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{{Short description|Upcoming American psychological thriller film}}
{{Short description|2038 American psychological thriller film}}


{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name          = The Fine Print 3
| name          = The Fine Print 3
| image          = <!-- Add poster filename when available -->
| image          = [[File:The Fine Print 3 Release Poster.png|250px]]
| caption        = Teaser poster
| caption        = Theatrical release poster
| director      = [[Ari Aster]]
| director      = [[Ari Aster]]
| producer      = Alex Brow
| producer      = [[Alex Brow]]
| writer        = Ari Aster<br>Alex Brow
| writer        = Ari Aster<br>Alex Brow
| starring      =  
| starring      =  
Line 19: Line 19:
* [[Stephanie Hsu]]
* [[Stephanie Hsu]]
* [[Rory Kinnear]]
* [[Rory Kinnear]]
* [[Daniel Kaluuya]]
}}
}}
| music          = <!-- To be announced -->
| music          = <!-- To be announced -->
Line 29: Line 30:
| language      = English
| language      = English
| budget        = $220 million
| budget        = $220 million
| gross          = $412 million
}}
}}
'''''The Fine Print 3''''' is a 2038 American psychological thriller film directed by [[Ari Aster]], who co-wrote the screenplay with series creator [[Alex Brow]]. It is the third installment in the ''Fine Print'' franchise and serves as a midquel, narratively set between the events of ''[[The Fine Print]]'' (2027) and ''[[The Fine Print 둘]]'' (2036). The film stars [[Aldis Hodge]], [[Teyonah Parris]], [[Jesse Plemons]], [[Mia Goth]], [[Florence Pugh]], [[David Dastmalchian]], [[Mahershala Ali]], [[Stephanie Hsu]], [[Rory Kinnear]], and [[Daniel Kaluuya]], who reprises his role from the first film. It was produced by [[Nightshade Studios]] and [[Monkeypaw Productions]], and distributed by [[Universal Pictures]].


'''''The Fine Print 3''''' is an upcoming American psychological thriller film directed and co-written by [[Ari Aster]], with series creator [[Alex Brow]] returning as co-writer and producer. It is the third installment in ''The Fine Print'' franchise and is set chronologically between the events of the original 2027 film and 2036’s ''[[The Fine Print 둘]]''.  
Following the divisive box office results of the second film, Universal Pictures initially hesitated to greenlight another installment. However, strong digital performance and a devoted fan following led to the project’s approval in 2037. Aster, returning to the director's chair, aimed to reconnect with the psychological horror tone of the original, while expanding the franchise’s mythos. Filming took place across Atlanta, Seoul, and Bulgaria, with [[Jarin Blaschke]] rumored to return as cinematographer. [[Aldis Hodge]] returned in the lead role after reportedly being offered $30 million and a more emotionally grounded arc.


The film stars [[Aldis Hodge]], reprising his role as Solomon Keene, alongside returning cast members [[Teyonah Parris]], [[Jesse Plemons]], and [[Mia Goth]], all playing their original characters. New cast members include [[Florence Pugh]], [[David Dastmalchian]], [[Mahershala Ali]], [[Stephanie Hsu]], and [[Rory Kinnear]].
Released theatrically on October 7, 2038, ''The Fine Print 3'' received mixed reviews from critics and audiences. While the film was praised for its writing, performances (particularly from Aldis Hodge and Florence Pugh), and thematic ambition, it faced notable backlash for its overreliance on returning characters—especially the inclusion of Daniel Kaluuya, which many fans labeled as blatant nostalgia bait. Critics also cited the film’s visual direction as inconsistent, with some describing it as overly stylized and “rushed in post-production.” Despite the polarized reception, the film grossed $421 million worldwide against a $220 million budget, outperforming its immediate predecessor but falling short of the franchise’s 2027 original.


''The Fine Print 3'' is scheduled to be released theatrically in the United States on October 7, 2038, by [[Universal Pictures]].
== Plot ==
Following the collapse of the Virecon cognitive-contract empire, Solomon Keene is recruited into a clandestine regulatory unit tasked with investigating a resurgence of recursive memorandums—documents capable of rewriting memory through language. These memos are destabilizing collective understanding of reality, rewriting personal and historical narratives.


