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DROP

Label: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. 

Physical Media Release Date: 06/10/25.

Form of Release: 4K UHD + Blu-ray.

DROP SYNOPSIS:

A widowed mother's first date in years takes a terrifying turn when she's bombarded with anonymous threatening messages on her phone during their upscale dinner, leaving her questioning if her charming date is behind the harassment.

 

Everyone's a suspect.

From Blumhouse, producers of M3GAN, and Platinum Dunes, producers of A Quiet Place, comes Drop, the action-packed thriller that proves dating can be deadly. The blood-chilling action of Drop is NOW AVAILABLE to watch on Digital, 4K UHD and Blu-ray from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment; with never-before-seen bonus content featuring the filmmakers and cast discussing the making of the film.
 
First dates can be rough. In this mind-bending action thriller from the director of Happy Death Day, they can also be deadly. Violet (Meghann Fahy, The White Lotus) is a widowed mother who has worked up the courage to go on her first date in years with a charming photographer named Henry. The cute couple’s killer chemistry is rudely interrupted by a series of anonymous drops to Violet’s phone showing a masked intruder entering her home and ordering her to follow a series of instructions. Violet must do exactly as she’s told or her loved ones will die. Her unseen tormentor’s final directive? Kill Henry.
 
From acclaimed director Christopher Landon (Happy Death Day franchise, Heart Eyes), Drop stars Meghann Fahy (The White LotusYour Monster), Brandon Sklenar (1923It Ends With Us), Violett Beane (The FlashTruth or Dare), and Jeffery Self (Search PartySpoiler Alert).

OUR FILM REVIEW

First dates are intimidating - to most people - not to mention in this modern world where we meet the people we want to date online, we’re going into everything mostly blind. Not to mention, we not only meet people we want to date through the screens of our phones, but we also put so much of our personal information out there, who knows what kind of hands that it falls into. Christopher Landon’s Drop meditates on this idea where Violet is caught in a wild ultimatum during her first date with Henry. As she’s having dinner with Henry, an anonymous instigator continuously drops messages to her phone that she either kills her date, or her family will be killed.

 

Already, a simple and sweet setup and premise, however, Drop has more to offer up its sleeve. What starts a nice romance thriller, evolves into something with a much bigger picture. It’s a romance thriller about navigating the modern dating world while navigating trauma, but it’s also an espionage thriller with thorough contemplations about how our technological landscape has warped the meaning of privacy, and what it means to have moments that are truly ours to keep to ourselves, and not send to a screen. It’s not always perfect; the discussions on trauma and abuse feel a little treaded and rote here. Almost like it’s hitting very similar themes from Whannel’s The Invisible Man.  So, it’s espionage aspects are much more compelling here.


The real strength of the film is its co-leads Meghann Fahy and Brandon Sklenar who each give incredibly strong performances. The script allows both to bounce off each other in charming ways, however Landon’s directing of the set piece is just the whole reason this works out, and may be his strongest directing feat yet. It feels almost like “dinner theater” watching how this whole night plays out for the two. There are some odd choices here. There’s some weird and distracting visual effects regarding the airdrops she gets on her phone, but there are also genuinely exciting and bold formal choices that were very fun to watch. Drop doesn’t quite get everything right, but it does get everything that matters at least. It’s exciting, thrilling, funny, and, yes, it is quite romantic at times as well.

SPECIAL FEATURES 

  • A RECIPE FOR THRILLS: MAKING DROP – Join the cast and crew of DROP as they sort through the ingredients of this date gone wrong.

  • A PALATE FOR PANIC – Take a seat and devour the details that went into creating Palate, a film set that doubles as a fully operational restaurant.

  • KILLER CHEMISTRY – Join Meghann Fahy and Brandon Sklenar as they discuss their characters’ first date and how they managed to keep Violet and Henry grounded throughout the escalation of events.

  • FEATURE COMMENTARY WITH DIRECTOR CHRISTOPHER LANDON

DROP

RT Critic Score (as of 06/10/25)

84%.

RT Audience Score (as of 06/10/25)

80%.

MPAA

PG13.

Runtime 

95 minutes.

Original Release 

2025.

Video 

Codec: HEVC / H.265
Resolution: Native 4K (2160p)
HDR: HDR10
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

Audio

English: Dolby Atmos

Subtitles 

English, English SDH

Discs

4K Ultra HD
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD-66, 1 BD-50)

Digital 

Digital 4K
Movies Anywhere

Packaging

Slipcover in Original Pressing

Playback

4K Blu-ray: Region free
2K Blu-ray: Region A​​​

OUR VERDICT:

+ Director of Happy Death Day + Freaky

+ A Whodunnit for the Modern Age of Tech 

+ Critically Acclaimed

+ x4 Special Features

Director Audio Commentary

Digital Code Included

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