logo
The Best Social Media Horror Movie You Haven't Seen Is Getting a Sequel

The Best Social Media Horror Movie You Haven't Seen Is Getting a Sequel

Gizmodo06-05-2025

Influencers will pick up where 2023's Influencer left off to weave more worst-case-scenario online drama.
In 2023, Influencer made io9's year-end list of the best movies you might have missed, and we've continued to recommend it ever since. It's definitely one you don't want to know too much about before watching it for the first time—but the title hints at the subject matter, and it's not a spoiler to say Influencer is a cautionary tale about putting too much of yourself online. You never know who might be paying an unhealthy amount of attention, especially when, say, you're on a solo vacation in Thailand.
It's a twist-filled and satisfyingly twisted tale. After a festival run, it streamed on genre platform Shudder, where it built up a following though didn't quite, ahem, go viral—but today comes news worth 1,000 'likes': Influencer is getting a sequel! And it's titled, naturally, Influencers.
Even better, as Deadline reports, Influencers has actually already wrapped. It's once again from writer-director Kurtis David Harder, and brings back the first film's memorable Cassandra Naud, with the addition of Georgina Campbell (Barbarian).
This time around, the thrills unfold across southern France; according to Deadline, 'the sequel watches as a young woman's chilling fascination with murder and identity theft sends her life into a whirlwind of chaos. Pic deepens a cinematic universe built around themes of deception, online identity, and the darker sides of curated personas, offering an expanded canvas compared to the original.'
The trade also has a quote from Harder: 'With Influencers, I wanted to revisit the themes of control and illusion, but from a new angle—one that's more seductive, more dangerous, and more unhinged,' said Harder. 'It's a film that plays with perception. Fans of Influencer will feel something familiar beneath the surface, but the real fun is discovering just how deep those connections run.'
Yes, he did indeed promise the sequel is more unhinged than the original, and we can't wait to see how he pulls that off. Shudder once again picked up the rights in English-speaking countries—there's no release date yet—and the film will seek international distribution at this year's Cannes Film Festival.
You can (and should) watch 2023's Influencer on Shudder now.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Roaring: Art, Fashion, and the Automobile in France, 1918-1939' Review: An Exhibition in Forward Motion
‘Roaring: Art, Fashion, and the Automobile in France, 1918-1939' Review: An Exhibition in Forward Motion

Wall Street Journal

time42 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

‘Roaring: Art, Fashion, and the Automobile in France, 1918-1939' Review: An Exhibition in Forward Motion

St. Louis During World War I, a horror that mired men in trenches, the only things that zipped were biplanes and the new tanks. The American George S. Patton was a tank commander in that war and learned its lessons. In 1944, by then a lieutenant general, he addressed the men of the Third Army before D-Day: 'I don't want any messages saying 'I'm holding my position.' We're not holding a goddamned thing. We're advancing constantly.' The advance guard! The avant-garde! The lean and free-wheeling approach to life and art that marked the interwar years—that's the subject of a spectacular exhibition at the Saint Louis Art Museum, 'Roaring: Art, Fashion, and the Automobile in France, 1918-1939,' which features 12 exceptional historic cars among more than 160 period objects.

Springsteen's Berlin concert echoes with history and a stark warning
Springsteen's Berlin concert echoes with history and a stark warning

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

Springsteen's Berlin concert echoes with history and a stark warning

Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] BERLIN (AP) — Veteran rock star Bruce Springsteen, a high-profile critic of President Donald Trump, slammed the U.S. administration as 'corrupt, incompetent and treasonous' during a concert Wednesday in Berlin. He was addressing tens of thousands of fans at a stadium built for the 1936 Olympic Games that still bears the scars of World War II and contains relics from the country's dark Nazi past. 'Tonight, we ask all who believe in democracy and the best of our American experiment to rise with us, raise your voices, stand with us against authoritarianism, and let freedom reign,' he said. Springsteen, long a political opponent of the president, has made increasingly pointed and contentious public statements in recent concerts. He denounced Trump's politics during a concert last month in Manchester, calling him an 'unfit president' leading a 'rogue government' of people who have 'no concern or idea for what it means to be deeply American.' Springsteen is no stranger to Berlin. In July 1988, he became one of the first Western musicians to perform in East Germany, performing to a ravenous crowd of 160,000 East Germans yearning for American rock 'n' roll and the freedom it represented to the youth living under the crumbling communist regime. An Associated Press news story from that period says 'fireworks steaked through the sky' and hundreds of people in the audience waved handmade American flags as they sang along to 'Born in the USA.' Almost four decades later, Springsteen issued a stark warning: 'The America that I love, the America that I've sung to you about, that has been a beacon of hope and liberty for 250 years, is currently in the hands of a corrupt, incompetent, and treasonous administration.'

