GHOST RIDER (2026)


In a darker, reimagined take on Marvel’s hellfire anti-hero, Johnny Blaze (Keanu Reeves) returns as the Ghost Rider—older, colder, and burdened by centuries of damnation. When a forbidden occult syndicate tears open a gateway between Earth and the underworld, Blaze is forced into an uneasy alliance with Lilith Blackthorn (Gal Gadot), a former sorceress turned hellbound enforcer who may be the key to sealing the rift—or destroying everything.
The trailer crackles with infernal energy: neon-lit cityscapes melting under hellfire wheels, chain-whip combat tearing through demon hordes, spectral chases across rain-soaked highways, and ritualistic showdowns in abandoned cathedrals where flames whisper secrets. Every frame leans into atmosphere—smoke, embers, and shadow—grounding the supernatural in grim, tactile reality.
A stylish, R-leaning supernatural action epic that finally treats Ghost Rider as mythic horror. Gritty, soulful, and fiercely cinematic, this reboot ignites the franchise with purpose—and leaves scorch marks that linger.