After experiencing a creative wipeout with the 2009 comedy, “Miss March,” director Zach Cregger took some time to reinvent himself. He returned to theaters in 2022, delivering the modestly budgeted chiller, “Barbarian,” embarking on a new career path to disturb viewers instead of tickle them. The film performed well at the box office, but, more importantly, it suddenly turned Cregger into a talent to watch, keeping the movie business interested in his next offering. “Weapons” is the follow-up, and while “Barbarian” was a deeply flawed endeavor, Cregger shows noticeable improvement in his command of tone for the picture. It begins as a terrifying tale of loss involving missing children and the guardians dealing with such an event, but the helmer isn’t strictly focused on examining trauma. “Weapons” gets a tad weirder than that, keeping up Cregger’s impishness and love of surprises in a feature that manages to maintain some dramatic balance for most of the run time. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

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