Until Dawn (2025) - JoBlo https://www.joblo.com/tag/until-dawn-2025/ The JoBlo Movie Network features the latest movie news, trailers, and more. Updated daily. Fri, 25 Apr 2025 21:17:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 David F. Sandberg didn’t want to do another IP-based movie due to getting death threats after Shazam! Fury of the Gods https://www.joblo.com/shazam-fury-of-the-gods-death-threats/ https://www.joblo.com/shazam-fury-of-the-gods-death-threats/#respond Fri, 25 Apr 2025 21:17:16 +0000 https://www.joblo.com/?p=837873 David F. Sandberg got death threats after Shazam! Fury of the Gods and swore off IP-based movies... until he got the script for Until Dawn.

The post David F. Sandberg didn’t want to do another IP-based movie due to getting death threats after Shazam! Fury of the Gods appeared first on JoBlo.

]]>
After the release of Shazam! Fury of the Gods, director David F. Sandberg was ready to swear off any further IP-based projects, telling GamesRadar+ that he actually received death threats from fans over the movie.

I mean, to be honest, fans can get very, very crazy and very angry with you,” Sandberg said. “You can get, like, death threats and everything so after Shazam 2, I was like, ‘I never wanna do another IP-based movie because it’s just not worth it.’” The director was prepared to follow until he was sent the script for Until Dawn. “I was like, ‘Ah, this would be so much fun to do, to do all these kinds of horrors? I kind of have to do it, and hope that the people see what we’re trying to do and like it,’” he said. “I really thought it was brilliant of the writers to come up with this time loop idea where the night starts over because then you do kind of get that feel of the game, when you’re replaying it and making different choices. I think it’s very much in the spirit of the game.

It’s safe to say that Shazam! Fury of the Gods was not well received. The film grossed just $134 million worldwide, making it a box-office bomb. Reviews were mixed, with many saying the sequel was inferior to its predecessor. That said, death threats are never the answer.

Sandberg’s latest film, Until Dawn, is an adaptation of the 2015 video game developed by Supermassive Games and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. “One year after her sister Melanie mysteriously disappeared, Clover and her friends head into the remote valley where she vanished in search of answers,” reads the official synopsis. “They find themselves horrifically murdered, only to wake up and find themselves back at the beginning. Trapped in an endless time loop, they’re forced to relive the nightmare again – only each time, the killer is different, each more terrifying than the last, and the only way to escape is to survive until dawn.

Until Dawn is now playing in theaters, but our own Tyler Nichols was mixed on the film. “Overall, I didn’t hate my time with Until Dawn, I just found it was an all-too-familiar journey,” he wrote in his review. “One moment it felt like they were picking apart tropes and the genre, and the other times it felt like it was perfectly in line and stereotypical. If you’re going to break down the genre, then you need characters and story beats that actually subvert the norm.” You can check out the rest of his review right here.

The post David F. Sandberg didn’t want to do another IP-based movie due to getting death threats after Shazam! Fury of the Gods appeared first on JoBlo.

]]>
https://www.joblo.com/shazam-fury-of-the-gods-death-threats/feed/ 0 https://www.joblo.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/shazam-fury-of-the-dogs-death-threats-david-f-sandberg.jpg
Until Dawn Review: Does This Video Game Adaptation Work? https://www.joblo.com/until-dawn-review/ https://www.joblo.com/until-dawn-review/#respond Fri, 25 Apr 2025 13:01:18 +0000 https://www.joblo.com/?p=837687 We take a look at David F. Sandberg’s much anticipated adaptation of the hit video game, Until Dawn.

The post Until Dawn Review: Does This Video Game Adaptation Work? appeared first on JoBlo.

]]>
Until Dawn review

PLOT: A group of friends trapped in a time loop, where mysterious foes are chasing and killing them in gruesome ways, must survive until dawn to escape it.

