The Strangers: Chapter 3 Review

The Strangers: Chapter 3 Review

Horror


The bizarre experiment that is The Strangers reboot trilogy has finally reached its end. Madelaine Petsch’s exhausted final girl Maya has been on the run for one night of grueling hell, stretched far too thin across three separate films. However, instead of a full circle reckoning, The Strangers: Chapter 3 crawls toward its confused conclusion.

The teases of Venus, Oregon’s murderous underbelly, back in the first installment, finally get pushed closer to the forefront, though with zero new revelations that foreshadowed clues hadn’t already indicated. That means that it’s more spinning wheels as Maya continues her attempts to evade the clutches of the town’s most sadistic masked residents, including the least surprising reveal that Richard Brake’s Sheriff Rotter is not only in on it, but an orchestrator of the chaos.

His motive factors into the murky backstory behind the masked killers and their slaygrounds, a continued dispelling of mystery that robs the film of tension. Not helping is that director Renny Harlin, working from the behemoth screenplay by Alan R. Cohen & Alan Freedland, maintains laser focus on Maya’s survival bid and deteriorating mental state amidst the constant barrage of attackers.

The Strangers: Chapter 3 trailer

Madelaine Petsch as Maya and Gabriel Basso as Gregory in The Strangers – Chapter 3. Photo Credit: John Armour

Petsch remains exonerated in this meandering trilogy; the unrelenting gauntlet of Maya’s constant evasion makes it all the easier to feel her level of exhaustion and breaking point to a palpable degree. It also becomes clear, once Maya goes toe to toe with Scarecrow (his identity another big “no duh”), that the actor is bringing much more thought to her character’s arc than the script. Petsch interrogates the concept of a final girl, quietly choosing to dismantle it altogether in acknowledgement of everything her character has endured.

That leaves Chapter 3 on an introspective, ambiguous note that the trilogy doesn’t quite earn. Harlin attempts to close the loop with a greater sense of all-out action as the final siege brings Maya’s sister into the fray, but this plot point, like most in this series, winds up another underbaked idea designed to propel Maya’s journey.

The action and attempts to close the loop on demystifying serial killers’ seemingly random acts of violence do make for a less tedious entry than Chapter 2, but this trilogy has consistently been afraid to actively engage with any questions or ideas beyond Chapter 1’s recreation of Bryan Bertino’s 2008 home invasion hit. It’s been trapped in place since, occasionally tossing out a few wild sequences or ideas that are never fully realized.

The Strangers – Chapter 3. Photo Credit: Jordy Clarke/Lionsgate

The Strangers reboot trilogy is so barebones that it’s difficult to wrap my brain around the idea of a lengthy supercut. Or remotely caring about new masked killers that were trimmed from the final cut; Chapter 3 can’t even find anything of substance for Dollface or Pinup Girl to do. But at least Harlin provides a clearer sense of geography and direction here, and we’re mercifully free of CG boars.

Demystifying the line “Because you were home,” and so poorly, misunderstands why it was so effective in the first place. Chapter 3 brings us no closer to explaining why this trilogy was so compelled to explore this chilling answer, and so superficially. This misfire instead leaves you repeating the original film’s question, “Why are you doing this to us?”

The Strangers: Chapter 3 releases in theaters on February 6, 2026.

1.5 out of 5 skulls

 



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