Film & TVNewsWatch the trailer for Jordan Peele’s new horror series, Lovecraft CountryThe show, set in the segregated America of the 1950s, is also executive produced by JJ AbramsShareLink copied ✔️July 25, 2020Film & TVNewsTextThom Waite The first full-length trailer for Lovecraft Country, a new series from producers Jordan Peele and JJ Abrams, has finally been unveiled, and it’s as full of horrors – both human and supernatural – as you might expect. Adapted by the writer – and Underground co-creator – Misha Green, from Matt Ruff’s 2016 novel of the same name, Lovecraft Country follows Atticus Black (Jonathan Majors) as he travels across 1950s Jim Crow-era America, alongside his friend Letitia (Jurnee Smollett-Bell) and uncle George Black (Courtney B. Vance). Along the way, the characters navigate encounters with human racists, as well as monsters and paranormal events inspired by the mythologies of H. P. Lovecraft (think: ghosts, cults, and plenty of tentacles). Last month, Jordan Peele debuted the second season of his Twilight Zone reboot, which also stars Jurnee Smollett-Bell, alongside Sky Ferreira. The Get Out director’s Candyman reboot was also set to premiere last month, but has been pushed back to October 16 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Lovecraft Country will air on HBO from August 16. Watch the new trailer in the video above. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe Voice of Hind Rajab, a Palestinian docudrama moving audiences to tearsMeet the 2025 winners of the BFI & Chanel Filmmaker AwardsOobah Butler’s guide to getting rich quickRed Scare revisited: 5 radical films that Hollywood tried to banPlainclothes is a tough but tender psychosexual thrillerCillian Murphy and Little Simz on their ‘provoking’ new film, Steve‘It’s like a drug, the adrenaline’: Julia Fox’s 6 favourite horror filmsHow Benny Safdie rewrote the rules of the sports biopic Harris Dickinson’s Urchin is a magnetic study of life on the marginsPaul Thomas Anderson on writing, The PCC and One Battle After AnotherWayward, a Twin Peaks-y new thriller about the ‘troubled teen’ industryHappyend: A Japanese teen sci-fi set in a dystopian, AI-driven future