This October, the Die'ced trailer will show a killer scarecrow


The horror show In the movie Die'ced, a young girl meets a crazy serial killer the night before Halloween.

This scarecrow isn't going to see the magic. In fact, this scarecrow is a killer, and in the new slasher movie Die'ced, he plans to cause a lot of trouble on Halloween. Die'ced is a scary movie made by director Jeremy Rudd. It's about a crazy killer who likes scarecrows and is after a young girl. Something that will ruin the scary season for everyone.

In addition to the scary new video for Die'ced, you can read the movie's official plot summary below:

"A teenage girl is determined to find out what happened to her missing mother, but she soon runs into a crazy serial killer who was mistakenly let out of an insane asylum the night before Halloween."

Die'ced is a movie written and directed by Jeremy Rudd. Eden Campbell plays the role of Cassandra Blain. Campbell is best known for her role as Annie in the Netflix movie series Fear Street 2 (2021), in which she starred with Stranger Things' Sadie Sink, as well as in They Reach (2020) and The Mortal Collection (2019).

Nigel Vonas, who is known for a recurring role on the TV show Arrow as well as roles in Falling Skies (2015), Olympus (2015), and Supernatural (2014), plays Cassandra's father, Jon Blain. Jason Brooks, who is known for roles in movies like Friday the 13th: Vengeance (2019) and Friday the 13th Vengeance 2: Bloodlines (2022), plays Benjamin.

The rest of the group is made up of Jon Meggiso, Shayna Jensen, Raymond Power, Ryan Chen, Jeremy Rudd, Hamzah Farah, Shannon McGrath, Nathan Rudd, Christine Rose Allen, Scott Mullet, Esha More, Lee Raymond, Collin Fischer, Nika Kleiman, and Mason Meggison.

Die'ced is currently marked as "available" starting on October 19.

October is a great time to watch scary movies.

This October, there are a lot of scary movies to choose from at the theater. Horror fans have already gotten movies like Saw X, which is a prequel-slash-sequel with Tobin Bell back as John Kramer/Jigsaw getting revenge on a new group after going to Mexico for an experimental procedure that turns out to be a scam, and The Exorcist: Believer, which is a legacy sequel to the 1973 horror movie classic.

The rest of the month will see the release of V/H/S/85, a found footage horror movie where each scary segment is made by a different director; the Hulu original Appendage, which is about an insecure fashion designer whose feelings start to take on a physical form; and the prequel Pet Sematary: Bloodlines, which shows what happened before the 2019 adaptation of the Stephen King classic Pet Sematary.

And that's not even talking about stories like "The Mill," "Dark Harvest," "Dear David," and "Suitable Flesh."

This month also brings the long-awaited movie version of the scary video game Five Nights at Freddy's. Starring Josh Hutcherson, Elizabeth Lail, Piper Rubio, Mary Stuart Masterson, and Matthew Lillard, Five Nights at Freddy's centers on Mike Schmidt, a troubled security guard, who accepts a night job at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza, a once-successful but now abandoned family entertainment center, where he discovers its four animatronic mascots – Freddy Fazbear, Bonnie, Chica, and Foxy – move and kill anyone that is still there after midnight.

Universal Pictures plans to put Five Nights at Freddy's in cinemas and on Peacock at the same time on October 27, 2023, in the United States.

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