Beetlejuice 3 (2025)

Michael Keaton, Alec Baldwin, Geena Davis

After a freak accident claims their lives, Barbara Maitland (Geena Davis) and Adam Maitland (Alec Baldwin) awaken to a shocking new reality — they are no longer among the living. Bound to their beloved country home as ghosts, the couple struggles to adjust to the eerie monotony of the afterlife.

At first, their haunting existence is quiet and uneventful, but everything changes when a loud, brash, and tasteless new family buys their home and begins to transform it into something unrecognizable.

Desperate to preserve the warmth, memories, and identity of their cherished house, the Maitlands attempt ordinary haunting tricks to scare the intruders away, but their efforts prove laughably ineffective. Running out of options, they turn to a dangerous solution — summoning the notorious “bio-exorcist,” Beetlejuice (Michael Keaton). Crude, vulgar, and completely unpredictable, Beetlejuice thrives on chaos. His arrival ignites a whirlwind of bizarre antics, twisted magic, and unhinged schemes that spiral far beyond the Maitlands’ control.

What begins as a simple plea for help soon becomes a full-blown nightmare. Instead of saving their home, Beetlejuice wreaks havoc on the living and the dead alike, blurring the boundaries between worlds. The Maitlands must wrestle not only with the intruders in their house but also with the unholy force they themselves unleashed — a trickster spirit who thrives on mayhem and never plays fair.

Directed by Tim Burton, Beetlejuice 3 carries on the legacy of the original cult classic with its macabre gothic aesthetic, surreal humor, and signature blend of creepy and comedic. Michael Keaton delivers another electrifying, career-defining turn as the striped-suit specter, balancing grotesque absurdity with razor-sharp wit.

Darkly hilarious, visually inventive, and unapologetically strange, Beetlejuice 3 proves that the afterlife isn’t about peace — it’s about pandemonium. Just remember: once you call his name three times, there’s no going back.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *