When you think about ventriloquist dummies. What’s the first thing that comes to mind?. For me, I find them deeply unsettling. The frozen grin and the dead eyes that seem to stare into my soul is very unnerving. Anyway, regardless of how I feel, Sam Raimi clearly understands that type of nightmare better than most people alive. Deadline has reported that Raimi will be officially directing a brand-new adaptation of Magic for Lionsgate.
For those of you that watched the original 1978 Magic, you will remember that it starred Anthony Hopkins as a troubled ventriloquist whose relationship with his foul-mouthed dummy slowly spirals into psychological chaos. If Hannibal Lecter terrified you, wait until you meet the puppet named Fats. This is horror on another level. The film built a cult following over the years because it leaned more into fractured minds and creeping dread than cheap jump scares.
Sam Raimi, who turned chaos into a filmmaking language, now takes on this adaptation. Just bear in mind that this is the same director who brought us The Evil Dead. He practically dragged us through the beautiful insanity of Drag Me to Hell, and somehow made possessed forests feel emotionally aggressive. If anybody knows how to direct horror, it’s him. I love his use of elements of dark humour, flying cameras, and emotional trauma, that adds panic. But the bottom line is that he makes it work and that is why this pairing is perfect.
Mark Swift and Damian Shannon will write the script. This is also brilliant because the duo previously worked with Raimi on Send Help, his recent survival horror thriller starring Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien. It’s interesting that Magic was never really about supernatural spectacle but uncertainty. It made you wonder if the dummy was alive or was the main character collapsing mentally due to the loneliness that was causing decay from the inside. The movie left you with more questions than answers that had you on the brink of insanity. And Raimi loves living in exactly that kind of madness.
Can you picture it? A bunch of uneasy close-ups, violent bursts of tension, and that signature Raimi camera movement charging through hallways like a child experiencing a sugar rush. And let’s not forget the creepy dummy sitting in silence while audiences collectively decide sleep is overrated. No casting has been announced yet, and Lionsgate hasn’t revealed a release date either. But horror fans are already paying attention because this has all the ingredients to become one of those deeply uncomfortable movies people obsess over for years afterwards. The kind you recommend to friends while also warning them that it might permanently ruin puppets forever.
