race* season 13, but the Scottish lass' dainty, delicate ankles that carried her through to the finale ultimately buckled after a spin with Denali.

"It was over three months ago, now. I was actually dancing with Denali, and I tripped and landed on my foot the wrong way. It really f---ed me!" Rosé says in the latest episode of *EW's BINGE* podcast (below, and on Spotify now) about the final lip-sync against Kandy Muse that sent her home. "My physical therapist and I thought it was going to be a couple of weeks, but the injury just never got better because it was sprained in a stiletto, and the position of being in high heels is just really traumatic."

The New York City queen first revealed the injury in a discussion with RuPaul on Friday's season 13 closer, but competed against Kandy in a Britney Spears-themed lip-sync smackdown despite the pain after telling the Emmy-winning host that "nothing" could stop her from vying for the crown.

She was ultimately sent home as a runner-up, and says her foot still hasn't fully healed.

"I'm almost better, but that finale was the first time that I was able to get on a real pair of heels. My looks for the ball, we were constantly redesigning, stressing out if I could wear heels at all," she explains. "It was stressful and I definitely think it impacted my journey. To be honest, when RuPaul was like, 'Rosé, this is not your time,' I was like, 'No s---, bitch!'" This has been f---ing crazy! I had to learn how to walk again! But, I'm so proud of what happened and I wouldn't change it. It's all good."

RuPaul's Drag Race

Rosé looking lovely at the 'RuPaul's Drag Race' season 13 finale. VH1

Kandy admits that going up against such a seasoned competitor was no easy task: "I don't think she would've beat me with a good ankle or not," Kandy says with a laugh, "but, she was putting up a fight!"

Hear the full *EW's BINGE* podcast recap of *RuPaul's Drag Race* season 13 with Gottmik, Rosé, Kandy Muse, and Symone above and on Spotify below.

***Subscribe to EW's BINGE podcast for full recaps of all 13 seasons of *RuPaul's Drag Race*, featuring exclusive interviews with the season 13 top four, Jaida Essence Hall, Trixie Mattel, Katya, Peppermint, Bianca Del Rio, Bob the Drag Queen, Sasha Velour, and more.***

**Related content: **

- *RuPaul's Drag Race* top 4 reunite to spill scalding tea on season 13's wildest moments

- In *RuPaul's Drag Race* winner Symone, a star is born: 'I want to rule the world'

- Watch the* RuPaul's Drag Race* season 13 queens hilariously read photos of their first time in drag

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Rosé reveals a dance with Denali led to her RuPaul's Drag Race finale ankle injury

EW's BINGE podcast returns with a RuPaul's Drag Race season 13 reunion between Rosé, Gottmik, Kandy Muse, ...
New Photo - Fresh Prince's OG Aunt Viv, Janet Hubert, is heading back to Bel-Air

Actress Caroline Chikezie will also gueststar on Peacock's &34;BelAir&34; for its final season. Fresh Prince's OG Aunt Viv, Janet Hubert, is heading back to Bel

Actress Caroline Chikezie will also guest-star on Peacock's "Bel-Air" for its final season.

Fresh Prince's* *OG Aunt Viv, Janet Hubert, is heading back to Bel-Air

Actress Caroline Chikezie will also guest-star on Peacock's "Bel-Air" for its final season.

By Mekishana Pierre

Mekishana Pierre author photo

Mekishana Pierre

Mekishana Pierre is a news writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2025. Her work has previously appeared on *Entertainment Tonight* and Popsugar.

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on October 28, 2025 5:51 p.m. ET

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Janet Hubert as Vivian Banks on 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'

Janet Hubert as Vivian Banks on 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'. Credit:

Chris Cuffaio/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty

The original Aunt Viv is back in Bel-Air!**

Janet Hubert is heading to a familiar zip code as a guest star in the fourth and final season of *Bel-Air*, Peacock's modern-day reimagining of *The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air*, the streamer announced Tuesday. It's an full-circle moment for the actress who originated the role of Will's Aunt Vivian on the original sitcom.

Hubert will play a wise woman who meets Hilary (Coco Jones) and becomes instrumental to the Banks family.

Actress Caroline Chikezie (*Power Book II: Ghost*) will also guest-star in the final season as Dominique Warren, the leader of Geoffrey's (Jimmy Akingbola) former London gang who's also like a sister to him.**

Caroline Chikezie

Caroline Chikezie.

J. Countess/Getty

As *Fresh Prince *fans are intimately aware of, Hubert played Aunt Viv until she was replaced by Daphne Maxwell Reid in season 4. The move was highly controversial and left a bitter taste in Hubert's mouth, which led to her publicly criticizing star Will Smith and the show numerous times throughout the years.

Things were rocky between Hubert and Smith for decades; the actress slammed the Oscar and Grammy winner for being an "egomaniac" and accused him of being responsible for her firing from *Fresh Prince*. Smith also hit back, claiming that Hubert wanted the show to be "*The Aunt Viv of Bel-Air*."

Tyra Banks to guest-star on 'Bel-Air' 32 years after 'Fresh Prince' role

Tyra Banks in 2025 and on 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air' in 1993

'Fresh Prince' star Tatyana Ali joins Peacock's 'Bel-Air' for season 2

Tatyana Ali

They made amends in 2020, when Smith revealed that he and Hubert sat down together for the first time in 27 years for an HBO Max reunion special timed for the show's 30th anniversary.

During the sit-down, Hubert explained that she wasn't fired, but rather she just didn't accept the "really bad deal" offered to her that meant a reduced salary and not being allowed to work elsewhere. Then a mother of a newborn and wife of an out-of-work husband, Hubert turned it down and was subsequently recast. Smith subsequently admitted that he could "see where I made the set very difficult for Janet," conceding that, at the time, he saw felt like "everything was a threat" to him.

The duo ended by apologizing and embracing, with Smith declaring to Hubert, "You're still my Aunt Viv."**

Janet Hubert and Will Smith on 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'

Janet Hubert and Will Smith on 'The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'.

Alice S. Hall/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty

Hubert is one of several *Fresh Prince of Bel-Air* alums to return for the new series, with all of them playing new roles.

Reid, who played Aunt Viv No. 2 on *Fresh Prince*, portrayed Helen in *Bel-Air* season 1. Vernee Watson-Johnson, who played OG Will's mom, Viola "Vy" Smith, portrayed Janice alongside Reid. Joseph Marcell, who played butler Geoffrey on *Fresh Prince*, portrayed someone from *Bel-Air* Geoffrey's past in season 3. Tatyana Ali, who played the precocious Ashley Banks on the OG series, portrayed middle school English teacher Mrs. Hughes in season 2. Tyra Banks, who played Will's ex-girlfriend on *Fresh Prince*, was recently announced as another guest star for the series' final season; the model and actress will play a former college classmate with a big personality with whom Viv (Cassandra Freeman) is reluctantly reunited.

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

Season 4 of *Bel-Air* follows Will (Jabari Banks) as he attempts to balance the fun and excitement of senior year. Carlton (Olly Sholotan) tests his own resolve as he deals with the fallout of some very big decisions that could threaten his future. Together, the boys will help each other through this pivotal time in their lives.

Carla Banks Waddles serves as writer, showrunner, and executive producer on *Bel-Air*. Morgan Cooper, whose short fan film inspired the series, is also an executive producer and director, and will helm the final two episodes. **

*Bel-Air* season 4 is set to premiere Nov. 24 on Peacock.**

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Fresh Prince's OG Aunt Viv, Janet Hubert, is heading back to Bel-Air

Actress Caroline Chikezie will also gueststar on Peacock's &34;BelAir&34; for its final season. Fresh ...

 

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