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Ryan Coogler & the Cast of Sinners Just Gave Horror Fans Everything They Needed to Hear

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In case you’ve been living under a rock, Sinners is not just a film anymore. With a record-breaking 16 Oscar nominations and sold-out screenings that sparked genuine online history lessons about the Jim Crow South, Ryan Coogler‘s blues-soaked vampire film has become the conversation in cinema right now. And Deadline just sat down with the whole crew โ€” Coogler,Michael B. Jordan, Wunmi Mosaku, and Delroy Lindo โ€” for the kind of in-depth interview that horror fans specifically need to be reading.

Because here’s the thing, a lot of the coverage around Sinners has leaned into the history, the music, the awards sweep. All deserved. But we’re here for the vampires, the hoodoo priestess, the Devil in a stolen body, and what it actually felt like to build that supernatural world from the inside out. So let’s get into it.


The Villain Is the Devil. In an Irishman. And That Was Always the Plan.

Sinners

For the uninitiated, the big bad of Sinners is the Devil himself, possessing an Irish rogue played by Jack O’Connell, hunting after the gifted young musician Sammie (Miles Caton). It’s a premise that sounds chaotic on paper and lands like a gut punch on screen. The supernatural threat isn’t incidental to the story, it’s woven into the mythology of the blues itself, that old crossroads deal made flesh.

Coogler describes the film’s approach to genre as instinctive rather than calculated. When asked what defines the magic of Sinners, he didn’t talk about category or concept. He pointed straight at the people around him:

“The magic of the film is my incredible cast. Getting all these talented people together, they are very lovely to be around, they’ve got different rhythms and they complement really well.”

That sounds like a deflection until you realize he means it literally. The supernatural elements of Sinners work because the human ones do first. That’s a lesson a lot of horror filmmakers could stand to learn.


Wunmi Mosaku as Annie: The Hoodoo Priestess Who Steals Every Scene She’s In

If you’ve seen Sinners, you know Annie is the one you don’t mess with. She’s a hoodoo priestess with a gun and a complicated history with Smoke (Jordan), and Mosaku plays her with the kind of quiet intensity that makes every scene feel like it could detonate at any moment.

What’s fascinating is how Mosaku and Jordan built that lived-in history from scratch. They did it with music, shared playlists, songs that captured where their characters were emotionally. And with a willingness to get genuinely vulnerable with each other. Jordan described the trust that had to be built before the relationship could breathe on screen:

“It was a lot of vulnerability. I think it was understanding that this movie is Ryan, and it’s coming from him. And knowing him for such a long time and understanding that I am a vessel for a lot of his expression. And I want to always honor that and understand where those things are coming from, so I can bury them into the character as seamless as I can.”

There’s a specific scene Mosaku highlighted that gives you a window into how that supernatural world was built beat by beat. After Stack’s death, Smoke is in shock, and Annie comes to him. Mosaku sat beside Jordan, held his hand, and then they talked afterward about the fact that they’d both been holding back out of mutual over-respect for each other’s process. The conversation unlocked something:

“It was really like, oh, actually me and Michael now know each other well enough and trust each other well enough… to know that there is no wrong answer now. That there’s just a free rein to be creative and express what we are truly feeling.”

For a film where the supernatural is always pressing against the edges of every scene, that kind of actorly freedom isn’t just nice to have,  it’s what makes the horror feel real.


The Garlic Scene: Where Comedy and Vampire Lore Collide Beautifully

Here’s the behind-the-scenes story you didn’t know you needed.

There’s a scene in Sinners where the characters eat garlic in a circle. A vampire defense measure, for those keeping track at home. On set, the “garlic” was actually white chocolate carved to look like cloves. Giant white chocolate cloves. That everyone had to convincingly eat.

Jordan, who was wearing gold fronts and could barely chew, described the chaos:

“I got gold fronts in and sh-t, so I can’t really eat with them in, and I’m chilling and I’m like, ‘I don’t know how the fu-k this is going to work out. I can’t even talk at this moment.'”

But it gets better. Lindo, playing Delta Slim, apparently became the unofficial chocolate ration officer:

“He started rationing the chocolate out to everybody. It was a whole exercise.”

And Coogler caught him fake-eating and quietly let it ride. Because as he explained, the ambiguity of whether Delta Slim was actually eating the garlic ended up serving the film’s central question of who among them might actually be a vampire. The chaos became craft. Jordan put it perfectly:

“It played to the whole suspicion of who was a vampire, who wasn’t, and stuff. So yeah, that just worked out a lot better than I thought it was.”


