The Fear Review

Apartment 7A (2024) Review | Broadway Horror Meets Rosemary’s Baby

16 min · 20 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Apartment 7A (2024) Review | Broadway Horror Meets Rosemary’s Baby

Descripción

Apartment 7A takes the world of Rosemary’s Baby and filters it through Broadway ambition, bodily discomfort, manipulation, and psychological horror. This week on The Fear Review, William and Amy continue their Natalie Erika James spotlight with Apartment 7A, the psychological horror prequel centered on Terry Gionoffrio before the events of Rosemary’s Baby. Julia Garner and Dianne Wiest deliver incredible performances in a movie that leans less on constant scares and more on dread, manipulation, and physical discomfort. From the brutal ankle injury sequences to the glamorous but unsettling interpretation of the devil, Apartment 7A creates a very different kind of horror experience while still feeling connected to Rosemary’s Baby. Does the movie work better as a prequel… or as its own standalone nightmare? In this episode: • Why the Broadway/fame angle gives the movie its own identity • Julia Garner and Dianne Wiest’s standout performances • The body horror and sound design that made us physically uncomfortable • How the movie handles themes of manipulation, fame, and bodily autonomy • The connections to Rosemary’s Baby • Full spoiler discussion and ending breakdown Around here, The Fear is Family.

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Portada del episodio Forbidden Fruits Review: This “Cute” Witch Movie Gets Unbelievably Nasty

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Portada del episodio Leviticus Is Basically Conversion Therapy It Follows

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Portada del episodio The Voices of Our Mother Review | One of Horror's Most Unexpected Twists?

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Portada del episodio Amy Walked Out of Find Your Friends

Amy Walked Out of Find Your Friends

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