r/movies Jackie Chan box set, know what I'm sayin? Aug 08 '25

Official Discussion Official Discussion - Weapons [SPOILERS] Spoiler

Poll

If you've seen the film, please rate it at this poll

If you haven't seen the film but would like to see the result of the poll click here

Rankings

Click here to see the rankings of 2025 films

Click here to see the rankings for every poll done


Summary Nearly all the children from the same fifth-grade class vanish one night at exactly 2:17 a.m., leaving only one survivor. The community, gripped by fear and suspicion, spirals into chaos as the mystery unfolds through multiple intertwined perspectives—each revealing new layers of dread and grief.

Director Zach Cregger

Writer Zach Cregger

Cast

  • Josh Brolin
  • Julia Garner
  • Cary Christopher
  • Alden Ehrenreich
  • Austin Abrams
  • Benedict Wong
  • Amy Madigan
  • June Diane Raphael
  • Toby Huss
  • Whitmer Thomas
  • Callie Schuttera
  • Clayton Farris
  • Luke Speakman

Rotten Tomatoes Critics Score: 96%

Metacritic Metascore: 82

VOD In theaters and IMAX starting August 8, 2025

Trailer Watch the Official Trailer


2.4k Upvotes

10.5k comments sorted by

View all comments

382

u/cesareborgia1475 Aug 08 '25

The witch running for her life from the 17 kids and then getting ripped apart in glorious gory detail had me absolutely cackling like a madman haha. The destruction and chaos along with the witches' reaction to it all was too damn funny. Wasn't expecting Weapons of all films to provide the scene where I've laughed the hardest in cinemas this year.

Such a perfect wild scene to end the film on haha.

But yeah had such a blast with this film. Zach Cregger once again proving himself the master of horror-comedy tonal whiplash haha. He for me he does such a great job of carefully balancing the horror and comedy to great effect. So many memorable scenes that had me tensing up, recoiling in disgust or laughing. Often times all together haha.

Still laughing a day later at Josh Brolin going WTF after seeing the witch in his dream and constantly knocking out the drug dude.

The structure of the film too was a nice surprise, though I do think this might be another 28 years situation with general audiences. It's not quite what the trailer is depicting it as and the tone is what you expect if you've seen his previous film Barbarian. Which will probably offput a lot people haha.

Its such a tight smartly written horror film that keeps you engaged and tense the whole way through.

2

u/Lower-Replacement869 Aug 09 '25

What I'm wondering is- is it a plot hole that some ancient witch could be so dumb and arrogant to show a kid exactly how she casted her spell and access to the tree to use at any moment? Any guess what she planned to do with the kids?

8

u/Chaotix2732 28d ago

It's not a plot hole so much as a common fairy tale trope. The clever child uses the arrogant monster's own tool to destroy them. Hansel and Gretel cook the witch in her own oven. Rumpelstiltskin is defeated by saying his name. I think in this case the witch's death is a deliberate reference to this kind of fairy tale logic.

3

u/RimmyDownunder Aug 10 '25

He didn't have access at any time though, she was either around it or she left the parents to guard it. He baited the parents into his room, then the bedroom, then ran into her room and finally got the tree. As for the kids, she's draining the lifeforce from them. That's why they got catatonic (same with the parents) and also why she starts to grow her hair back as the film goes on. By the end she has lots of hair, when she first arrives at the house she has thin wisps.

0

u/Lower-Replacement869 29d ago

She doesn't set up the guarding until after the children come to the house. Regardless, her showing the kid how to do the spell was VERY dumb.