When The Black Phone hit theaters, it delivered a chilling, grounded horror experience that resonated deeply with audiences. Based on Joe Hill’s haunting short story, the film, directed by Scott Derrickson and penned by C. Robert Cargill, introduced us to Finney Blake (Mason Thames), a young boy abducted by the terrifying Grabber (Ethan Hawke). Trapped in a soundproof room with only a disconnected black phone, Finney found an unexpected lifeline in the voices of the Grabber’s past victims, and guidance from his psychically gifted younger sister, Gwen (Madeleine McGraw). Against all odds, Finney escaped and dispatched his tormentor, emerging not just physically free, but seemingly free from the bullies who once plagued his life, earning a newfound respect. Talk about a glow-up! The story ended on such a cathartic, triumphant note, with Finney not just surviving but thriving. It felt… complete.
It felt like a closed chapter, a harrowing tale with a definitive, if hard-won, end. Most of us walked out thinking, “Well, that’s that, then.” So, the news of a sequel, Black Phone 2: A Sequel I Never Thought Would Happen, comes as a genuine shock – a sequel I truly never thought would happen. Especially since, well, the Grabber is dead. You’d think that would be the end of his little magic act.
Fast forward to the present, and Finney is now 17, seemingly living a normal, post-traumatic but stable life. Good for him, though I’m sure his therapy bills are through the roof. But as horror fans know, evil rarely stays buried for long. Derrickson and Cargill revisit their dark universe, but this time, the terror takes a decidedly more supernatural turn.
While the first film deftly blended supernatural elements with a very real, visceral threat, Black Phone 2 appears to lean heavily into the paranormal. The Grabber, despite his chilling preference for targeting young boys (a very specific, and frankly, rude, niche), seems to have found a new, spectral way to haunt. His target this time around is Finney’s sister, Gwen. This shift makes perfect, terrifying sense: Gwen’s psychic visions were instrumental in the Grabber’s downfall, and it appears he’s seeking a very personal, posthumous revenge. Guess he didn’t appreciate being outsmarted by a couple of kids and some dead boys. This raises chilling questions: Is the Grabber’s spirit manifesting through the black phone, or a new conduit of fear? And how will Gwen, whose unique abilities once saved her brother, contend with a malevolent entity that transcends the physical realm and is singularly focused on her? Maybe she can just hang up on him this time.
Black Phone 2: A Sequel I Never Thought Would Happen promises to plunge audiences even deeper into the chilling consequences of the Grabber’s reign, exploring the lasting trauma he inflicted, even from beyond the grave. Prepare yourselves for a terrifying escalation, as Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill once again push the boundaries of fear.
Black Phone 2 is coming to theaters on October 17, 2025. Get ready to pick up the phone again, because it sounds like the Grabber’s still got a bone to pick – literally, probably.