Scary Movie 6 is basically what happens when com-horror, chaos, and cups full of nostalgia all get thrown into a blender and served up as a smoothie sequel (the sixth scoop).
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Twenty-six years after outrunning a suspiciously familiar masked killer (“Ghostface”), the Core Four are back in the killer’s crosshairs. And no horror movie IP (or woke joke) is safe. Marlon Wayans (“Shorty”), Shawn Wayans (“Ray”), Anna Faris (“Cindy”), and Regina Hall (“Brenda”) reunite in Scary Movie alongside fresh faces to slash through reboots, remakes, requels, prequels, sequels, spin-offs, elevated horror, origin stories, anything with the word legacy in it, and every “final chapter” that absolutely isn’t final. Nothing is sacred. No trope survives. Every line gets crossed.
In this version, The Wayans are back to cancel the Cancel Culture – with the kind of exaggerated, unhinged humour that makes you laugh first and question your morals second. The returning cast also helps a lot. Seeing familiar faces back in the mix gives it that chaotic comfort-food energy, like junk TV you didn’t realise you missed.
But it’s not all slashing perfection. The biggest issue is that it tries to cover everything. Every horror trend. Every viral moment. And, every “wait, I recognise that” reference. And while that sounds fun on paper, in practice it sometimes feels like doomscrolling in movie form – fast, loud, and slightly overwhelming. Some jokes land instantly, others feel like they’re still buffering while the scene moves on.
The humour also swings wildly between clever parody and not-really-necessary territory. When it works, it’s sharp and very online in a good way. When it doesn’t, it feels like it’s trying a bit too hard to keep up with modern horror’s endless sequel machine. There’s a constant sense that the film is sprinting to catch up with whatever horror dropped six months ago, even when the joke would’ve landed harder if it had just slowed down and let it breathe.
Still, there’s something oddly charming about how committed it is. It knows the genre is ridiculous. It knows you know it’s ridiculous. And instead of fixing that, it doubles down and throws more Ghostface-shaped chaos at the screen. That confidence does a lot of heavy lifting. Even when a gag misses, it rarely feels lazy – just overstuffed, like someone trying to cram every idea they’ve ever had into one group chat before it gets muted.
What also helps is the cast chemistry, which honestly does a lot of emotional smoothing over the rougher edges. The returning ensemble slips back into their roles with an ease that makes the whole thing feel like a very unhinged reunion special. Even when the script is wobbling between satire and slapstick overload, there’s a familiarity there that keeps you watching. It’s the kind of comedy where you can tell everyone is fully aware they’re in on the joke. Even when the joke is spiralling into chaos.
And then there’s the modern horror of it all. The film throws itself at today’s genre landscape with zero hesitation – elevated horror, legacy sequels, TikTok-fuelled scream culture, AI-adjacent killers, all of it gets dragged into the mix. Sometimes it’s clever. Sometimes it’s just… a lot. But even when it’s uneven, it does capture something true about horror right now: there’s so much of it, so fast, and so self-referential that parody almost feels like it’s parodying itself.
By the time it winds down, this is a horror flick that hasn’t exactly reinvented the formula. But, it doesn’t really try to. Instead, it leans into nostalgia, throws in a few genuinely funny spikes, and hopes the sheer volume of jokes will carry it through. And weirdly, it kind of does.
So, while Scary Movie 6 isn’t a perfect comeback (and it’s definitely not subtle), it is a loud, chaotic, occasionally hilarious reminder of why this franchise existed in the first place. If nothing else, it’s the kind of film you watch with friends, snacks (*see below for best suggestions), and zero expectations… and maybe that’s the most honest way to meet it.
* Local kings of crispy, crunchy tenders, crave-worthy chicken tender, Pappa Flock is bringing back “Waazzzuuup” for a new generation with the ultimate Scary Movie Munchies Menu. The brand has dropped two limited-edition cinema snacks just in time for the film’s release, because apparently facing a masked killer is easier when you’re well-fed.
The Sour Power Lemonade features freshly squeezed house-made lemonade twisted with a sour candy kick. It hits sharp upfront with a proper mouth-puckering blast before mellowing back into something refreshingly familiar, served with sour candies and a Ghostface lollipop basically giving fans something to scream about before they even get to the cinema.
Then there’s the Munchie Cup, which It mixes crispy Pappa Flock chicken tenders with caramel popcorn, landing somewhere between sweet, salty and crunchy overload. It’s indulgent, slightly unhinged, and exactly the kind of thing you’d demolish before the opening credits finish rolling.
Rachel Korbel, Chief Marketing Officer at Pappa Flock, says the collab is all about fun, nostalgia, and leaning into that iconic “Waazzzuuup” energy. And, to celebrate, select Pappa Flock stores are even turning into Scary Movie hotlines, where customers can record their best “Waazzzuuup” for a chance to win double passes to the film.