Totally Killer Jun 2026

The premise is deceptively simple. In the present day, the quiet town of Vernon is haunted by a three-decade-old cold case: the "Sweet Sixteen Killer." In 1987, the masked murderer killed three teenagers before vanishing.

What makes Totally Killer stand out from other time-travel horror films (like The Final Girls ) is its unflinching critique of its target decade. The film refuses to wallow in sepia-toned reverence. When Jamie arrives in 1987, she is not charmed by the analog warmth; she is horrified by the pervasive sexism, the victim-blaming, and the laissez-faire attitude toward safety. One of the film’s funniest and most telling running gags involves Jamie repeatedly trying to use the internet or a cell phone, only to be met with confusion. But the deeper joke is on the past. When she warns her teenage mother, Pam (Olivia Holt), that a killer is on the loose, the 80s teens respond not with action but with apathy, more concerned with mall culture and social hierarchy than survival. The film argues that the “simpler time” of the 80s was not simpler—it was simply more ignorant, and that ignorance was lethal. Totally Killer