Maniac Madness and Toolbox Terror Join Screambox Roster
Screambox has revealed a brutal roster of horror titles for July, offering fans a blend of classic slashers, international thrillers and an all-new original series. The month kicks off with Uncle Sam, the Independence Day slasher that turns patriotic pageantry into a blood-soaked spectacle. On the eleventh, the service uncages William Lustig’s cult staple Maniac alongside the ’70s video nasty The Toolbox Murders, post-apocalyptic biker romp The New Barbarians, psychedelic vampire shocker Vampyres and two lesser-known gems in Fire and Ice and The Killing Hour.

Mid-month brings Screambox’s first foray into original programming with The Trouble with Tessa, a two-episode premiere on the fifteenth. The series follows a disgraced documentarian who unearths a cache of mysterious tapes and sets out to expose the darkest secrets of a picture-perfect town. Viewers seeking surreal thrills need look no further than The Stendhal Syndrome from giallo maestro Dario Argento, which arrives alongside the cosmic dread of The Endless and the record-breaking South Korean shocker The Wailing on the eighteenth.

July draws to a close with a two-part descent into witchcraft as The Witch: Part 1 – The Subversion and The Witch: Part 2 – The Other One take over screens from the twenty-fifth. These entries promise to expand the unsettling world first hinted at in 2015’s found-footage classic Hell House LLC and its subsequent prequel.
Screambox continues to cement its place as a home for devotees eager to explore horror’s far-reaching corners. By blending well-known slashers with foreign shockers and commissioning its own original series, the platform creates a continual stream of content that keeps subscribers on edge. The addition of The Trouble with Tessa also underscores Screambox’s commitment to nurturing fresh voices while expanding its library beyond licensed titles.

Subscribers can catch these titles on iOS, Android, Apple TV, Prime Video, Roku, Fire TV, YouTube TV, Samsung smart TVs, Comcast, Cox and at Screambox.com. For more information, visit the Screambox website: screambox.com/