REVIEW: It’s always going to be a controversial decision when you adapt a video game and then decide to not follow its story. But if any adaptation was going to do it, the game where you make different decisions to try and survive a slasher, with varying outcomes, seems like the place to start. After all, everyone has a unique game experience so you’re going to piss off some sect of fans by following a certain throughline. Until Dawn gets rid of that issue by introducing an entirely new story, yet still carries plenty of connections with the game. The real question is… does it work?

Until Dawn follows Clover (what a name) and her friends as they’re out looking for her missing sister. It’s pretty stereotypical, but that seems to be what the movie is going for. Once at her sister’s last known location, they find themselves in a time loop, where they die to various horrific villains over and over. We also get an appearance from Peter Stormare, the only actor who actually reprises his role from the game. I was a little skeptical of his inclusion at first, but he’s worked into the narrative seamlessly, and his role gets even better in retrospect.

Michael Cimino and Ella Rubin in Until Dawn (2025).

I know there was a certain sect of the game fandom that was upset about the diversion with the story, but I’ve always found that a bit silly. I’ve quite enjoyed my multiple playthroughs of the game, but I don’t need one with different actors. We’ve already seen that storyline done before, why would I want to see it again, only on a path that maybe I’m not a fan of? Instead, the filmmakers are able to tie it into the game in an interesting way, while still giving it enough room to breathe on its own. It just can feel a little stale at parts, as the time loop almost works against the narrative. While I would argue this probably fits in more with the Dark Pictures games, this could actually expand the Until Dawn series (which, despite its fervent fanbase, is still just the one game). Obviously, I won’t get into why, but the time loop aspect allows them to go back to this well, even in video game form if need be.

Ella Rubin does a decent job as Clover (and looks eerily like Dixie D’Amelio), but no one in the cast has much to work with. All of these characters are paper-thin, and it’s mostly the high concept that keeps the story moving forward. Ella has a sister that the group is for, and there are some basic dynamics between the friends. Outside of that, they keep the details to a minimum. But I found myself less rooting for the teens and more just wanting somebody to escape the loop. Oddly, I quite enjoyed Abe (Belmont Cameli) as his character ended up being more useful and pragmatic than we’d usually see from his type.

Belmont Cameli, Ji-Young Yoo, Ella Rubin and Odessa A'zion in Until Dawn (2025).

For a movie where a bunch of characters die over and over, I found myself a bit disappointed in the kills here. There are a couple that make an impact, but otherwise, they feel very generic. Don’t get me wrong, they’re all done well on a technical level, but given David F. Sandberg‘s experience in the genre, I was really expecting it to be a bit more over the top. Instead, far too many people are killed off-screen or where we’re just seeing the aftermath. Thankfully, there are some body explosions that were handled extremely well that almost made up for it. But when you’re dealing with this kind of concept, not giving us a massive kill montage feels like a missed opportunity.

Overall, I didn’t hate my time with Until Dawn, I just found it was an all-too-familiar journey. One moment it felt like they were picking apart tropes and the genre, and the other times it felt like it was perfectly in line and stereotypical. If you’re going to break down the genre, then you need characters and story beats that actually subvert the norm. Instead, we get bland characters that, appearance aside, are indistinguishable from one another, and a completely uninteresting story. I enjoyed the connections to the game, and the actors make the most of their vanilla characters. And hell, I’ll support any movie that give Peter Stormare a paycheck. The man is a national treasure.

UNTIL DAWN IS IN THEATERS ON APRIL 25TH, 2025.

David F. Sandberg, director of the video game horror film Until Dawn, digs into his approach to practical special FX in a new video
6

The post Until Dawn Review: Does This Video Game Adaptation Work? appeared first on JoBlo.

]]>
https://www.joblo.com/until-dawn-review/feed/ 0 MV5BZWU4NDY0ODktOGI3OC00NWE1LWIwYmQtNmJiZWU3NmZlMDhkXkEyXkFqcGc@._V1_ Opera Snapshot_2025-04-24_233903_www.imdb.com untildawnpic2 David F. Sandberg, director of the video game horror film Until Dawn, digs into his approach to practical special FX in a new video https://www.joblo.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/until-dawn-cast.jpg