Lee Cronin's The Mummy
Horror has always been one of cinema's most reliable delivery systems for traditional values. At its best, the genre insists that evil is real, that families are worth fighting for, and that some things are worse than death.…
Full analysis belowNOT A WOKE TRAP. Lee Cronin's The Mummy is a pre-release review based on available materials, cast, and the director's prior work. Based on everything available, this film appears to be a family-horror supernatural thriller with traditional values at its core: a father desperate to protect his children, a family unit under supernatural siege, and evil presented as genuinely dangerous and externally real. The horror genre's classic framing of family as the fortress against supernatural evil is front and center in the premise. Nothing in the available materials suggests progressive ideology lurking beneath the surface. The R rating is for violence and language, not ideology.
Horror has always been one of cinema's most reliable delivery systems for traditional values. At its best, the genre insists that evil is real, that families are worth fighting for, and that some things are worse than death. Lee Cronin's The Mummy, arriving April 17, 2026 from the director of Evil Dead Rise, appears positioned to honor that tradition.
The premise is deceptively simple and genuinely unnerving. Charlie Cannon (Jack Reynor), a journalist, watches his young daughter Katie disappear in the desert without explanation. Eight years later, shattered by grief and the wreckage it has made of his family, Charlie is stunned when Katie comes home. What should be a miraculous reunion becomes a waking nightmare. The daughter who returns is not entirely the daughter who left.
This is a pre-release review. Lee Cronin's The Mummy does not open until April 17, 2026, and no critic screenings have yet been held. What follows is based on available trailers, the production's published materials, the cast and crew's prior work, and the genre context of the film.
Lee Cronin earned his current position in horror by doing something Evil Dead Rise could have done badly: he took the Evil Dead framework, which is chaos and escalation and bodily horror, and planted it inside a family. The mother-and-sons dynamic of Evil Dead Rise gave the carnage moral weight it would not have had with a group of strangers. A mother trying to protect her sons while something ancient and evil wears the face of her sister is a horror scenario that works because it corrupts the most foundational bond in human experience. Cronin understands this. Family is not the backdrop in his films. It is the target.
The Mummy appears to follow the same logic at higher scale. A child disappears. The father's life falls apart around the absence. The child returns changed. The question is not whether the horror is scary; Cronin knows how to generate dread. The question is what the horror means, and from everything available, it means what horror has always meant at its most effective: that the protective instinct of a parent is matched in intensity only by the evil that can exploit it.
Jack Reynor is an excellent choice for Charlie Cannon. His work in Midsommar, Sing Street, and Free Fire shows a performer who can carry emotional weight and physical danger simultaneously. His presence suggests a Charlie who is not a generic action dad but a specific, damaged man whose capacity to protect his family has already been shattered by eight years of loss. The story does not start with a strong family under attack. It starts with a family already broken, trying to survive a horror it cannot fully comprehend.
Laia Costa, a Spanish actress known for demanding and physically committed performances (Victoria, Newness), plays Charlie's wife. The casting suggests the film intends their marriage as a real relationship with real fractures, not a prop for action sequences.
May Calamawy, last seen doing exceptional work in Moon Knight, plays a role that has not been fully described in available materials. Given her range, she is likely carrying significant weight in the second or third act. Veronica Falcon (Queen of the South, Yellowstone) plays the mother-in-law, which places another strong female presence at the center of the family under siege.
The production credentials are formidable. James Wan's Atomic Monster and Jason Blum's Blumhouse co-produce. These are two of the most effective horror production companies currently operating. They have different approaches: Blumhouse is lean and budget-conscious; Atomic Monster goes for scale. The combination produced something specific with The Conjuring and Insidious franchises: horror that has moral weight and takes evil seriously. Warner Bros. and New Line Cinema distribute, giving the film mainstream theatrical access.
The rating is R for Language, Gore, Brief Drug Use, and Strong Violent Content. This is a harder R than Evil Dead Rise, which means Cronin is pushing the horror to its limit. The choice is appropriate for a Mummy reimagining. The original 1932 Boris Karloff film was built on dread and atmosphere; the 1999 Brendan Fraser version was action-adventure with horror dressing; Tom Cruise's 2017 attempt was a confused franchise-launcher. Cronin is clearly swinging back toward the atmospheric dread of the original while incorporating modern horror brutality. The title card bears his name: Lee Cronin's The Mummy. Not Universal's. Not a franchise reboot. His.
From a values perspective, the premise is built on pillars that are deeply traditional. A father who never stopped looking for his missing daughter. A family torn apart by loss trying to reconstitute itself. Evil that takes the form of the most beloved thing imaginable in order to destroy the family from within. These are not progressive conceits. They are ancient ones. The horror genre at its most morally serious, from Rosemary's Baby to The Shining to Hereditary to Evil Dead Rise, uses the supernatural as an externalization of evil that is real, active, and personally destructive. Cronin clearly shares this moral framework.
What will determine the final VVWS score when the full review publishes is whether the film introduces ideological content into this traditional horror framework. Evil Dead Rise kept its politics out of the horror. Blumhouse films occasionally do not (Get Out, for example, is a horror film where the monster is white people). Based on available evidence, The Mummy does not appear to carry political freight. Its premise is not about systems of oppression. It is about a supernatural entity that targets a family through their love for a missing child. That is elemental rather than ideological.
Conservative horror fans should mark April 17. If Cronin delivers what he appears to have built, The Mummy will be a rare horror film that gets the traditional elements right: family worth protecting, evil that is genuinely evil, and a father who does not quit when the odds are against him.
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female-Led Horror Framework (Genre Tradition) | 2 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.7 |
| Ambiguous Family Structure Indicators | 2 | 1 | 0.5 | 1 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 1.7 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family as the Ultimate Thing Worth Protecting | 5 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 6.3 |
| Supernatural Evil as Externally Real and Morally Serious | 4 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 5.04 |
| Fatherhood as Unconditional Protective Covenant | 4 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.8 |
| Marriage Under Extreme Pressure | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 16.2 | |||
Score Margin: +15 TRAD
Director: Lee Cronin
CENTER. Cronin is an Irish filmmaker whose horror work has not carried significant political messaging. Evil Dead Rise, his breakthrough studio film, was focused on genre craft and family horror rather than social commentary. His debut feature (The Hole in the Ground, 2019) was also a family-centered supernatural horror film. His pattern is clear: he uses horror to examine family under threat, not to deliver ideological content.Lee Cronin is an Irish writer-director who emerged from the horror festival circuit with The Hole in the Ground (2019), a well-reviewed supernatural horror film about a mother who suspects her son has been replaced by something else after an encounter in the woods. His Evil Dead Rise (2023) was a critical and commercial success that reinvigorated the Evil Dead franchise by centering the horror in a family apartment rather than a cabin in the woods. The Mummy represents his largest production to date, with a budget commensurate with the Warner Bros./New Line release and the prestige of two major horror production companies behind him. James Wan (Saw, The Conjuring, Insidious, Aquaman) and Jason Blum (Paranormal Activity, Get Out, Halloween H40, The Black Phone) produce.
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative adults who enjoy horror should take this seriously. Lee Cronin is not a horror director who uses the genre as ideological cover. Evil Dead Rise worked because it cared about the family at the center of the horror. The Mummy appears to operate on the same principle at larger scale: a missing child, a shattered father, a family reconstituting itself around a horror it does not yet understand. The R rating is for violence and language. Come prepared for intensity. This is not a comfort-horror jump-scare machine. Cronin builds dread through emotional investment and then destroys the things you have come to care about. That is exactly how good horror should work.
Parental Guidance
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