Iconic horror brand Fangoria re-launched last year, and the resurrected and thoroughly reinvigorated label wasted no time getting into film production with on-brand titles likePuppet Master: The Littlest Reichand this year’s standout genre docHorrorNoir. Next up is the bloody and bonkers cult movie throwbackSatanic Panic,which debuted at Overlook Film Festival earlier this year before being scooped up by RLJE Films.
The theatrical feature debut fromChelsea Stardust(All That We Destroy) follows a pizza delivery girl named Sam (Haley Griffith) on the shift from, or maybeto, hell. Strapped for cash and desperate for the funds to make her dreams come true, Sam looks to make up for a long and fruitless shift with one last long-distance delivery to a high-end neighborhood. But the customers on the other side of the door aren’t just hungry for a slice; they’re a Baphomet-worshiping cult of wealthy elites (led by a glammed outRebecca Romijn, no less) hungry for the sacrificial virgin blood that helps them hold onto power. And unfortunately, Sam is a virgin.

Written byGrady Hendrix(Mohawk, ‘My Best Friend’s Exorcism’) from a story he co-wrote withTed Geoghegan,Satanic Panicalso starsJerry O’Connell,Ruby Modine, andArden Myrin(and features an appearance from Collider regularClarkeWolfe,) and arrives on VOD, digital, and in theaters on August 01, 2025. Watch our exclusive trailer debut below, followed by the new poster.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Sam’s first day as a pizza delivery driver is not going according to plan. At the end of a long day and not enough tips, her last delivery turns out to be for a group of Satanists looking for someone to sacrifice. Now in a fight for her life, Sam must fend off witches, evil spells and demonic creatures, all while trying to keep her body – and soul – intact. Starring Hayley Griffith (“The Loudest Voice”), Ruby Modine (Happy Death Day franchise), Jerry O’Connell (“Billions”) and Rebecca Romijn (X-Men franchise), Satanic Panic is “an absolutely entertaining horror film that will satisfy any viewer’s need for monsters, mayhem and…jokes” (Robert Saucedo, Birth.Movies.Death)