An Experimental New Dating Site Matches Singles Based on Their Browser Histories
An Experimental New Dating Site Matches Singles Based on Their Browser Histories

WIRED

time3 hours ago

  • WIRED

An Experimental New Dating Site Matches Singles Based on Their Browser Histories

Jun 11, 2025 2:56 PM Browser Dating users upload their 5,000 most recent searches, which are turned into a 'browsing personality profile" by AI. Photo-Illustration:Imagine, for a moment, that your most clandestine internet searches—anxiety-riddled deep dives on WebMD, Google queries wondering if your cat is trying to kill you, or why farts smell the way they do—were the key to finding a soulmate. Would you sign up for a dating site that guaranteed connection in return for your browser history? For more than a decade, developers have tried to perfect the science of compatibility. Tinder promised infinite swipes. Bumble let women make the first move. Feeld championed polyamory. Grindr was a gay utopia (until it became overrun with ads). Lex was entirely text based. And Pure, an anonymous dating app, was all about shameless hookups. Now as AI reimagines the landscape of Big Dating, one platform is offering a solution no one asked for: matching singles based on their browser histories. While the idea sounds antithetical to an era where dating and social media profiles writ large are perfectly curated, that's exactly the point, according to Browser Dating artist and developer Dries Depoorter, who is known for creating digital projects with an eye for mischief that blur the line between reality and farce. (He insists the dating site is 100 percent legit.) 'There's honesty in that,' Depoorter, who is based in Ghent, Belgium, says of the concept. Despite their flaws, dating sites and apps also remain the best place to meet future partners (if you're young and horny they are mostly unavoidable). According to Pew Research, 42 percent of US adults say online dating made finding a partner easier. But online dating today has become more about the illusion of potential rather than the reality of who someone actually is. But the attraction of discovery—believing our private curiosities make for a better portrait of who people actually are—appealed to Depoorter. He thinks Browser Dating can be a genuine alternative to finding genuine love. As opposed to Hinge or Raya, where users craft their profiles with expertly angled-photos and facts cherry-picked to make themselves seem as witty and interesting as possible, on Browser Dating, there is no hiding the real you. 'Instead of choosing the best pictures or best things about yourself, this will show a side of you that you'd never pick. You're not able to choose from your search history—you have to upload all of it.' Though, for now at least, users of Browser Dating have a small pool to choose from—less than 1,000 users have signed up since its launch last week. Users are first required to download a Chrome or Firefox extension, which they use to export their recent browser history and then upload to the site. Profiles feature the usual bare outline of a person: age, location, gender, and sexual preference. A browsing personality profile is also generated for each user, offering insight into how they navigate the internet. Matches are not limited by location, though Depoorter says there is an option to restrict search by state or country, if they so choose. Once matched, you won't see the other person's search history, only a summary of 'fun facts' about shared interests—perhaps pointing out your bizarre Wikipedia obsession with the 'dancing plague' or the time of day you're most active online—which is meant to accentuate the harmonies of your online behaviors. Unlike most dating apps, which charge monthly or annual fees for their paid tiers, there is only a one-time payment of €9 to sign up granting users unlimited matches; a free option limits users to five matches. Depoorter says he doesn't want to exploit users by having them pay on a recurring basis. When I suggest that that kind of pay model is mostly unheard of today, he pushes back. 'I'm an artist, I like to do things differently.' Early reviews and reactions have been mixed. 'Super weird,' one app developer noted on X. 'This is the wildest idea,' said another user on Product Hunt. 'I love the audacity.' 'Good to see the privacy focus from the start given how sensitive some of this data might be,' a programmer posted on Bluesky. The biggest concern for users—justifiably so—is around privacy and user safety, and given the amount of personal data the Depoorter is asking people to fork over, those issues are also on his mind. The site scans up to 5,000 recent browser searches or goes back as far as search history is stored, which could be several years, but never exceeds the maximum number of entries. (Browsing data from Incognito mode sessions cannot be uploaded). Depoorter uses Firebase, Google's open-source tool for developing AI apps, to store and manage data. 'It's not exposed to the internet.' Depoorter says of the AI processing, which he says happens locally. 'I don't want to expose any browser history to another company.' Already there have been complaints of lagging email verification and the site not allowing users to delete their profile; Depoorter says he has since fixed these issues. Browser Dating doesn't currently allow for the uploading of photos, but Depoorter is working to change that, and says he plans to implement more features in the coming months, including an app for easier communication between connections and a recommendation feature that suggest possible first date locations. The idea originally came to Depoorter in 2016 at V2, an experimental art and tech center in Rotterdam. He was hosting a workshop that explored unique connections between attendees who were familiar with his work and who agreed to share a year's worth of their search history. The nature of Depoorter's art as a digital provocateur has sought to interrogate the subtext of hidden connections, taking a 'critical and humorous' approach to some of the most urgent questions of his generation. Surveillance, AI, machine learning, and social media are recurring themes across his explorations. 'Difficult subjects,' he says when we speak over Zoom. 'But there is no big message. I want to leave that open. If anything, I want to show what is possible with technology in a playful way.' In 2018, in a series titled 'Jaywalking,' he turned live surveillance feeds into video art, forcing viewers to confront the use of public data as a means of privacy invasion. He followed that with Die With Me, a chatroom app that could only be accessed when your phone had less than 5 percent battery life; though Depoorter is quick to reject definitive interpretations of his art, it read as a comment on the value of time and how we choose to use it when one knows it's running short. For those who can look beyond the shock of Brower Dating's initial conceit, the question is also an urgent one: What if the curiosities we try so hard to conceal are actually the things that can bring us together? Depoorter, 34, doesn't claim to be any kind of dating guru. 'I'm not a specialist,' he tells me. He surfed Tinder in the app's early days but has been with his partner for 10 years. He promises that despite his work as an artist, the site is not a gimmick, and he wants to continue to scale. Already people have suggested that it might work better for matching potential friends rather than romantic partners. Depoorter anticipates there will be hurdles but doesn't sugarcoat them; he is aware of just how difficult it may be to onboard users hesitant to share their personal anxieties and desires. 'Either people are fans of the idea or they are not,' he says. 'There is no convincing them.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store