The Blackening Online

In the standard slasher film, when a group of friends stumbles upon a dusty, locked box in a remote cabin, curiosity usually kills the cat. But in Tim Story’s The Blackening , when the ensemble opens that box, they don’t find a cursed diary or a rusty knife. They find a board game. A black board game. With one instruction: “Play or die.”

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In answering that question, The Blackening does more than survive the tropes of horror. It resurrects them, embarrasses them, and finally—joyfully—buries them. The Blackening

The film is unapologetically Black. You will miss half the jokes if you don't know the difference between "cracklin' cornbread" and "sweet cornbread," or why playing a Spades tournament is a matter of life and death. And that is the point. For too long, Black audiences have had to translate their experiences for a mainstream lens. The Blackening refuses to translate. It invites you in, but it will not slow down. In the standard slasher film, when a group

It is a movie that asks: What if the scariest thing in the woods isn’t the man with the mask, but the fear that your own friends might think you’re “not really Black”? A black board game