“Thanksgiving” Sequel Coming in 2025, Director Eli Roth Confirms: 'John Carver Will Kill Again!'
"We want to out-do ourselves, make it better than the first one," said the director
Thanksgiving is getting a bloody second course.
On Thursday, director Eli Roth confirmed he'll be making a sequel to Thanksgiving, the horror movie that debuted in theaters earlier this month.
"Great news: I got the call this morning from Sony — we're doing a sequel. Going back for seconds. Thanksgiving 2 is a go," said Roth in a video on Instagram, adding, "We want to out-do ourselves, make it better than the first one."
Roth, 51, called it a "dream" to start a "slasher franchise" and added that the sequel will hit theaters "sometime in 2025, probably around Thanksgiving."
In the caption, he wrote, "BREAKING NEWS! John Carver will kill again! @thanksgivingmovie sequel is a GO!!! Thank you everyone who supported ORIGINAL HORROR in theaters!!! Go see it now on the big screen while it’s in cinemas, sequel set for release in 2025! Taking a year to really get the script right, working on it starting today!"
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Thanksgiving's cast includes Patrick Dempsey (PEOPLE's current Sexiest Man Alive!), Addison Rae, Milo Manheim, Jalen Thomas Brooks, Nell Verlaque, Rick Hoffman and Gina Gershon.
Its plot is about a masked serial killer (dressed like a 17th century Pilgrim) claiming victims in Plymouth, Massachusetts, after a Black Friday incident results in a tragedy.
A synopsis teases, "Picking off residents one by one, what begins as random revenge killings are soon revealed to be part of a larger, sinister holiday plan. Will the town uncover the killer and survive the holidays … or become guests at his twisted holiday dinner table?"
Related: 'Talk to Me' Sequel in the Works from A24 After Original's Breakout Success
Roth is known for making films like Cabin Fever, Hostel and The Green Inferno. Thanksgiving stems from the fake-movie-trailer segment he directed for 2007's Grindhouse.
The director recently told PEOPLE about seeing Thanksgiving come to fruition 16 years after Grindhouse.
"It was really a pleasure not just to make a Thanksgiving movie, but to fill the November horror movie void," he said. "I felt like the calendar has been missing a November horror movie. It's been my life's mission to bring Halloween into November."
Thanksgiving is now in theaters.
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