Let’s play a game. Picture a Hollywood A-lister at the peak of their fame. What’s their next move? A gritty biopic? A cozy romantic comedy? A nine-figure deal to join a cinematic universe? Wrong. Think darker. Think colder. Their next move is to stab a man with a syringe in a candlelit crypt. Their next move is to produce, star in, and bank on a horror movie. This isn't a fluke. It’s a rebellion. And actors like Sydney Sweeney aren't just joining the fray—they're leading it, proving that the smartest, most powerful play in town isn't to put on a cape, but to make the audience afraid to turn off the lights. The "Immaculate" Business Model: More Than a Paycheck When Sweeney’s nun, Cecilia, let out that guttural, soul-shattering scream in Immaculate, it wasn’t just a moment of cinematic terror. It was a mission statement. Sweeney didn't just act in the film; her production company, Fifty-Fifty Films, engineered it. Why? Because horror is the...