
Film of the Week: 'Weapons' - Why did 17 children vanish at 2:17am?
A child narrator sets up the 'true story,' in which 'a lot of people die in a lot of really weird ways.'
The unseen youth is not wrong.
Before we get to those deaths, we're presented with Weapon's central mystery through enduring imagery: 17 children in the small town of Maybrook wake up one night at precisely 2:17am. They all rush out of their bedrooms and run off into the night, arms outstretched in a particularly eerie fashion – as if they were flying off to Neverland. They are never heard from again.
Why did the kids vanish en masse?
A kidnapping? A prank gone wrong? Mass hysteria? An updated case of the dancing plague of 1518 – with less dancing and more disappearing? The whole community is baffled by this terrible riddle, and tempers are rising among the grieving parents – like Archer Graff (Josh Brolin), whose son has gone missing.
Things aren't helped that all 17 children were part of the same Maybrook Elementary School classroom, led by Justine Gandy (Julia Garner). Suspicion quickly falls on the young woman, who is a caring teacher, enjoys a good swig of vodka every now and then, and finds the word 'WITCH' painted on her car in red.
Despite the pitchforks brandished by the townsfolk, she's just as confused as everyone else. Ignoring the warnings from the school head Marcus (Benedict Wong), she decides to investigate.
You see, her classroom has 18 pupils. Which means that one boy, Alex (Cary Christopher), was spared...
Cregger's second feature film after 2022's Barbarian is not the easiest to review, as to go into too much detail about what makes Weapons work would be doing it (and future audience members) a great disservice. It's really worth going into it willing to be blindsided.
Safe to say that Cregger skilfully employs a Rashomon-style narrative construction to craft a distressing fairytale that starts off as a small-town mystery thriller with shades of Twin Peaks and Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners. And his novelistic approach pays off, as it only furthers quite how much Stephen King must be green with envy that this suburban US nightmare isn't his baby.
The episodic construction allows Cregger to ratchet the dread, as each chapter follows a different character POV – Justine, Archer, local cop Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), hapless drug addict James (Austin Abrams), Marcus and finally Alex – and work as intersecting clues. Only as the sinister jigsaw pieces fall into place do you realise the meticulous nature of Weapons' structure, and that the time-hopping exercise is anything but a cheap gimmick.
Again, to reveal where it all leads and anything about a third-act character – a tricky role played to perfection by Amy Madigan - would be to detrimentally spoil.
Mark these words: you'll remember her.
Throughout, Weapons benefits from an unnerving use of silence and open spaces, some terrific camera pans and unbroken takes, as well as earned jump scares. Moreover, a majestic feather in its cap is its rather startling tonal playfulness.
As Cregger moves away from the Brothers Grimm / Pied Piper-tinged enigma and embraces some dreamworld imagery – one hallucinated armament apparition in particular is as bizarre as it is metaphorically haunting – he also introduces sight gags and a smattering of gallows humour.
Granted, the bleak comedy was there to begin with, as the doorbell video camera footage of the kiddies rushing away from their homes is soundtracked to George Harrison's 'Beware Of Darkness'; but the gleefully macabre levels are upped considerably towards the end of the film. Whether it's a well-timed expletive from Brolin's character after a fright or the grand guignol and slapstick-sensitive finale, Weapons reveals itself as surprisingly cathartic.
It's quite the feat.
When the film goes for scary, it'll make you jump out of your skin.
When it decides to crawl under said skin, it'll make you meditate on the 'weapons' and 'targets' in even the most seemingly safe all-American suburban spaces, and how paranoia can be... well, weaponised.
When it goes for gory, even hardened gore-hounds will wince.
When it chooses to be funny and unexpectedly camp, it's a demented riot.
And at the end of the day, no one's going to be acting valiant when clocks read 2:17 anymore.
While some may take issue with how some questions are left unanswered and how the central mystery loses its serious edge once revelations do come, Cregger's masterful offering proves that his hellish Airbnb in 2022 was no fluke.
More than that, Weapons has become the tense and deliriously entertaining horror film to beat this year. Considering 2025 has already been good to the genre, with Presence, Sinners, The Ugly Stepsister, 28 Years Later and Bring Her Back – to name but a few highlights – that should tell you plenty.
Once more, good luck if you happen to be awake at 2:17am.
Weapons is out in cinemas now.
