The headline out of SXSW 2026 was that Ready or Not 2: Here I Come is a bloody, outrageous sequel and that Samara Weaving is fantastic. The buried detail is that every review says the same thing: the film works because Weaving works. Horror comedy still lives or dies on the lead, and Ready or Not 2 is the latest proof that the genre depends on one star performance to hold the tone together.
Every Review Hangs on Samara Weaving
Rotten Tomatoes led its first-reviews roundup with the line that Samara Weaving is “fantastic” in a “bloody, outrageous” sequel, and that the film delivers inventive kills, colorful villains, and an expanded world. The Hollywood Reporter noted that the sequel “can’t quite conjure the original’s dark magic” and loses some gothic intimacy but that Weaving delivers “another terrific performance” with “some nice bits of character comedy in the margins.” Daily Dead called the film a “sadistic, savvy sequel” and highlighted Weaving’s “blood-curdling” screams and character work. Bloody Disgusting described it as crowd-pleasing comedic carnage. In every case, the verdict on the movie is inseparable from the verdict on the lead.
That pattern is not new. The 2019 original was praised as a sharp, witty blood-soaked delight with Weaving as the emotional anchor; Ars Technica and others compared her to the best final girls of the decade. The sequel, directed again by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett and released by Searchlight Pictures on March 20, 2026, doubles down on the formula: more families, more lore, more gore. What does not change is that the balance of horror and comedy rests on whether the audience believes the person in the center. When the reviews say the sequel is “just as good, if not better” or a “downgrade from the last time,” the variable they are really describing is how well Weaving holds the frame.
Horror comedy as a genre has always depended on performers who can sell both the scares and the jokes. Slashfilm has outlined that the genre requires more than comedy and horror in the same film; it needs deliberate tonal shifts and a lead who can carry them. The Wayans-driven Scary Movie franchise was framed around a “recipe” and “formula” that could not be mimicked without the right stars. Ready or Not 2 does not have an ensemble of comedians; it has one final girl and a cast of villains. If Weaving had not landed, the film would not have landed. The rave reviews are, in that sense, reviews of her.
What This Actually Means
The takeaway is not that Ready or Not 2 is bad. It is that horror comedy’s dependence on the lead is the real story. When every critic leads with the star, the genre is still living or dying on one performance, and the industry has not found a way around that.
Who Is Samara Weaving?
Samara Weaving is an Australian actress who gained attention in Australian television and later for her work in genre film. She received an AACTA Award nomination for her role on the soap opera Home and Away and appeared in Ash vs Evil Dead. She is best known for playing Grace in Ready or Not (2019) and Ready or Not 2: Here I Come (2026), where her performance as the final girl has been cited by critics as the anchor that makes the horror-comedy balance work.
Why the Lead Carries the Genre
Slashfilm has outlined that horror comedy requires more than comedy and horror in the same film; it needs deliberate tonal shifts and a lead who can carry them. The 2019 original Ready or Not was praised as a sharp, witty blood-soaked delight with Weaving as the emotional anchor; Ars Technica and others compared her to the best final girls of the decade. The sequel doubles down on the formula: more families, more lore, more gore. What does not change is that the balance of horror and comedy rests on whether the audience believes the person in the center. When every critic leads with the star, the genre is still living or dying on one performance. The rave reviews for Ready or Not 2 are, in that sense, reviews of Samara Weaving; the industry has not found a way around that dependence.
That pattern is consistent across prestige coverage and reflects how the genre is evaluated: as drama first, with audience expectations often secondary.
The consistency of that message across outlets is the story.
Horror comedy as a genre has always depended on a lead who can carry both scares and jokes; Ready or Not 2 is the latest proof that the industry has not found a way around that.
The industry response has been to keep greenlighting the same type of project.
Sources
Rotten Tomatoes, The Hollywood Reporter, Daily Dead, Slashfilm, Wikipedia