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Horror Mogul Blumhouse Confronts Oversaturation as Auteur Films Shine
9 Oct
Summary
- Blumhouse Productions founder Jason Blum admits horror may have reached a saturation point
- Blumhouse faces a string of box office and critical disappointments in 2024-2025
- Acclaimed auteur horror films like Sinners and Weapons outperform Blumhouse's releases

As of October 9th, 2025, Jason Blum, the founder of Blumhouse Productions, is confronting the possibility that the horror genre has reached a saturation point. Blumhouse, known for its low-budget, high-profit horror films, has weathered a string of critical and box office disappointments over the past year.
The company's troubles began in 2024 with the releases of Night Swim and Imaginary, and continued through 2025 with The Wolfman, The Woman in the Yard, Drop, and the underwhelming M3GAN 2.0. Meanwhile, some of the most acclaimed genre releases this year, such as Ryan Coogler's Sinners and Zach Cregger's Weapons, have scored massive wins with higher budgets and riskier creative approaches.
Blum, the veteran producer who has built an empire on reviving fading horror franchises, even lost a high-profile bidding war to A24 for the rights to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, a painful setback for his legacy. However, the horror mogul remains unfazed, acknowledging that the genre's boom-and-bust cycle is simply part of the industry's nature.
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As Blumhouse continues to navigate these challenges, the producer remains confident that the company will weather the storm and make a comeback, just as it has done many times before. With upcoming releases like The Black Phone 2 and the highly anticipated Five Nights at Freddy's 2 on the horizon, Blum believes the horror genre "is like Charlie Sheen" - it may crash, but it will always rise again.