The Mummy (2026) Trailer Analysis: Ancient Gods, Ritual Horror, and a Corrupted Afterlife

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy (2026) teaser hints at ritual horror, corrupted afterlife myths, and an unsettling procedural mystery rooted in Ancient Egyptian belief. This isn’t a nostalgic revival, but a darker reckoning with gods, death, and what should stay buried.

Lee Cronin's The Mummy (2026)After watching the teaser trailer for Lee Cronin’s The Mummy (2026) several times, there’s enough on screen to start forming a clearer theory beyond what’s been officially published. I’ve deliberately avoided forums and fan speculation, so this read comes purely from what the trailer itself is offering.

I’ve always had a soft spot for The Mummy as a concept. Even in its earliest versions, including the Hammer era, it functioned as a love story filtered through horror. That emotional spine gave the zombie myth a strange elegance. Stephen Sommers later pushed the material into camp and spectacle, turning it into pulp adventure. This new iteration appears to reject both approaches entirely. Sitting outside Universal’s legacy plans, it feels safe to assume Blumhouse has given Cronin the freedom to rebuild the myth from the ground up.

Continue reading “The Mummy (2026) Trailer Analysis: Ancient Gods, Ritual Horror, and a Corrupted Afterlife”

Sing Street is Not About Getting the Girl

sing-street-posterBy Ed Sum (The Vintage Tempest)

Sing Street is a wholesome and fun coming of age film where new student Conor Lalor (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) needs to form a band so he can win the heart of Raphina (Lucy Boynton). This girl hangs out in front of a boarding home, waiting for a knight in shining armour to take her away, and who she’s dating now is hardly Lancelot.

Unlike musicals which I’ve come to adore in the past, namely Little Shop of Horrors about a nerd aspiring for success (and to win at love), and Grease about 50’s style romance, this tale explores the new wave post-punk sound which emerged mid-80’s. To explore the economic difficulties of the era, the story takes place in Dublin, Ireland.

Continue reading “Sing Street is Not About Getting the Girl”