A24 Announces 'Y2K' Disaster Comedy Movie
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A24 Announces ‘Y2K’ Disaster Comedy With Wētā Workshop Practical Effects

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Jaeden Martell Mr. Harrigan's Phone

Hot on the heels of Everything Everywhere All At Once‘s Oscar wins, A24 may be dipping back into the genre-bender well once more with disaster comedy Y2K.

Y2K hails from actor/comedian/writer and former “Saturday Night Live “cast member Kyle Mooney, who will direct from a screenplay co-written with producer Evan Winter.

In the film, “It’s New Year’s Eve 1999. Two high school nobodies decide to crash the last big party before the new millennium. When the clock strikes midnight, the night gets more insane than they ever could have imagined.”

It’s that intriguing premise and Wētā Workshop handling Y2K’s design and practical effects that hints toward a wilder genre-bender than expected for this disaster comedy. How insane will this high school comedy get?

Jaeden Martell (It, Mr. Harrigan’s Phone) and Julian Dennison (Deadpool 2) star as the high school friends. Y2K also stars Rachel Zegler (West Side Story), Lachlan Watson (“Chucky,” “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina”), Mason Gooding (Scream 2022, Scream VI), The Kid Laroi, Tim Heidecker (Us), Eduardo Franco (“Stranger Things”), Miles Robbins (Daniel Isn’t Real, Halloween 2018), Alicia Silverstone (The Killing of a Sacred Deer, The Lodge), Fred Hechinger (Fear Street), and Daniel Zolghadri (Funny Pages).

A24 will produce alongside Matt Dines, Ali Goodwin and Jonah Hill (Mid90s) of Strong Baby and Chris Storer (“The Bear”) of American Light & Fixture. A24 will finance and handle worldwide releasing.

Stay tuned for more on Y2K.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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Five Home Invasion Horror Movies to Stream This Week

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Door 1988 - home invasion horror

There’s a reason that home invasion horror films like The StrangersThemThe PurgeHushDon’t BreatheFunny Games, and more rank highly among horror fans. The very concept of your private sanctuary getting corrupted and invaded by an unhinged intruder who means you grave harm is inherently terrifying. The realistic thrills of home invasion films can offer some of the most intense horror, and some of the biggest surprises when the formula is subverted.

This week’s streaming picks are dedicated to home invasion horror movies that unleash suspense, chills, violence, and stalker thrills. Here’s where you can stream them this week.

For more Stay Home, Watch Horror picks, click here.


Angst – Kanopy, Midnight Pulp, Mubi, Tubi

Angst

An unconventional, stylized Austrian horror movie that largely influenced Gaspar Noe’s work, Angst follows a psychopath as he’s released from prison and eager to commit crime again. After a botched murder attempt, the psychopath flees to a large house, and proceeds to torture and murder the three family members that live there. The psychopath is based on Werner Kniesek, a killer who brutally slaughtered a family of three while on parole. Director Gerald Kargl may have taken a stylized approach, but it’s an unpleasant, creepy watch that makes for one of the more extreme entries in home invasion horror.


Door – SCREAMBOX

Door 1988

Director Banmei Takahashi’s home invasion horror begins in simple, familiar fashion. A beleaguered housewife, Yasuko (Keiko Takahashi), spends her days trying to keep her home tidy while looking after her son and husband. She has no time for the salesman that’s insistent upon making a sale, leading to an encounter that leaves the salesman with a massive grudge. Then the creepy phone calls and stalker behavior ensue. While Door offers all of the intense cat-and-mouse sequences and stalker chills of home invasion horror, Banmei Takahashi escalates the horror to insane levels of madness and bloodletting. Come for the home invasion horror and stay for one of the most insane finales ever. This obscure gem deserves more love for its commitment to subverting some archetypical tropes via gonzo, gory chaos.


Sleep Tight – freevee, Kanopy, Peacock, SCREAMBOX, Tubi

Sleep Tight Home Invasion Horror

Jaume Balaguero’s Sleep Tight gets under your skin, especially if you live alone. Luis Tosar is one of horror’s most underrated and scariest villains as apartment concierge, Cesar. He’s miserable, and all he wants is for everyone around him to be discontent too. He revels in making the tenants’ lives hell, and they’re typically easy to agitate. But the unflappable Clara, with her sunny outlook, becomes the object of Cesar’s fixation in his fervent desire to induce a mental breakdown in her. It means consistently breaking into her apartment – often with her there at night, sleeping peacefully in her bed – to find new ways to inflict suffering without her being aware. It’s bleak, disturbing, and one of the most uncomfortable viewing experiences ever.


Wait Until Dark – Tubi

Wait Until Dark home invasion

Audrey Hepburn stars as a blind woman whose home is invaded by a trio of criminals seeking their lost heroin stash. Originating from a stage play, the film was one of the most popular during its release in 1967 and earned Hepburn an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Wait Until Dark may not be anywhere close to the level of intensity and brutality that we’re accustomed to now in the subgenre, but it’s a foundational classic that many have borrowed from since. Hepburn makes for a winsome lead that has no trouble earning rooting interest, but it’s the suspenseful atmosphere that sets this apart. It culminates in one of horror’s greatest jump scares of all time. If you’d like to make it a double feature with a similarly themed home invasion horror, check out See For Me on Hulu or Shudder.


When a Stranger Calls Back – freevee, Pluto TV, Tubi

When a Stranger Calls Back

One of the earliest examples of a sequel far superior to its predecessor, this under-seen cable movie delivers severe tension starting with one of horror’s best openings of all time. Jill Schoelen (The StepfatherCutting Class) stars as this outing’s babysitter, the target of an unseen stranger when left to care for two sleeping kids. While the first film delivered the iconic “The calls are coming from inside the house” trope, this sequel goes to surprising and frightening places, often involving home invasion. When a Stranger Calls Back offers up one of the most eccentric killers of the decade, and that’s saying a lot. More importantly, the opening sequence alone earns this film’s spot among some of the scariest home invasions that horror has to offer.

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