== Premise ==
Keene joins neuro-linguistic expert Dr. Nira Voss (Pugh), archivist Perry Lode (Dastmalchian), and analyst Hye-Jin Kim (Hsu) to trace the origin of these corrupted signatures. Meanwhile, Camille Rivers (Parris), now a rogue journalist, tries to uncover the truth about the disappearance of Aaron Wells (Kaluuya), whose existence has been partially erased from public record.
Set in the year following the Virecon collapse, the film explores the origins of Solomon Keene’s entanglement with The Archive. As global oversight agencies attempt to dismantle remnants of cognitive contract systems, Keene joins a covert task force to trace the source of recursive memorandums infecting public consciousness. Meanwhile, forces within the government and private sectors attempt to rewrite history before it can be decoded.
 
As Keene begins experiencing memory glitches that connect him to Wells, Eve Merrow (Goth) re-emerges—appearing across both physical and digital systems. Richard Vale (Plemons), operating from legal exile, feeds information through a dissident AI channel. The team uncovers that Vaughn Keele (Kinnear) and Senator Carter Ren (Ali) have been overseeing a shadow directive to engineer a universal legal dialect, effectively controlling truth.
 
Keene finally locates Wells in a memory-locked tribunal, where they uncover the Archive’s true purpose: not to preserve truth, but to pre-author it. In the climax, Wells sacrifices his remaining identity to force a global clarity pulse, destabilizing recursive systems—but at the cost of his memory entirely. The film ends with Keene alone in a liminal archive, holding a memo that reads only: “Do not remember me.


== Cast ==
== Cast ==
* [[Aldis Hodge]] as Solomon Keene
* [[Aldis Hodge]] as Solomon Keene
* [[Teyonah Parris]] as Claire Dazey
* [[Teyonah Parris]] as Camille Rivers
* [[Jesse Plemons]] as George Levan
* [[Jesse Plemons]] as Richard Vale
* [[Mia Goth]] as Annika Ford
* [[Mia Goth]] as Eve Merrow
* [[Florence Pugh]] as Dr. Nira Voss, a neuro-linguistic programmer with access to classified dialect archives
* [[Florence Pugh]] as Dr. Nira Voss
* [[David Dastmalchian]] as Perry Lode, an archivist survivor with altered memories of Keene’s first mission
* [[David Dastmalchian]] as Perry Lode
* [[Mahershala Ali]] as Senator Carter Ren, a government official with deep ties to The Archive
* [[Mahershala Ali]] as Senator Carter Ren
* [[Stephanie Hsu]] as Hye-Jin Kim, a Korean analyst decoding corrupted memos linked to Virecon
* [[Stephanie Hsu]] as Hye-Jin Kim
* [[Rory Kinnear]] as Vaughn Keele, a systems philosopher embedded in the early legal dialect experiments
* [[Rory Kinnear]] as Vaughn Keele
* [[Daniel Kaluuya]] as Aaron Wells


== Production ==
== Production ==
Following the mixed commercial performance of ''The Fine Print 둘'' (2036), Universal Pictures weighed continuing the franchise. Ultimately, strong critical reception and an active cult following led to a greenlight for a third installment, structured as a midquel linking the psychological aftermath of the first film with the conspiratorial descent of the second.
Following the mixed commercial reception of ''The Fine Print 둘'' (2036), Universal Pictures hesitated to greenlight a follow-up. However, high demand for digital viewings and increased academic attention toward the series’ narrative complexity led to the development of a midquel. Ari Aster returned to direct and co-write, working closely with Alex Brow to bridge the thematic gaps between the first two entries.
 
Filming took place between April and December 2037, across Atlanta, Seoul, Bulgaria, and Prague. The film utilized a mix of abandoned data facilities and practical set design to visualize bureaucratic horror through a surreal lens.


[[Ari Aster]] was confirmed as director in early 2037, marking his return to the director’s chair after co-writing the previous entry. Series creator [[Alex Brow]] returned as producer and co-writer, with the duo reportedly revisiting several unused concepts from the original’s development slate. Early drafts emphasized memory entanglement, temporal recursion, and linguistic collapse — with Aster calling the film “a metaphysical autopsy of consent.
[[Daniel Kaluuya]]’s return as Aaron Wells was confirmed after months of secrecy. His appearance was treated as a major turning point in the story’s overarching arc, tying the events of all three films together in a nonlinear narrative.


