There’s a quiet, unnerving confidence pulsing beneath Netflix’s “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen,” a slow-burn psychological horror series that understands that dread is far more effective when it lingers rather than lunges. Created by Haley Z. Boston, with executive producers Matt and Ross Duffer alongside Hilary Leavitt, the series reframes one of life’s most sacred milestones—marriage—into something far more existential than celebratory.
Rachel (Camila Morrone) is five days away from becoming a wife, a detail that should signal joy but feels like a ticking clock instead. Traveling with her fiancé, Nicky (Adam DiMarco), to his family’s remote, snow-covered estate for an intimate ceremony, she carries a gnawing sense that something is fundamentally wrong. Not in ways that immediately reveal themselves, but in subtle, creeping waves that slowly begin to erode her sense of certainty. It’s within those quiet fractures that the series finds its voice
Boston and her creative team lean heavily into atmosphere over explanation, trusting the audience to sit with Rachel’s unease rather than rushing to define it. That patience pays off. The isolation of the setting becomes more than just aesthetic; it mirrors Rachel’s emotional detachment as she begins to question not only her surroundings but also the very foundation of her relationship. What starts as pre-wedding anxiety gradually transforms into something far more disquieting.
Morrone delivers a performance rooted in instinct rather than hysteria. She portrays Rachel not as fragile, but as perceptive—a woman attuned to shifts that others either ignore or refuse to see. DiMarco complements her well, offering just enough ambiguity to keep both Rachel and the audience unsettled. Their dynamic becomes the series’ emotional engine, grounded in tension rather than overt conflict.
What ultimately elevates “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen” is its thematic undercurrent. This isn’t simply a story about fear; it’s about commitment, identity, and the terrifying permanence of choosing the wrong life. The series positions marriage not as a destination but as a point of no return, where doubt carries consequences as suffocating as any supernatural force.
There are no cheap shocks here, nor a reliance on overused genre tricks. Instead, the series builds tension like a tightening knot, each episode layering discomfort with precision. By the time its central questions become unavoidable, the audience is already fully entangled.
In a genre often dominated by spectacle, “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen” is refreshingly restrained. It doesn’t shout to be heard; it whispers, leaving an impression that lingers well beyond its final moments.
Final Grade: B+
“Something Very Bad Is Going To Happen” is available to stream today on Netflix.