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Euronews
a day ago
- Euronews
'Weapons': Why no one needs a prequel to the box office hit of 2025
While it was highly anticipated, Zach Cregger's Weapons has become the breakout hit of the summer no one expected. Not only did the American filmmaker's sophomore horror film top the box office during its debut weekend and has raked in a reported $92 million internationally at the time of writing (on a budget of $38 million), it's also become one of the most critically acclaimed films of 2025. For those who haven't yet had the pleasure, Weapons is a mystery horror gem that takes place in the aftermath of the disappearance of 17 children, who all leave their homes one night at precisely 2:17am. They run into the night and are never seen or heard from again. In our (glowing) review for Weapons, we wrote: 'Cregger skilfully employs a Rashomon-style narrative construction to craft a distressing fairytale that starts off as a small-town mystery thriller with shades of Twin Peaks and Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners. And his novelistic approach pays off, as it only furthers quite how much Stephen King must be green with envy that this suburban US nightmare isn't his baby.' We added: 'Weapons has become the tense and deliriously entertaining horror film to beat this year. Considering 2025 has already been good to the genre, with Presence, Sinners, The Ugly Stepsister, 28 Years Later and Bring Her Back – to name but a few highlights – that should tell you plenty.' But because we can't have nice, self-contained things, there's trouble afoot... There are only three certainties in life: death, taxes and Hollywood greed. The slightest whiff of buzz and box office glory and opportunistic studios start getting ideas, seeking to milk creative properties dry. And because Weapons is a hit, a prequel has apparently been tabled, with Cregger reportedly in early talks for a time-reversing follow-up. Per an exclusive report from The Hollywood Reporter, Cregger is in early discussions with Warner Bros. Pictures and New Line Cinema for an origin film set in the Weapons universe – with the prequel focusing on the film's mysterious antagonist. Warning: mild spoilers ahead. The prequel would focus on Amy Madigan's character Gladys – this demented fairytale's witch, who cast a spell on the kiddies and ends up meeting a particularly gruesome end. On a surface level, a prequel could make some artistic sense. Weapons is a non-linear story that explores multiple viewpoints, and the film never gets Gladys' perception. There's no doubt that Madigan would ace it if she were to return to the role, and Cregger has proven that he's not to be underestimated. However, one of the many reasons why Weapons works so well is a lack of backstory for the evil character. We don't need answer dumps or to be clued up on the 'why' behind her nefarious motivations; it's a lot creepier when these elements remain unknown. Prequels not only run the risk of botching continuity, canon and tension, but dish out unnecessary explanations. Recent examples like The Hobbit trilogy, Furiosa and Wonka prove it. Moreover, they are always poison when it comes to the most interesting characters: villains. A villain origin story that reveals motive ruins mythology, quashes audience imagination, and tanks the scare potential of a truly excellent antagonist. Norman Bates is far more scary without a motive. Darth Vader definitely lost his threatening edge when George Lucas decided to go back and unveil his entire backstory. Hannibal Lecter is much less frightening once you've been force fed the origins of his cannibalistic ways. And the nightmares triggered by aunt Gladys will be more underwear soiling if audiences are purposefully kept in the dark about why she's parasitically invading families' spaces and terrorising small towns. 'It's a lot scarier when there's no motive, Sid.' Wise words from Billy Loomis in the first (and best) Scream film. So, Mr. Cregger, if you're reading... First of all, congrats and enjoy your moment – it's merited. Secondly, please don't bend to studio pressure and fight for Weapons to be a standalone. We understand you're already busy with the upcoming Resident Evil film, as well as an original film you're reportedly working on titled Flood. Do those. And if you won't listen to Euronews Culture, please listen to Billy. Murderous tendencies aside, he had a point.


Euronews
08-08-2025
- Euronews
Film of the Week: 'Weapons' - Why did 17 children vanish at 2:17am?
