Camila Morrone stars in Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen and tells Harper's Bazaar she refuses to play the clichéd horror girl. Her controlled, psychologically complex performance signals a major shift in her career trajectory.
Camila Morrone Steps Out of the Scream and Into Something Far More Interesting
Camila Morrone has never been content to play it safe, and her latest role in Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen proves exactly that. The Argentine-American actress and model is drawing serious attention for a performance that subverts every expectation the horror genre typically demands — no shrieking, no stumbling, no wide-eyed victimhood. Instead, Morrone brings a controlled, almost glacial tension to the screen that has critics reaching for comparisons to early Nicole Kidman. For the Asia-based reader who follows culture as closely as they follow five-star openings, Morrone is the name to know this season.
In a recent conversation with Harper's Bazaar, Morrone answered the magazine's signature "First, Now, Next" questionnaire with the kind of disarming candor that makes for genuinely compelling reading. She was frank about the roles she has turned down, the instincts she has learned to trust, and the specific type of horror performance she is determined never to deliver. "I don't want to be the cringe horror girl," she said, with the confidence of someone who has already done the work to ensure she won't be.
What Makes Morrone's Approach to Horror So Distinctive?
Where many actors approach the horror genre as a launching pad — a reliable way to generate buzz before pivoting to prestige drama — Morrone appears to have reversed the equation entirely. She arrived in Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen with a body of work that already included critically noted turns in Daisy Jones and the Six and Death Wish, and she used that credibility to demand a character with genuine psychological complexity. The result is a performance that unsettles rather than startles, which is a considerably more difficult thing to achieve on screen.
Her instinct to resist the obvious is something she traces back to her earliest experiences on set, when she watched seasoned actors make bold, counterintuitive choices that seemed wrong in the moment and revelatory on screen. That education, she has said, shaped everything about how she reads a script. She is looking for the moment where the character could go one way and chooses another — and she wants the audience to feel the weight of that choice long after the credits roll.
Why the "First, Now, Next" Framework Reveals So Much
The Bazaar questionnaire format — deceptively simple in structure — has a way of exposing exactly where a public figure actually stands, as opposed to where their publicist would prefer them to stand. Morrone's answers moved fluidly between her early fascination with the work of directors like Alejandro González Iñárritu, her current absorption in the craft of physical performance, and her next ambition: a project that she described only as "something that requires me to disappear completely." That phrase alone signals an actor operating at a different level of intentionality than most of her peers.
She also spoke with unusual candor about the specific pressures that come with being a young woman in Hollywood who is also frequently photographed at fashion events and resort openings across Europe and the Americas. The assumption, she noted, is that visibility in one arena translates to superficiality in another. She has spent the better part of the last three years proving that assumption wrong, one carefully chosen role at a time.
Where to Watch, and What to Expect Next
For readers planning a long weekend in which the itinerary includes a private screening room — whether at a villa in Phuket, a suite at The Peninsula Tokyo, or aboard a chartered yacht in the Andaman — Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen is exactly the kind of film that rewards a darkened room and complete attention. It is tense without being gratuitous, atmospheric without being slow, and anchored by a lead performance that will be discussed for considerably longer than the film's release cycle.
Morrone's next project remains officially unannounced, but the industry conversation around her is shifting in a direction that suggests a significant awards-season push is being planned. For now, the film stands as the clearest statement yet of what she is capable of — and, perhaps more importantly, what she refuses to become.
Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen
📍 Available via major streaming platforms and select theatrical releases across Asia
📞 Check local listings for screening times
🌐 Read the Harper's Bazaar interview
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen about?
It is a horror film starring Camila Morrone in a lead role that prioritises psychological tension over conventional genre scares. Morrone has described her performance as a deliberate departure from the archetype of the reactive, frightened horror protagonist.
Why does Camila Morrone say she doesn't want to be the cringe horror girl?
In her Harper's Bazaar questionnaire, Morrone used the phrase to articulate her resistance to a specific type of performance — one defined by reactive screaming and passive victimhood — that she considers both creatively limiting and culturally reductive. Her performance in the film reflects that conviction directly.
What other projects has Camila Morrone been known for?
Morrone gained significant recognition for her role in the Amazon Prime series Daisy Jones and the Six, as well as earlier film work including Death Wish. She has steadily built a reputation for choosing projects that prioritise character complexity over commercial formula.
Where can audiences in Asia watch the film?
The film is available through major international streaming platforms and select theatrical releases across key Asian markets. Readers should check local listings for specific availability by country and platform.
What is Camila Morrone's next project?
As of publication, her next project has not been officially announced. In her Harper's Bazaar interview, she described it only as something that requires her to "disappear completely" — suggesting a transformative, character-driven role rather than another genre film.