This article contains spoilers for Five Nights at Freddy’s.
Recommended Videos Five Nights at Freddy’s has been taking a critical bashing since it premiered on Oct. 27, but one thing that viewers all agree on is that it’s jam-packed with a ton of lore and game references. However, considering the movie is PG-13, I didn’t expect any over-the-top gory death scenes.
That doesn’t mean they weren’t enjoyable to watch, though! Here’s a look at all the characters who die in the Five Nights at Freddy’s movie, in order.
No matter how much the horror movies of today have diverted from the quintessential tropes of the past by altering the manner of addressing disturbing themes, jump scares will always reign as a fear-inducing element of the genre.
Recommended Videos After all, who wouldn’t steer their eyes away from the screen with utter rapidity when larger-than-iconic villains such as Ghostface, Leatherface, or Michael Myers emerge from the darkest corners of the room to mete out the most gruesome death to their victims?
Everyone has that one friend that they’ve known forever but don’t see very often, and while the bond remains, there’s absolutely no way under any circumstances they’d ever consider letting them live under the same roof. That’s the basic premise of director Xavier Manrique’s Who Invited Charlie? in a nutshell, albeit with a COVID-tinged twist.
Recommended Videos Adam Pally stars as the title character, who after a serendipitous run-in with Reid Scott’s self-centered hedge fund manager Phil, ends up showing up announced at his family home in the Hamptons, where Phil has fled from the city with his wife Rosie (Jordana Brewster) and son Max (Peter Dager) to escape the onset of the pandemic during the height of the first wave in March 2020.
Recommended Videos It was a lot of fun talking with Chris Lowell and Rose McIver earlier this week, who were in Los Angeles to promote their latest film Brightest Star. Co-written and directed by Maggie Kiley, Lowell stars as The Boy (we never learn his real name) who, as the film begins, has just been dumped by the love of his life, Charlotte (played by McIver). The story goes back and forth in time as we see how these two became patiently entwined while in college and what later led them to split up.
We live in a word where horror franchises comfortably run into double digits, an entire Transformers trilogy is on the way after six previous films of wildly varying quality, and Terminator got rebooted three times in a decade to no avail. As haunting as that is on its own, it also makes it even more frustrating for fans who invested in the opening chapter of a would-be series that ended up being placed on the chopping block before its time.