From the get-go, writer-director Zach Cregger aims to get under your skin. A child narrator sets up the 'true story,' in which 'a lot of people die in a lot of really weird ways.' The unseen youth is not wrong. Before we get to those deaths, we're presented with Weapon's central mystery through enduring imagery: 17 children in the small town of Maybrook wake up one night at precisely 2:17am. They all rush out of their bedrooms and run off into the night, arms outstretched in a particularly eerie fashion – as if they were flying off to Neverland. They are never heard from again. Why did the kids vanish en masse? A kidnapping? A prank gone wrong? Mass hysteria? An updated case of the dancing plague of 1518 – with less dancing and more disappearing? The whole community is baffled by this terrible riddle, and tempers are rising among the grieving parents – like Archer Graff (Josh Brolin), whose son has gone missing. Things aren't helped that all 17 children were part of the same Maybrook Elementary School classroom, led by Justine Gandy (Julia Garner). Suspicion quickly falls on the young woman, who is a caring teacher, enjoys a good swig of vodka every now and then, and finds the word 'WITCH' painted on her car in red. Despite the pitchforks brandished by the townsfolk, she's just as confused as everyone else. Ignoring the warnings from the school head Marcus (Benedict Wong), she decides to investigate. You see, her classroom has 18 pupils. Which means that one boy, Alex (Cary Christopher), was spared... Cregger's second feature film after 2022's Barbarian is not the easiest to review, as to go into too much detail about what makes Weapons work would be doing it (and future audience members) a great disservice. It's really worth going into it willing to be blindsided. Safe to say that Cregger skilfully employs a Rashomon-style narrative construction to craft a distressing fairytale that starts off as a small-town mystery thriller with shades of Twin Peaks and Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners. And his novelistic approach pays off, as it only furthers quite how much Stephen King must be green with envy that this suburban US nightmare isn't his baby. The episodic construction allows Cregger to ratchet the dread, as each chapter follows a different character POV – Justine, Archer, local cop Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), hapless drug addict James (Austin Abrams), Marcus and finally Alex – and work as intersecting clues. Only as the sinister jigsaw pieces fall into place do you realise the meticulous nature of Weapons' structure, and that the time-hopping exercise is anything but a cheap gimmick. Again, to reveal where it all leads and anything about a third-act character – a tricky role played to perfection by Amy Madigan - would be to detrimentally spoil. Mark these words: you'll remember her. Throughout, Weapons benefits from an unnerving use of silence and open spaces, some terrific camera pans and unbroken takes, as well as earned jump scares. Moreover, a majestic feather in its cap is its rather startling tonal playfulness. As Cregger moves away from the Brothers Grimm / Pied Piper-tinged enigma and embraces some dreamworld imagery – one hallucinated armament apparition in particular is as bizarre as it is metaphorically haunting – he also introduces sight gags and a smattering of gallows humour. Granted, the bleak comedy was there to begin with, as the doorbell video camera footage of the kiddies rushing away from their homes is soundtracked to George Harrison's 'Beware Of Darkness'; but the gleefully macabre levels are upped considerably towards the end of the film. Whether it's a well-timed expletive from Brolin's character after a fright or the grand guignol and slapstick-sensitive finale, Weapons reveals itself as surprisingly cathartic. It's quite the feat. When the film goes for scary, it'll make you jump out of your skin. When it decides to crawl under said skin, it'll make you meditate on the 'weapons' and 'targets' in even the most seemingly safe all-American suburban spaces, and how paranoia can be... well, weaponised. When it goes for gory, even hardened gore-hounds will wince. When it chooses to be funny and unexpectedly camp, it's a demented riot. And at the end of the day, no one's going to be acting valiant when clocks read 2:17 anymore. While some may take issue with how some questions are left unanswered and how the central mystery loses its serious edge once revelations do come, Cregger's masterful offering proves that his hellish Airbnb in 2022 was no fluke. More than that, Weapons has become the tense and deliriously entertaining horror film to beat this year. Considering 2025 has already been good to the genre, with Presence, Sinners, The Ugly Stepsister, 28 Years Later and Bring Her Back – to name but a few highlights – that should tell you plenty. Once more, good luck if you happen to be awake at 2:17am. Weapons is out in cinemas now.


Fashion Network
28-07-2025
- Fashion Network
Pharrell Williams and Nigo's Icecream brand enters women's streetwear
Icecream introduces its first-ever women's collection for fall-winter 2025, fronted by Spanish rapper BB Trickz. Known for its bold graphics and skate-culture DNA, the streetwear label reimagines its early 2000s classics through a feminine lens. Founded in 2004 as an offshoot of Billionaire Boys Club, Icecream quickly gained recognition for its vivid graphics, skateboarding influences and hip-hop roots. This women's launch marks a natural evolution of the brand, preserving its playful identity while offering a fresh take tailored to a female audience. The campaign was shot by Los Angeles-based photographer Lauren Leekley and directed by Ross Westland, the artistic director for both Icecream and Billionaire Boys Club in Europe. Set in a luxurious residential backdrop, the visuals juxtapose Americana-style elegance with Icecream's signature skate-inspired silhouettes—featuring bold colors, camo prints and easygoing tailoring. BB Trickz, who rose to fame with her viral track 'Super,' brings a mix of edge and glamour to the campaign, reinforcing the brand's appeal to a new generation of fashion-forward creatives. True to its roots, Icecream's 46-piece women's capsule draws inspiration from the brand's visual archives. Highlights include graphic-print jersey sets, houndstooth cardigans, embroidered caps, denim shorts, and logo-stamped boxer shorts and bras—all reinterpreted with contemporary detailing and proportions. Pricing reflects Icecream's premium streetwear positioning, with tops starting at €55, jackets priced between €240 and €355, jeans at €185, and accessories such as caps and boxer shorts at €61.