Fear Street: 1978

    Fear Street: 1978
    2021

    Synopsis

    In 1978, two rival groups at Camp Nightwing must band together to solve a terrifying mystery when horrors from their towns' history come alive.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Sadie SinkChristine 'Ziggy' Berman
    • Emily RuddCindy Berman
    • Ryan SimpkinsAlice
    • McCabe SlyeTommy Slater
    • Ted SutherlandYoung Nick Goode
    • Chiara AureliaSheila
    • Brandon SpinkYoung Will Goode
    • Marcelle LeBlancBecky
    • Eden CampbellAnnie
    • Michael ProvostKurt

    Recommendations

    • 83

      IndieWire

      The surprise isn’t that it deviates from the groundrules set out in the film before it, or even the scores of horror films from in and around the decade in which it’s set. It’s that when Fear Street: 1978 is given the opportunity to fulfill the promises it’s made for itself, it does so unreservedly, with a clear sense of purpose.
    • 80

      The Guardian

      Netflix’s flashy RL Stine trilogy continues with a darker Friday the 13th-aping horror that brings more shocking gore and excellent performances.
    • 70

      IGN

      While Fear Street Part 2: 1978 still offers some thrills, it's not a cut above its predecessor.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Despite the sometimes tedious pacing and repetitive script, it’s a classic-feeling slasher that delights in gore — think Friday the 13th — and an affirming example of Janiak’s confidence behind the camera.
    • 70

      Slashfilm

      Fear Street Part 2 also thrives once it really gets going. There’s a certain rough patch at the start that the film thankfully shrugs off, eventually sucking us into its night-dark story of doomed youth. A potential – and potentially questionable – romance that blooms between Ziggy and Nick Goode (Ted Sutherland), the boy destined to grow up and be sheriff, is charming in its clumsiness. A side character like punk rocker counselor Alice (Ryan Simpkins) seems annoying at first, only to blossom into someone we’re actively rooting for. After two films, the real strength of Fear Street is in its characters, not its scares. No one is expendable meat here – but that doesn’t mean they won’t get ground up in the end.
    • 69

      Paste Magazine

      In the moment, what it does do well is tease the increasingly metaphysical conclusion that is swiftly approaching, which looks to shed some of the “slasher movie” trappings and embrace the idea of a supernatural evil that resonates and repeats across centuries and generations of lives. Here’s hoping that the Fear Street trilogy can stick the landing.
    • 60

      Empire

      A darker middle act, Fear Street Part Two: 1978 lacks the verve of 1994 but still delivers enjoyable summer camp-based bedlam. Next up: 1666.
    • 60

      Variety

      Fear Street in general and the 1978 chapter in particular are at their best when forging their own path, which makes it a shame when they’re too reluctant to walk it.