Sinners is a breathtakingly terrifying ode to Black mythology

Horror movies centering Black characters are not a new phenomenon, but the genre’s resurgence in recent years has ushered in a fresh wave of ambitious and occasionally phenomenal features that spin the United States’ legacy of racism into captivating, supernatural tales. Sinners, writer / director Ryan Coogler’s latest project, feels very much like a product […]

Apr 17, 2025 - 16:18
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Sinners is a breathtakingly terrifying ode to Black mythology
A man wearing an a-shirt and belts around his shoulders. Behind the man are two women in dresses holding weapons and looking on in terror.

Horror movies centering Black characters are not a new phenomenon, but the genre’s resurgence in recent years has ushered in a fresh wave of ambitious and occasionally phenomenal features that spin the United States’ legacy of racism into captivating, supernatural tales. Sinners, writer / director Ryan Coogler’s latest project, feels very much like a product of this recent era in the way it pulls from and remixes classic vampire canon to tell a powerful story about life for Black Americans in the South at a time when the country’s promise of their freedom was not guaranteed.

Sinners reads as a deeply personal narrative that’s been gestating within Coogler’s mind for years, and the film shifts between being scary, stylish, and sexy in ways meant to leave you in awe of how magical movies on the big screen can feel. And while the movie doesn’t exactly reinvent the bloodsucker genre, it pours a captivating and beautiful energy into it that makes this feel like Coogler working near the height of his still-growing creative powers.

Everyone is guilty of at least a little heathenry in Sinners, but there are few people with reputations as tarnished as twins Elijah / “Smok …

Read the full story at The Verge.