Delroy Lindo, Delta Slim, and the Sacred Horror of the Blues

Lindo’s Delta Slim is one of the most quietly devastating characters in recent horror-adjacent cinema. A veteran blues musician navigating the line between the sacred and the profane in a world where that line has teeth. To prepare, Lindo immersed himself in the actual musicians of that era: Son House, Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Ike Turner.

What he found wasn’t just musical research. It was a spiritual framework that fed directly into the supernatural world of the film:

“With a musician like Son House, really interesting because he was navigating throughout his life the relationship between the sacred and the profane. And that just resonated for me.”

The blues and horror have always been siblings, of course. Both are about confronting what lives in the dark. The crossroads deal, the Devil’s bargain, the thing that follows you home, these aren’t modern horror inventions. They’re baked into the mythology Coogler was working with. Lindo understood that instinctively, and it shows.

He also spoke about his relationship with Coogler as a director in terms that every horror fan should appreciate:

“One of the strengths, one of the things that I most appreciate about Ryan is the generosity of spirit, which gives to each and every one of his colleagues agency, we can talk to him.”

A director who listens. On a horror set. Revolutionary.


The Chain Gang Scene: The Moment the Film Became Something Else

For pure horror fans, the chain gang scene is one of the moments where Sinners becomes something genuinely difficult to categorize. Mosaku described watching it back as a kind of shock. The blues rising out of the scene in a way she couldn’t quite remember being in the script:

“I was like, ‘Wow, was that in the script? I don’t remember that being in the script.’ And just being completely in awe of their openness and their flexibility and their reception to the emotion that was being built up in the scene and Ryan not calling ‘Cut’ at the end of the monologue. It just took me by surprise.”

Ryan not calling cut. That’s the horror filmmaker instinct, right there. Knowing that the most unsettling thing you can do is let a moment breathe past where everyone expects it to stop.

She also pointed to a small change Coogler made in another scene that cracked the film open: switching a line from “Why are you here, Smoke?” to “Elijah, why are you here?” . Using the character’s real name instead of his street name:

“That was like, again, I thought it was a perfect script, a perfect scene, but then just calling him by his name broke the whole scene open to something else.”

In horror, that kind of small detail ,the real name, the true name, carries weight. It’s the difference between a mask and a face.


What Sinners Actually Is, and Why Horror Fans Need to Claim It

Coogler describes cinema as a quilt. Every filmmaker adding their square in conversation with those who came before. He name-checks Jordan Peele as an inspiration, alongside Spike Lee, Ava DuVernay, and Barry Jenkins. That’s not accidental. Sinners sits in a tradition of Black filmmakers using genre to excavate something true about American history.

When asked what he’d like to make next, Coogler’s answer was simple: all of it. Every genre. He’s not a horror director. He’s not a superhero director. He’s a filmmaker who follows the story wherever it goes, including into the dark.

And right now, the dark is where his best work lives.


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[Exclusive Clip] ‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

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Audiences are invited to explore one of Vermontโ€™s most mysterious regions inย From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle, arriving later this month on streaming platforms and DVD.

‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

The documentary will debut on April 28, 2026, on platforms including Apple TV, Prime Video, and Google Play. DVD editions will be available exclusively through the Small Town Monsters online shop.

‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

Directed by Seth Breedlove, the film continues the companyโ€™s exploration of folklore, cryptids, and unexplained phenomena. Breedloveโ€™s previous work includes The Mothman of Point Pleasant, On the Trail of Bigfoot, American Werewolves, and more than two dozen feature-length productions. In total, Small Town Monsters has released more than thirty films, along with investigative programs, web series, books, podcasts, and exclusive membership content.

‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle was made possible through the support of backers from the companyโ€™s 2025 Kickstarter campaign.

Set in rural Vermont, the documentary examines the legend of the Bennington Triangle, an area associated with reports of UFOs, ghosts, phantom lights, mysterious creatures, and a series of unexplained disappearances. At the center of the mystery is Glastenbury Mountain, where decades of unanswered questions continue to inspire speculation.

‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

Going beyond folklore and campfire tales, the film asks a chilling question: Why is Glastenbury Mountain so inexplicable, and what happened to those who went missing?

‘From the Beyond: High Strangeness in the Bennington Triangle’

Check out our exclusive clip below. 

