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90s Horror Icons Return to Cinemark This February

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90s Horror Icons Return to Cinemark This February

For horror fans, February is usually a quiet month—a transitional period where we wait for the spring blockbusters to bloom. However, 2026 is breaking the mold. Before Ghostface returns to wreak havoc in Scream 7 on February 27, Cinemark is turning back the clock. In a move that celebrates the golden era of the post-modern slasher and teen supernatural thriller, the theater giant is bringing three genre-defining staples back to the big screen: Final Destination, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and The Craft.

This “week of shrieks” isn’t just a marketing stunt; it’s a curated journey through the films that stood side-by-side with the original Scream in the late 90s and early 2000s, helping to redefine what it meant to be young, beautiful, and absolutely terrified in Hollywood.


The Lineup: Dates and Details

If you’re looking to relive these nightmares in a darkened theater with a bucket of popcorn, mark your calendars. Tickets are officially on sale, and the schedule is packed:

  • Final Destination: February 20 & 23
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer: February 21 & 24
  • The Craft: February 22 & 25

Cheating the Reaper: Final Destination (2000)

The series kicks off with the film that made an entire generation terrified of highway log trucks and bathtub drains. Directed by James Wong (who co-wrote the script with Glen Morgan and Jeffrey Reddick), Final Destination stripped away the masked killer and replaced him with an invisible, unstoppable force: Death itself.

The story follows Alex Browning (Devon Sawa), a high school student who has a terrifyingly vivid premonition of his plane exploding mid-air. After a frantic scene leads to him and a handful of classmates being kicked off the flight, they watch in horror as the plane actually goes down. But as the survivors soon learn, you can’t skip your spot on the list. One by one, “Design” comes for them in a series of Rube Goldberg-style freak accidents.

Starring Ali Larter, Kerr Smith, and the legendary Tony Todd, this film remains a masterclass in tension, proving that sometimes the scariest monster is the one you can’t see.

Secrets and Hooks: I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997)

Next on the docket is the quintessential seaside slasher. If Scream was the meta-commentary on the genre, I Know What You Did Last Summer was its moodier, atmospheric cousin. Directed by Jim Gillespie and written by horror royalty Kevin Williamson (based on the Lois Duncan novel), the film stars the “it-crowd” of the 90s: Jennifer Love Hewitt, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ryan Phillippe, and Freddie Prinze Jr.

The plot is a cautionary tale about the weight of a shared secret. After a Fourth of July celebration ends in a hit-and-run accident, four friends dump a body into the ocean and vow to take the secret to their graves. A year later, they receive a note that simply says, “I know what you did last summer,” and suddenly, a man in a slicker with a meat hook begins picking them off. It’s a stylish, high-stakes thriller that perfectly captures the “teen scream” aesthetic of the decade.

Magic and Mayhem: The Craft (1996)

Rounding out the trio is the cult classic that made “Light as a feather, stiff as a board” a household phrase. The Craft moved away from the slasher tropes to explore the darker side of high school social hierarchies and occult empowerment.

Directed by Andrew Fleming, the film follows Sarah (Robin Tunney), a newcomer at a Catholic prep school who finds herself drawn to a trio of outcasts played by Fairuza Balk, Neve Campbell, and Rachel True. Together, they form a coven and begin practicing witchcraft to solve their personal problems. However, as the old saying goes, “Whatever you send out comes back three-fold.” When a powerful invocation goes wrong, the girls find that magic has a steep price, leading to a climax of psychological and supernatural warfare.


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