True evil transcends death. The Grabber seeks vengeance in Black Phone 2, starring Ethan Hawke and Mason Thames. Catch it in Philippine cinemas on October 15.
In 2022, The Black Phone terrified audiences worldwide and introduced a chilling new villain to the horror genre, the Grabber, played with bone-chilling menace by Ethan Hawke. Directed by Scott Derrickson, the film became a critical and commercial success, resonating with viewers on a personal and emotional level.
“It was extremely rewarding to see audiences embrace the film the way they did, specifically because so much of it came directly from my own childhood,” Derrickson shares. “As an artist, seeing those personal feelings and memories connect with so many people, especially young people, added a sense of purpose to the darker memories of my childhood.”

With its popularity surging even after release, especially among teens who discovered it on streaming and reimagined its terrifying moments on TikTok and memes, calls for a sequel were inevitable. Derrickson and longtime collaborator C. Robert Cargill returned to pen Black Phone 2, once again weaving in fragments of their own childhoods from the 1970s and 1980s to ground the horror in raw, emotional truth.
The sequel reunites audiences with siblings Finn (Mason Thames) and Gwen (Madeleine McGraw), who survived the Grabber’s clutches. Four years later, Gwen begins receiving eerie calls from a black phone in her dreams, visions of three boys being stalked in a winter camp. When the siblings investigate, they discover that death has only made the Grabber more powerful and more relentless.
At its core, Black Phone 2 continues exploring themes of trauma, family, and survival. “One of the core themes of The Black Phone was the idea of children carrying the sins of their father, and that continues here,” Cargill says. “Finn is coping in the same ways his father once did, falling into the same patterns. We wanted to explore how trauma echoes through families and whether that cycle can be broken.”
For producer Jason Blum, the sequel is both terrifying and meaningful. “The script for Black Phone 2 reminded me what an incredible foundation Joe Hill’s story gave us, and how brilliantly Scott and Cargill have built on it,” Blum says. “They have deepened the mythology while keeping the intimacy of the first film, balancing horror, emotion and character in a way that feels real. That is what makes great horror, it has to matter, it has to connect, and they have delivered that again here.”
With Derrickson, Cargill, Blum, and the returning cast, Black Phone 2 promises to deliver not just jump scares but a chilling, emotionally charged story that lingers long after the credits roll.
Evil returns as Black Phone 2 arrives in Philippine cinemas on October 15.

