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The red band trailer for Eli Roth’s Ice Cream Man dropped this week and the horror internet has not calmed down since. The premise is straightforward and deeply wrong. A mysterious ice cream man rolls into Bayleen Bay, a sun drenched seaside town that looks like it was designed by someone who wanted to make a suburb feel like a threat, and he starts serving his customers something with a little extra. What that extra ingredient does is turn children into killers. Enthusiastic, focused, committed killers. The adults of Bayleen Bay are not having a good summer.
Ari Millen stars as the Ice Cream Man. The film opens August 7, 2026, distributed through Roth’s own label The Horror Section, with a planned rollout across more than 2,000 screens. Roth co-wrote the screenplay with Noah Belson.
Eli Roth Has a Type, and His Type Is This
Roth announced himself in 2003 with Cabin Fever, a deeply strange piece of work about flesh-eating bacteria and very bad decision-making in the woods. It was the kind of debut that made people want to know what came next. What came next was Hostel, which arrived in 2005 and briefly convinced a generation that budget European travel was a fast track to a windowless room and a pair of pliers. Some people never booked a hostel again. Roth knew what he was doing.
Hostel: Part II followed with a sharper point. Then years of various projects. Then Thanksgiving in 2023, which reminded people who had been assuming Roth was coasting that he is not coasting. Thanksgiving was mean and funny and had a parade float scene that earned its place in the conversation.
Ice Cream Man is described by Roth as one of his wildest and most extreme projects. That is a meaningful claim from someone whose filmography includes what it includes.
Children Were Always the Scariest Option

The evil children subgenre keeps coming back because the premise cannot be made comfortable. Children of the Corn built a theology around it. Children as true believers, adults as the corruption to be purged. Village of the Damned went colder. No ideology, just those eyes, looking through you. Cronenberg’s The Brood went somewhere stranger, externalizing a mother’s psychological damage into small murderous figures that exist entirely to act on what she cannot express out loud. All three films are doing the same thing underneath. The creature that is supposed to need you does not need you at all. It has somewhere to be.
Ice Cream Man is working that same nerve. Kids are the conduit. An adult is providing the mechanism. And the town that looks like safety is where the dying happens.
Why This Trailer Is the One to Watch in 2026

Horror has had a good year. Most of it has been the kind of horror that takes its time, slow builds, deliberate dread, the genre operating at its most composed. None of that is a complaint. But Ice Cream Man is not doing any of that.
The trailer is loud and bright and red. The violence is extreme, and the red band designation is fully earned. What makes it land differently than a standard gore reel is the contrast built into the frame. Bayleen Bay is warm and golden and the lawns are perfect, and people are dying in it. Exploitation horror understood this trick decades ago. Splatter works better in sunshine. The 1970s and 1980s knew it. Most studios forgot.
Roth did not forget.
August 7. The ice cream truck is coming.

