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‘Night of the Reaper’ Movie Review: A Smart, VHS-Soaked Slasher with Modern Bite

Opening with a shocker that channels Wes Craven’s Scream at its sharpest, Brandon Christensen’s (The Puppetman, Superhost) Night of the Reaper wastes no time signalling that it’s more than a nostalgia exercise. The story follows college student Deena (Jessica Clement), who returns home for what should be a quiet weekend only to be roped into a last-minute babysitting gig when her friend Haddie (Savannah Miller) falls ill. At the same time, the local sheriff (Ryan Robbins) receives a chilling package in the post — a cryptic piece of evidence that hints the town’s latest murder may not be an isolated act at all.

Christensen, working from a script co-written with his brother Ryan, leans into slow-burn pacing, carefully ratcheting up tension that rewards patience with a pay-off that’s clever, bloody, and subversive. The third-act twist deconstructs slasher tropes with affectionate nods to the genre’s history — a balancing act that feels both familiar yet fresh.

Visually, the film is drenched in retro VHS textures courtesy of cinematographer Clayton Moore — a lovingly distressed aesthetic that recalls battered video shop rentals yet feels distinctly contemporary, all pressed into the service of atmosphere. A low-key synth score by David Arcus, Terry Benn and Michelle Osis completes the spell, driving the atmosphere home, without ever drowning the on-screen action.

Clement proves an ideal anchor. As Deena, she is instantly sympathetic without slipping into caricature; her terror feels lived-in, her resilience hard-won. Christensen also laces the film with playful Easter eggs for horror fans — references that never distract but do reward the attentive. At a taut 93 minutes, Night of the Reaper doesn’t waste a frame, balancing moments of shocking violence with quieter beats that allow the dread to seep in.

If the film falters, it’s in the sheriff’s subplot. Robbins convinces early on as a weary small-town lawman, but when the performance pivots into rage, it edges into something more forced. The masked killer, too, feels underutilised — an icon in the making who never quite gets their due. And while the twist lands with a satisfying sting, it leaves just enough dangling threads — particularly around certain leaps in character logic — to nag at you afterwards.

Still, Christensen has delivered a slasher that doesn’t reinvent the wheel but sharpens the blade. Stylish, smartly paced and with just enough modern bite, Night of the Reaper is a seasonal treat — a love letter to babysitter scares and VHS nightmares that still manages to carve out its own (beating, bloodied) heart.

VERDICT:

Night of the Reaper premieres September 19 on Shudder.

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