The Blackening May 2026
What matters is that Tim Story and Tracy Oliver have crafted a film that functions on three levels simultaneously: a genuinely funny hangout comedy, a genuinely tense slasher thriller, and a genuinely incisive critique of racial performance.
When they weren't dying first, they were the "sassy best friend," the comic relief, or the oracle who mysteriously knew the house was haunted but stuck around anyway. The Blackening
Released in June 2023, The Blackening arrived as both a much-needed antidote to decades of cinematic marginalization and a razor-sharp comedy that refuses to let its audience laugh without also squirming. Directed by Tim Story ( Ride Along , Barbershop ) and written by Tracy Oliver ( Girls Trip ) and Dewayne Perkins (who also stars as the fan-favorite character Dewayne), the film is not merely a parody. It is an intervention. For generations, the horror genre has had a well-documented blind spot. The "Black character dies first" trope is so pervasive that it has its own Wikipedia page. From Friday the 13th to Scream , Black characters were often disposable—plot devices to raise the stakes before the white final girl took her stand. What matters is that Tim Story and Tracy
The joke, of course, is that the group—seven Black friends reuniting for a Juneteenth weekend—has already been playing a game their entire lives. The game of survival as a Black person in a horror movie. Directed by Tim Story ( Ride Along ,
In the standard slasher film, when a group of friends stumbles upon a dusty, locked box in a remote cabin, curiosity usually kills the cat. But in Tim Story’s The Blackening , when the ensemble opens that box, they don’t find a cursed diary or a rusty knife. They find a board game. A black board game. With one instruction: “Play or die.”
By [Your Name]
It is a movie that asks: What if the scariest thing in the woods isn’t the man with the mask, but the fear that your own friends might think you’re “not really Black”?