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This Week in Horror: DC Goes Full Body Horror, A24 Has Its Chainsaw Man, and The Bone Temple Is Finally Yours

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Good week. The Clayface trailer dropped and made DC relevant to this website for the first time in a while, A24 put a director on the Texas Chainsaw Massacre reimagining, and we got some interviews worth reading. Here is all of it.

Clayface Has a Trailer, and It Is Exactly What You Want

The Clayface trailer landed Wednesday, and it is DCโ€™s first real horror film. Not horror adjacent. Not dark. Horror. Tom Rhys Harries plays Matt Hagen, an actor whose face gets disfigured by a gangster. He turns to a scientist, played by Naomi Ackie, who transforms his body into clay. Then the body horror starts.

James Watkins directed, which is the right choice. He made Speak No Evil and before that The Woman in Black, and he understands how to make dread feel physical. The screenplay is by Mike Flanagan and Hossein Amini. That combination should tell you everything about the tone they are going for.

A24 Has a Director for Texas Chainsaw Massacre and His Last Film Cost Under a Million Dollars

Texas

Deadline confirmed that Curry Barker is writing and directing A24โ€™s reimagining of the 1974 original. Barker made Obsession for under a million dollars. Focus Features paid north of fifteen million to distribute it. It sits at 96% on Rotten Tomatoes. A24 hired him before it even opens, which opens May 15.

Kim Henkel, who co-created the original with Tobe Hooper, is executive producing his own creationโ€™s reimagining. That is either a blessing or a haunting. Probably both.

Astrolatry Is Going to Cannes and We Talked to the Actor Who Faced the Creature

Astrolatry is heading to the Frontiรจres Buyers Showcase on May 16-17. The film has a sentient severed penis that grows into a ten-foot practical creature with spiky teeth. We interviewed star Ethan Daniel Corbett about what it was actually like to act against it. Short answer: genuinely terrifying. Long answer is on the site.

The Bone Temple Is Home

28 years later: Bone temple

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple hit 4K UHD, Blu-ray, and DVD on Tuesday. If you held out from the digital release in February, now is the time. The 4K presentation is supposed to be great. Extras include audio commentary and a deleted scene. If your gonna watch The Bone Temple, why not watch it where the snacks are better.

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Astrolatry Built a Ten-Foot Practical Penis Scorpion

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A sentient severed penis grows into a ten-foot creature with spiky teeth. Genre cinema is doing fine.

Astrolatry follows Elliot, played by Ethan Daniel Corbett, who is every ingredient for quiet catastrophe assembled in one man. Socially isolated. Physically isolated. Craving dopamine and finding it in the wrong places. The romance guru pipeline, followed to its logical conclusion. Elliot does not just spiral. He loses a piece of himself, literally, and that piece does not cooperate.

Corbett described it as โ€œa horror satire, a trippy mind-fuck roller coasterโ€ and โ€œa modern retelling of Maniac,โ€ both of which are accurate and neither of which adequately prepares you. Director David Gordon is making his feature debut after shooting 14 films as a cinematographer and he is swinging for the fences.

The Creature

The effects company behind the creature has festival circuit work Corbett had already seen before signing on. He knew what they could do but he was not ready. โ€œWhen I saw it in person it was kind of mind-blowing,โ€ he said. โ€œEverything that you see in this movie is practical. Very, very little else. It was genuinely terrifying to have a ten-foot creature coming at you with a big mouth and spiky teeth.โ€

A CG creature asks an actor to imagine something. A ten-foot physical creature on a set asks nothing. It just arrives. The fear on Corbettโ€™s face in those scenes is not a performance. It is the normal reaction to a scorpion dick with sharp teeth.

Elliot

Corbett went into the character through the body. โ€œI mainly focus on the physicality of it. Who this character is and who he is wholly. I strive in those kinds of moments as an actor.โ€

Gordon was explicit about the concept, the โ€œnice guyโ€ archetype and the overtly toxic one are the same problem, both aimed at the same object. That reading lands because Corbett does not play it as a reading. Elliot is not a symbol. He is a person.

Where It Is Going

Astrolatry is heading to the Frontiรจres Buyers Showcase at Cannes on May 16-17. โ€œTo be able to get into that kind of room on Davidโ€™s first feature is incredible,โ€ Corbett said. โ€œTo be in front of buyers and to showcase the film and potentially get distribution through that.โ€ Frontiรจres is the correct room. It is full of people who understand that the most extreme premise, executed with precision, is not a punchline. It is an argument.

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