Clayface ranked among the most anticipated announcements in the current DC Universe slate. Directed by James Watkins from a screenplay by Mike Flanagan and Hossein Amini, the project promised a darker, more psychologically corrosive take on one of Batman’s most iconic rogues. The teaser trailer arrived this week, and it more than fulfills that promise. This is no comic-book film merely flirting with horror aesthetics. It is a committed, full-throated body horror nightmare.
For decades, mainstream superhero adaptations have approached the grotesque with caution—shadowy lighting, the occasional jump scare, little more. With Clayface, James Gunn and Peter Safran appear intent on rewriting those rules. Set for release on October 23, 2026, the film traces one man’s harrowing descent from rising Hollywood star to vengeful monster. The opening footage already suggests a merciless exploration of lost identity and corrosive ambition.
A Masterclass in Macabre Pedigree
The creative team behind the camera inspires genuine confidence. James Watkins, director of the unrelentingly bleak Speak No Evil and the atmospheric The Woman in Black, excels at letting dread build slowly, suffocating the viewer with mood before delivering the blow.
Pairing him with Mike Flanagan—modern master of emotional trauma fused with supernatural terror—raises the ceiling considerably. Flanagan’s influence is already evident in the trailer’s thematic weight: voiceovers that hint at the dark side of scientific ambition, and the psychological fracturing of a man literally losing his physical form. One minor reservation: Flanagan serves here only as a writer and story developer rather than as a director. While Watkins is a formidable talent, Flanagan’s distinctive, hypnotic visual rhythm is something we will inevitably miss. Even so, a script co-written by Flanagan and Hossein Amini (Drive) ensures a narrative unafraid to court discomfort.
Breaking Down the Clayface Teaser: Melting Flesh and Rot
The teaser itself is quietly devastating. It discards the expected action spectacle of the genre in favor of something far more unsettling. We meet Tom Rhys Harries as Matt Hagen, his performance already radiating intensity and genuine anguish.
Harries carries the descent with conviction. We see him swathed in bloody bandages, eyes burning an unnatural red beneath harsh hospital lighting. The footage soon fractures into flashes of grotesque transformation—skin melting in sickeningly realistic detail. The practical (or meticulously crafted digital) effects are tactile and repulsive, evoking the visceral body horror of David Cronenberg’s The Fly, laced with the macabre vanity of Death Becomes Her.
The trailer’s only notable shortcoming arrives in its final ten seconds: a flurry of rapid jump cuts that obscure the creature design. Teasing the monster is sound horror technique, yet a slightly longer, lingering shot of the full transformation would have elevated the teaser from very good to unforgettable.
Straight Horror, No Capes Required
Unsurprisingly, the trailer sparked immediate online debate. Could a film this visually repulsive and psychologically bleak truly coexist in the same universe as James Gunn’s Superman? Gunn addressed the question directly and without equivocation: Clayface is not a hybrid superhero horror film. It is a horror film, period.
That distinction matters. Set in Gotham City prior to the events of Superman, the story can function as a standalone descent into madness. By treating it as genre-first rather than shared-universe obligation, Watkins and Flanagan gain the freedom to pursue an uncompromising R-rating and prioritize atmosphere, fear, and psychological devastation over traditional comic-book structure.
The Future of Cinematic Terror?
Clayface is shaping up to be an event. It honors the tragic, urban-legend roots of its source material while delivering skin-crawling visuals that feel unpredictable. The decision to cast Tom Rhys Harries, supported by a strong ensemble that includes Naomi Ackie, David Dencik, and Eddie Marsan, signals a commitment to dramatic weight over star-driven spectacle.
We still have months to wait before the October 2026 release, and a project this reliant on sustained body horror carries inherent risks—maintaining its nasty edge across an entire studio-backed runtime is notoriously difficult. For now, however, the teaser succeeds at its most important task: it leaves the viewer deeply, genuinely uncomfortable. It suggests a film willing to rot the superhero genre from within, one melting limb at a time.
