Weapons is an upcoming psychological horror-thriller from director Zach Cregger, who previously gained acclaim for Barbarian. Unlike conventional slashers or creature features, this film takes a more unsettling and layered approach, exploring the haunting consequences of violence and the hidden darkness within human nature.

The story unfolds through a series of interconnected narratives, each tied together by a mysterious tragedy in a small American town. A shocking act of violence serves as the catalyst, and from there, the film weaves between different characters whose lives are suddenly and irreversibly changed. These characters range from a troubled young man struggling with his identity, to a family on the verge of collapse, to a group of teenagers caught up in an inexplicable nightmare. As their stories interlace, the audience begins to see the broader, more sinister picture: that violence is not just an event, but a cycle, an infection that spreads across generations.
True to its title, Weapons examines how the instruments of destruction are not limited to physical firearms or blades, but also manifest through fear, manipulation, and psychological control. Every character is both a victim and a potential “weapon” themselves, shaped by trauma, secrecy, and moral compromise.
Zach Cregger deliberately crafts an atmosphere of dread, slowly tightening the narrative tension rather than relying on jump scares. The tone echoes works like Magnolia in structure, but with the suffocating horror of Hereditary. As the film progresses, questions emerge about accountability, survival, and the darkness that lies dormant in ordinary people until triggered.
By the final act, Weapons forces viewers to confront the uncomfortable reality that evil is not an external force, but something cultivated within society itself. Disturbing, thought-provoking, and deeply unsettling, Weapons aims to be one of 2025’s most unforgettable horror experiences.