Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Now Stalks Theaters

April 24, 2026

Written by Kelli Marchman McNeely

Kelli Marchman McNeely is the owner of HorrorFuel.com. She is an Executive Producer of "13 Slays Till Christmas" which is out on Digital and DVD and now streaming on Tubi. She has several other films in the works. Kelli is an animal lover and a true horror addict since the age of 9 when she saw Friday the 13th. Email: horrorfuelinfo@gmail.com

After making everyone in 2023 collectively vow to never look at a cheese grater the same way again, Evil Dead Rise director Lee Cronin is back to ruin a different set of childhood memories.

Having turned a $147 million profit on demonic family trauma, Cronin has been handed the keys to the tomb. His latest project, The Mummy, is officially haunting theaters now—and if you’re expecting a charming rogue in a linen shirt or a CGI Brendan Fraser, you’re looking in the wrong sarcophagus.

Unwrapping the New Nightmare

Revealed in late 2024 as a complete reimagining of the classic monster, Cronin’s take promises to be “unlike any Mummy movie you’ve ever laid eyeballs on.” Given his track record, those eyeballs will likely be lucky to stay in their sockets.

“I’m digging deep into the earth to raise something very ancient and very frightening,” Cronin teased. Translation: prepare for a lot of dirt, very little sleep, and zero slapstick.

The Cast of Casualties

The film centers on Jack Reynor as Charlie Cannon, a journalist who probably should have stuck to local politics. Laia Costa joins him as his wife, while Natalie Grace plays their missing daughter, Katie. Rounding out the family are Shylo Molina and Billie Roy.

The ensemble also features May Calamawy and Verónica Falcón in mystery roles—though in a Lee Cronin film, “mystery role” is usually code for “person who experiences something deeply unpleasant in a tight space.”

The Dream (Scream) Team

Cronin isn’t venturing into the crypt alone. He’s brought back the heavy hitters from Evil Dead Rise to ensure the atmosphere is suitably suffocating: David Garbett (Cinematography): The man who knows exactly how to make shadows look predatory. There’s Stephen McKeon (Composer), returning to provide the sonic equivalent of nails on a chalkboard. And Bryan Shaw (Editor), a franchise veteran whose credits include both the 2013 Evil Dead reboot and Ash vs. Evil Dead.

From Karloff to Carnage

The Mummy has been a staple of the Universal lineup since Boris Karloff first donned the bandages in 1932. The original run lasted until 1955, concluding with the slightly less terrifying Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy.

While the franchise has seen various reboots over the decades, Cronin’s version aims to strip away the adventure-pulp layers and return the character to its roots: a terrifying, ancient force that really, really doesn’t want to be disturbed.

The Mummy is in theaters now. Pack your own bandages.

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