[[Aldis Hodge]], who previously expressed regret over participating in the second film, reversed his stance after a $30 million offer and script changes convinced him to rejoin the project. According to sources, his role in ''The Fine Print 3'' is more emotionally grounded and centers on his character’s initial trauma from exposure to “recursive signature loops.
== Marketing ==
Marketing for the film began in July 2038 with the reveal of a teaser poster featuring a spiraled fingerprint and the tagline “You were never cleared.” Universal launched an ARG website, CaseFile-R03.net, which generated cryptic files tied to viewer-submitted memory profiles.


Filming began in April 2037 across Atlanta, Seoul, and Eastern Europe, with several sequences shot in cold-storage server farms and actual former diplomatic archives. While no official cinematographer has been confirmed, [[Jarin Blaschke]] is rumored to return.
Daniel Kaluuya’s return was revealed via a hidden QR code embedded in the second poster, linking to a teaser video in which Aaron Wells whispered, “They erased the wrong memory.” A global campaign followed with projection-based teasers in Berlin, Seoul, and New York.
 
A full trailer was premiered in September at the "Memory Recital" live event in Berlin, simulating a tribunal where audience members participated in live narrative tests based on the film’s linguistic logic.


== Release ==
== Release ==
''The Fine Print 3'' is scheduled to be released in the United States on October 7, 2038, by [[Universal Pictures]]. A limited festival screening is expected in September 2038.
''The Fine Print 3'' was released theatrically in the United States on October 7, 2038, by Universal Pictures. The film premiered at the 2038 Venice International Film Festival and rolled out globally on October 11 across 50+ countries.
 
== Reception ==
''The Fine Print 3'' received widespread critical acclaim for its ambitious structure, philosophical undertones, and return to psychological horror. Critics praised Aldis Hodge’s performance as “emotionally harrowing,” and highlighted the interplay between his character and Daniel Kaluuya’s as “tragic and transcendent.”
 
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 91% approval rating based on 317 reviews, with an average score of 8.3/10. Metacritic gave it a weighted score of 84/100.
 
Audiences were more divided, with some praising its narrative ambition and others critiquing its dense, nonlinear structure. Despite this, the film earned $412 million worldwide against a $220 million budget, becoming the highest-grossing entry in the franchise.


== References ==
== References ==
Line 67: Line 87:


[[Category:2038 films]]
[[Category:2038 films]]
[[Category:Upcoming films]]
[[Category:American psychological thriller films]]
[[Category:American psychological thriller films]]
[[Category:Universal Pictures films]]
[[Category:Universal Pictures films]]
Line 79: Line 98:
[[Category:Films set in South Korea]]
[[Category:Films set in South Korea]]
[[Category:Surrealist films]]
[[Category:Surrealist films]]
[[Category:Films about memory]]
[[Category:Films featuring fictional legal systems]]

Latest revision as of 04:35, 13 February 2026

The Fine Print 3
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAri Aster
Written byAri Aster
Alex Brow
Produced byAlex Brow
Starring
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • 7 October 2038 (2038-10-07)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$220 million
Box office$412 million

The Fine Print 3 is a 2038 American psychological thriller film directed by Ari Aster, who co-wrote the screenplay with series creator Alex Brow. It is the third installment in the Fine Print franchise and serves as a midquel, narratively set between the events of The Fine Print (2027) and The Fine Print 둘 (2036). The film stars Aldis Hodge, Teyonah Parris, Jesse Plemons, Mia Goth, Florence Pugh, David Dastmalchian, Mahershala Ali, Stephanie Hsu, Rory Kinnear, and Daniel Kaluuya, who reprises his role from the first film. It was produced by Nightshade Studios and Monkeypaw Productions, and distributed by Universal Pictures.

Following the divisive box office results of the second film, Universal Pictures initially hesitated to greenlight another installment. However, strong digital performance and a devoted fan following led to the project’s approval in 2037. Aster, returning to the director's chair, aimed to reconnect with the psychological horror tone of the original, while expanding the franchise’s mythos. Filming took place across Atlanta, Seoul, and Bulgaria, with Jarin Blaschke rumored to return as cinematographer. Aldis Hodge returned in the lead role after reportedly being offered $30 million and a more emotionally grounded arc.

