Skip to main content

Go behind the screams of Smile in the horror film’s new video

A genuine smile can brighten your day. But you probably won’t see any of those life-affirming grins in Smile, an upcoming horror film from writer and director Parker Finn. Not even a dental hygienist could take pride in these twisted portents of doom. And as Finn explains in a new video featurette for the movie, the entity behind this curse uses smiles as a way to mask its intentions. Although given the clearly malevolent intent behind those expressions, it’s hard to argue that it’s an effective mask. It’s more like a non-verbal threat.

SMILE | Behind The Scenes Featurette (2022 Movie)

The video also introduces Sosie Bacon as the film’s lead character, Dr. Rose Cotter. She’s a therapist who treats a woman who is suffering from the delusion that something evil is out to get her. And it’s something that only she can see as a wicked smile in other people before it strikes. Soon enough, Rose learns that her now deceased patient may not have been crazy after all. Or perhaps her madness is simply infectious.

Recommended Videos

Because this is a horror story, we can reasonably assume that Rose has been cursed by some demonic entity. But to everyone else in Rose’s life, it looks like she has suffered a psychotic break. That ultimately endangers Rose because she has no one that she can truly turn to. No one believes her claims, and that’s why she may lose her life to this threat.

A creepy grin from Smile.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Boys‘ Jessie T. Usher co-stars in the film as Rose’s friend, Trevor. Kal Penn also appears as Dr. Morgan Desai, with Kyle Gallner as Joel, Caitlin Stasey as Laura, and Nick Arapoglou as Greg. The rest of the supporting cast includes Rob Morgan, Judy Reyes, Gillian Zinser, Kevin Keppy, Sara Kapner, and Jack Sochet.

Smile will be released only in theaters on September 30.

Blair Marnell
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
The most underrated horror sequel of this century is finally streaming again on Max
A group of people gather in Doctor Sleep.

In terms of traumatic childhoods, few movie characters have ever had it as bad as Danny Torrance. The young psychic child at the center of The Shining is not only relentlessly preyed upon one winter by the malevolent ghosts of a haunted hotel, but he and his mother are also nearly killed by his ax-wielding father. He experiences so many unimaginable horrors over the span of just a few months that one can't help but feel both relief and concern for him when The Shining ends.

Danny's traumatic time at the Overlook Hotel fittingly haunts writer-director Mike Flanagan's Shining sequel, Doctor Sleep. Based on the Stephen King novel of the same name, the film attempts to bring the story of Dan Torrance (played as an adult by Ewan McGregor) to a close. In doing so, it ends up telling a very different tale than its revered predecessor. If The Shining is about the dangers of alcoholism and male rage, then Doctor Sleep is about how children survive abuse in a world that seems intent on tamping them down and stealing their "shine."

Read more
5 most anticipated horror movies of fall 2024, ranked
A woman stares in the dark with a shadow over her face.

With the fall comes many annual traditions that many people love. Among the most important of those traditions is the idea of "spooky season," a time of year when Halloween is hotly anticipated and the movies on offer at the box office reflect that.

Horror movies are especially prevalent in the fall precisely because they can be timed around Halloween, which is when many people are most in the mood to be scared. We've pulled together a list of the five horror movies we're most eagerly anticipating this fall, including a few you may not have heard of yet.
5. Terrifier 3 (October 11)
TERRIFIER 3 | Official Trailer | Naughty Cut

Read more
35 years ago, this underrated sequel radically changed an iconic horror series
A nun stands in a church in A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child.

Horror sequels are typically pretty awful. There are exceptions, of course. Evil Dead 2 is more beloved than the first one, and both Halloween III: Season of the Witch and Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter have their devoted fans. But those films are exceptions to the rule. For every Evil Dead 2, there are hundreds of The Exorcist IIs.

In the A Nightmare on Elm Street series, the third entry, The Dream Warriors, is generally considered the best sequel. It delved into Freddy Krueger's origin, brought back original series star Heather Langenkamp, and featured a cast of rising actors that included then-unknowns Patricia Arquette and Laurence Fishburne.

Read more