Geese's "Getting Killed" and Samantha Downing's latest novel round out our picks for the weekend of Oct. 24.
Like the members of the Talamasca, we can keep a secret here at EW. But this week, we unmasked the secret organization at the center of AMC's latest expansion of Anne Rice's Immortal Universe -- celebrating our Talamasca: The Secret Order cover story with a premiere screening and panel with the cast and creators of the new series. If you're waiting for more Mayfair Witches and Interview With the Vampire, this is a great Anne Rice fix with a spy-thriller twist. -- Patrick Gomez, Editor-in-Chief
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Stephen King's worlds collide with HBO's new horror series, a prequel to the It films. There's a nod to King's Shawshank Redemption in the trailer, and The Shining's Dick Hallorann makes an appearance. Taking place in 1962, nearly three decades before 2017's It, the show's tension centers around the historical burning of a speakeasy that catered to Black patrons by a group of white supremacists. While race relations during the Civil Rights Movement and Cold War fears prey on the minds of Derry's locals, another horror haunts the rural community. Bill Skarsgård returns as killer clown Pennywise. -- Debbie Day, Staff Editor
Welcome to Derry: On set of the It prequel tracing the origins of Pennywise and the cursed Maine town (exclusive)
Jeremy Allen White hits the high notes in this biopic (he lost his voice performing "Born to Run!"). But the real highlight is seeing a member of my parents' generation be honest about their mental health. Therapy is the real hero of this Springsteen story. -- Morgan Sanguedolce, Video Producer
Why Bruce Springsteen's biopic focuses on the making of Nebraska album instead of Born in the U.S.A.
Popular YouTube film critic Chris Stuckmann adds a punchy new title to the found footage canon with his feature directorial debut, a Creepy Chan- and Cloverfield-inspired nightmare that emanates major cursed tape vibes. -- Ryan Coleman, News Writer
The story of Shelby Oaks: How Mike Flanagan teamed with a YouTube critic-turned-director for new horrors
From the jagged screams of "There's a bomb in my car!" on the album's opening track ("Trinidad") to the rolling beauty of the very next song, the earworm "Cobra," NYC rock darlings Geese remain gloriously unclassifiable on their latest musical triumph. -- Dalton Ross, Editorial Director
One last murder might just be the death of her. Samantha Downing returns with a killer thriller, perfect for your autumn TBR! Retired serial killer Lottie Jones gets back in the game after a nosy journalist starts digging up her past. -- M.S.