Skip to main content

Scariest trailer of the year? Watch the preview for The Witch and find out

There’s been quite of buzz surrounding the first trailer for The Witch, writer/director Robert Eggers’ thriller about a colonial family who may or may not be tormented by a witch rumored to live in the dark forest near their home. With some critics and journalists calling it the scariest trailer of the year — and some going so far as to call it one of the scariest trailers of all time — the Sundance Film Festival darling has quickly become popular nightmare fuel for online audiences.
Recommended Videos

Set in New England during the early 17th century, the film earned a “Best Director” award at Sundance for Eggers, a former art director and production designer making his first foray into directing feature films.

The haunting film chronicles the dark events that transpire after a Puritan family settles on the edge of an ominous forest. As strange things begin to happen around them and upset their lives, their paranoia mounts and they begin to turn on each other as they attempt to rid their lives of the mysterious, evil presence tormenting them.

The Witch has been hailed by critics for its faithfulness to its period setting, and Eggers’ attention to detail. Along with earning “Best Director” honors at Sundance earlier this year, the film was also nominated for the festival’s prestigious Grand Jury Prize. The cast is made up of mostly unknowns, including Anya Taylor Joy, Ralph Ineson, Kate Dickie, Harvey Scrimshaw, Ellie Grainger, and Lucas Dawson.

While the movie currently isn’t scheduled for wide release until 2016, it will be screened at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival and is expected to be available via on-demand services during (or possibly ahead of) its theatrical release.

You can see the film’s official poster below.

the witch poster
Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Where to watch New Year’s Eve, the 2011 Michelle Pfeiffer/Zac Efron rom-com
A man and a woman laugh in New Year's Eve.

The week between Christmas Day and the end of the year can feel a bit like limbo. You've done your shopping, you've opened your presents, you visited your friends and/or family, and you've consumed enough food and drink to sustain a small family. So now what?

The answer, at least for a few days, is to prepare for New Year's Eve. Simultaneously loved and loathed, the holiday is known for its mass consumption of alcohol, awkward kisses, and terrible singing of Auld Lang Syne. If you don't feel like going to a party, yet still feel like celebrating, you could always watch a movie where other people do the partying for you. New Year's Eve, the 2011 romantic comedy from director Gary Marshall, is just the ticket for anyone unwilling to brave the presence of masses of people as the old year ends and a new one begins. But where can one watch it?
Where can you watch New Year's Eve in the U.S.?

Read more
Where to watch the Knives Out sequel, Glass Onion
Daniel Craig looks concerned in Glass Onion.

In 2019, the murder mystery genre got a fresh infusion of life, and a new detective for the post-modern millennium, with Rian Johnson's twisty thriller Knives Out. Starring James Bond himself, Daniel Craig, as the loquacious Southern sleuth Benoit Blanc, the movie was a classic whodunit with a subtle stream of social satire interspersed between shocking deaths.

A hit with audiences and critics alike, Knives Out naturally spawned sequel talk, with not one but two sequels commissioned to follow Benoit as he solves mysteries in exotic locations with a rotating cast of A-listers and character actors. The first sequel, Glass Onion, is now available, and for those curious as to how, and where, to watch the follow-up, Digital Trends will help solve the mystery for you.
Where can I watch Glass Onion?

Read more
Where to watch Knives Out
Lakeith Stanfield, Noah Segan, and Daniel Craig in Rian Johnson's whodunit 'Knives Out.'

In 2019, the murder mystery genre got a fresh infusion of life and a new detective for the post-modern millennium with Rian Johnson's twisty thriller Knives Out. Starring James Bond himself, Daniel Craig, as the loquacious Southern sleuth Benoit Blanc, the movie is a classic whodunit with a subtle stream of social satire interspersed between shocking deaths.

A hit with audiences and critics alike, Knives Out naturally spawned sequel talk, with not one but two sequels commissioned to follow Benoit as he solves mysteries in exotic locations with a rotating cast of A-listers and character actors. With the first sequel, Glass Onion, about to be released on Netflix, those eager to watch the original will need to know where to find it.
Where can you watch Knives Out?

Read more