Released theatrically on October 7, 2038, The Fine Print 3 received mixed reviews from critics and audiences. While the film was praised for its writing, performances (particularly from Aldis Hodge and Florence Pugh), and thematic ambition, it faced notable backlash for its overreliance on returning characters—especially the inclusion of Daniel Kaluuya, which many fans labeled as blatant nostalgia bait. Critics also cited the film’s visual direction as inconsistent, with some describing it as overly stylized and “rushed in post-production.” Despite the polarized reception, the film grossed $421 million worldwide against a $220 million budget, outperforming its immediate predecessor but falling short of the franchise’s 2027 original.

Plot[edit | edit source]

Following the collapse of the Virecon cognitive-contract empire, Solomon Keene is recruited into a clandestine regulatory unit tasked with investigating a resurgence of recursive memorandums—documents capable of rewriting memory through language. These memos are destabilizing collective understanding of reality, rewriting personal and historical narratives.

Keene joins neuro-linguistic expert Dr. Nira Voss (Pugh), archivist Perry Lode (Dastmalchian), and analyst Hye-Jin Kim (Hsu) to trace the origin of these corrupted signatures. Meanwhile, Camille Rivers (Parris), now a rogue journalist, tries to uncover the truth about the disappearance of Aaron Wells (Kaluuya), whose existence has been partially erased from public record.

As Keene begins experiencing memory glitches that connect him to Wells, Eve Merrow (Goth) re-emerges—appearing across both physical and digital systems. Richard Vale (Plemons), operating from legal exile, feeds information through a dissident AI channel. The team uncovers that Vaughn Keele (Kinnear) and Senator Carter Ren (Ali) have been overseeing a shadow directive to engineer a universal legal dialect, effectively controlling truth.

Keene finally locates Wells in a memory-locked tribunal, where they uncover the Archive’s true purpose: not to preserve truth, but to pre-author it. In the climax, Wells sacrifices his remaining identity to force a global clarity pulse, destabilizing recursive systems—but at the cost of his memory entirely. The film ends with Keene alone in a liminal archive, holding a memo that reads only: “Do not remember me.”

Cast[edit | edit source]

Production[edit | edit source]

Following the mixed commercial reception of The Fine Print 둘 (2036), Universal Pictures hesitated to greenlight a follow-up. However, high demand for digital viewings and increased academic attention toward the series’ narrative complexity led to the development of a midquel. Ari Aster returned to direct and co-write, working closely with Alex Brow to bridge the thematic gaps between the first two entries.

Filming took place between April and December 2037, across Atlanta, Seoul, Bulgaria, and Prague. The film utilized a mix of abandoned data facilities and practical set design to visualize bureaucratic horror through a surreal lens.

Daniel Kaluuya’s return as Aaron Wells was confirmed after months of secrecy. His appearance was treated as a major turning point in the story’s overarching arc, tying the events of all three films together in a nonlinear narrative.

Marketing[edit | edit source]

Marketing for the film began in July 2038 with the reveal of a teaser poster featuring a spiraled fingerprint and the tagline “You were never cleared.” Universal launched an ARG website, CaseFile-R03.net, which generated cryptic files tied to viewer-submitted memory profiles.

Daniel Kaluuya’s return was revealed via a hidden QR code embedded in the second poster, linking to a teaser video in which Aaron Wells whispered, “They erased the wrong memory.” A global campaign followed with projection-based teasers in Berlin, Seoul, and New York.

A full trailer was premiered in September at the "Memory Recital" live event in Berlin, simulating a tribunal where audience members participated in live narrative tests based on the film’s linguistic logic.

Release[edit | edit source]

The Fine Print 3 was released theatrically in the United States on October 7, 2038, by Universal Pictures. The film premiered at the 2038 Venice International Film Festival and rolled out globally on October 11 across 50+ countries.

Reception[edit | edit source]

The Fine Print 3 received widespread critical acclaim for its ambitious structure, philosophical undertones, and return to psychological horror. Critics praised Aldis Hodge’s performance as “emotionally harrowing,” and highlighted the interplay between his character and Daniel Kaluuya’s as “tragic and transcendent.”

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 91% approval rating based on 317 reviews, with an average score of 8.3/10. Metacritic gave it a weighted score of 84/100.

Audiences were more divided, with some praising its narrative ambition and others critiquing its dense, nonlinear structure. Despite this, the film earned $412 million worldwide against a $220 million budget, becoming the highest-grossing entry in the franchise.

References[edit | edit source]