Billed as “the scariest movie you’ll ever hear,” A24’s slow-burn paranormal nightmare undertone haunts theaters on March 13.
Lucky for you, Bloody Disgusting has the early ticket.
On Wednesday, March 4th, we’re presenting FREE special sneak screenings in Austin, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, and Washington, DC.
RSVP below and let us know what you think by tagging @BDisgusting on Facebook, X, Instagram, or TikTok after the show.
Austin, TX – AMC Dine-In Tech Ridge @ 7:30 p.m.
Boston, MA – AMC Boston Common @ 7:30 p.m.
Chicago, IL – AMC River East @ 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles, CA – AMC Century City 15 @ 7:00 p.m.
New York City, NY – AMC Lincoln Square @ 7:30 p.m.
San Francisco, CA – AMC Metreon @ 7:30 p.m.
Washington, DC. – AMC Georgetown @ 7:30 p.m.
The film follows a paranormal podcast host who moves into her dying mother’s house to be her primary caregiver. When she receives audio recordings of a young pregnant couple experiencing supernatural noises, she realizes the woman’s story mirrors her own.
Nina Kiri (“The Handmaid’s Tale”) stars in the film, which marks the feature debut of writer-director Ian Tuason. Tuason will next tackle the eighth installment in the Paranormal Activity franchise.
Adam DiMarco, Michèle Duquet (The Virgin Suicides), Keana Lyn Bastidas (“The Hardy Boys”), and Jeff Yung (The Shrouds) round out the cast.
Joe Lipsett came away from the film’s Fantasia premiere a massive fan of the scares. He wrote in his 4.5-skull review, “I can’t remember the last time a movie made every hair on my body stand up, but undertone got me good.” Of the film’s use of sound, he writes, “It’s more than that, though; more so than any other recent horror film, The Undertone lives and dies on how sound and silence are used. And it is used incredibly well.”
Slaterverse Pictures’ Dan Slater and Black Fawn Films’ Cody Calahan produce. Executive producers include Steven Schneider and Roy Lee for Spooky Pictures, Chad Archibald for Black Fawn, Brit MacRae and Daril Fannin for Kino Studios, and DimensionGate.
undertone is rated R for “language.”
Turn the lights down low and the volume way up and listen to the sound of fear below.

