Adam Scott's Chilling New Movie Brings A Folk Horror Twist To An 82-Year-Old Disney Classic

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Adam Scott smiles while listening to a speaker at a Q&A event Marion Curtis/StarPix/Startraksp/Cover Images

Published May 2, 2026, 11:39 AM EDT

A Disney-related childhood freak-out helped inspire Damian McCarthy’s new supernatural folk horror exercise.

In an interview with ScreenRant's Ash Crossan, McCarthy revealed the inspiration for Hokum’s creepy Jack the Jackass, explaining the character’s Disney roots. “I guess just in terms of the design, it came from Pinocchio, the idea of the half boy, half jackass when they started to turn. That also had freaked me out as a kid. But then they're halfway transformed.”

Asked what it was like being face-to-face with such a terrifying figure, Hokum star Scott expressed relief that his exposure to Jack the Jackass was limited, while praising actor O’Connell. “Well, luckily, I never had to be on set with the donkey with Will playing that role. But I got to act with Will as the bellboy, and he's just incredible. And then, getting to see him play Jack, it's just terrifying. And it's hard to believe that's the same actor. Will's just incredible.”

McCarthy also explained how O’Connell came to play both the timid Alby and the freakish Jack. “When he was first going to play Alby, he's got so much energy, and in real life, he's really energetic and he's a lot of fun. But the thing with Alby is he's quite repressed...It just felt like that I had to really restrain Will, and he got it completely. He really played that part so well. But I knew he had all this energy.”

Knowing O’Connell had all this untapped energy, McCarthy offered him a second role that would allow him to really cut loose. “I said, ‘Well, Jack is so bonkers. He's so up and full of energy...if Will would be interested in doing that, too, you get to use all of that side of Will, as well, in that really cool way.’

McCarthy then discussed how O’Connell’s roles tie together through Scott’s character, a famous author who is cruel to aspiring writer Alby, and later receives his own torment thanks in part to Jack the Jackass. “He's very mean when they meet. So, I thought then that when Adam's character is being punished later on, it would be nice if Will, as Alby, was one of these things that's part of that torment.”

Scott’s tormented author and O’Connell’s pair of very different roles were a big part of why Hokum received such solid reviews after playing at SXSW, including a rave from ScreenRant:

The emotional rawness of the film makes the central narrative compelling, even as the brewing mythology and genuinely great twists keep escalating the tension to its breaking point. Hokum is a refinement of what came before, not a rehash: a terrifically composed throwback that knows when to play things grounded and when to embrace the horror for its full potential.

Hokum and its Disney-inspired horror monster were released in theaters on May 1.

hokum-key-art.jpg

Release Date May 1, 2026

Runtime 101 Minutes

Director Damian McCarthy

Writers Damian McCarthy

Producers Derek Dauchy, Mairtín de Barra, Roy Lee, Julianne Forde, Steven Schneider, Ruth Treacy

Cast

  • Headshot Of Adam Scott In The World Premiere Of Columbia Pictures' 'Madame Web'
  • Cast Placeholder Image
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