News & Updates

Jenna Ortega Stars in Another Paranormal Dance Scene in Latest ‘Beetlejuice 2’ Trailer

The Tim Burton film, which also stars Winona Ryder and Michael Keaton, hits theaters nationwide on September 6

Published by

Jenna Ortega‘s leading role in Tim Burton’s Netflix series Wednesday left her haunted by a viral dance scene that she choreographed herself. The actress has reunited with the gothic director, this time for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice — but in the latest trailer for the film, she finds herself once again locked into another paranormal dance sequence.

In the clip, Ortega’s Astrid Deetz and Catherine O’Hara’s Delia Deetz mirror each other’s movements in a round of choreography that leaves them both looking perplexed, as though they’ve been possessed and aren’t in control of their own bodies. It’s not an unlikely scenario, given that Astrid’s curiosity about her mother Lydia Deetz’s (Winona Ryder) past leads to the accidental opening of a portal to the afterlife.

“Ghosts aren’t real,” Astrid says in the trailer. “Only gullible people believe that kind of crap.” By the end, when she’s being restrained and hauled away by grimy, undead figures, she has cause to reassess her standing on what’s real and what isn’t. Lydia recruits Beetlejuice (Michael Keaton) to help save her daughter, knowing that bringing him back into her life comes with the added baggage of ruthless chaos. “Confronting the unknown, conquering your fears — there’s nothing harder,” she says.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice arrives in theaters nationwide on Sept. 6 and internationally beginning Sept. 4. The Beetlejuice sequel features Willem Dafoe as a ghost detective, Monica Bellucci as a vengeful ex-wife, and Danny DeVito in an undisclosed role. Justin Theroux, Burn Gorman, Arthur Conti, and Filipe Cates also appear.

“On Beetlejuice, I could tell every day what was gonna work and what wasn’t. And that was very invigorating. Especially when you’re doing something this extreme,” Burton told Rolling Stone in 1988, when the first Beetlejuice film was released. “A lot of people have ragged on the story of Beetlejuice, but when I read it, I thought, ‘Wow! This is sort of interesting. It’s very random. It doesn’t follow what I would consider the Spielberg story structure.’ I guess I have to watch it more, because I’m intrigued by things that are perverse. Like, I was intrigued that there was no story.”

From Rolling Stone US.

Recent Posts

Inside Thom Yorke’s Amazing New Album with Producer Mark Pritchard

In the first interview about the dystopian electronic project Tall Tales, Pritchard goes deep about…

March 12, 2025

Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco Announce Single ‘Sunset Blvd,’ Inspired by Their First Date

New track will precede the couple's collaborative album, I Said I Love You First

March 12, 2025

Japanese Breakfast’s Michelle Zauner Says Her Film Went ‘Down the Drain’ After Director Pulled Out

White Lotus' Will Sharpe was originally set to direct Crying in H Mart: "I was…

March 12, 2025

Lauryn Hill Makes Appearance at Roberta Flack’s Memorial, Performs Alongside Stevie Wonder

“It wouldn’t be possible for us just to stand by and not participate," Lauryn Hill…

March 12, 2025

Wheesung, South Korean Star Who Helped Bring R&B to K-Pop, Dead at 43

The musician was found dead at his home in Seoul, but a cause of death…

March 12, 2025

Ji Chang-wook Joins Jun Ji-hyun in New Horror Thriller

A strange virus unleashes chaos and terror in Ji Chang-wook and Jun Ji-hyun’s new film…

March 11, 2025