Satan-s Slaves 2- Communion Jun 2026
The most striking departure from the first film is the setting. The rural house was a place of nostalgia and isolation. The apartment block in Communion is a vertical slum—decaying concrete, rusted iron grates, flickering fluorescent lights, and a perpetually flooded courtyard. Joko Anwar and cinematographer Ical Tanjung transform this building into a labyrinthine nightmare.
Joko Anwar's Satan’s Slaves 2: Communion (2022) shifts the horror from the rural isolation of the first film to the claustrophobic entrapment of a decaying 14-story apartment building in Jakarta. While the first installment focused on a family’s personal tragedy, the sequel expands the mythology into a massive, multi-generational conspiracy involving a sinister cult and a ritual known as the "Communion". Key Narrative & Symbolic Layers The Illusion of Safety Satan-s Slaves 2- Communion
By trading a haunted house for a haunted community, Joko Anwar has crafted a film that lingers in the mind like the memory of a nightmare you cannot quite shake. It is a film about drowning—in floodwaters, in poverty, in guilt, and in the terrible, beautiful, horrifying act of communion with those we love. The most striking departure from the first film
The first film ended with a twist that the family’s nightmare was only beginning. The second film delivers on that promise by asking: What happens when a family’s curse becomes everyone’s problem? The answer is a relentless, waterlogged, and emotionally devastating journey that has more in common with The Wailing (2016) or The Exorcist III than with standard jump-scare fare. Joko Anwar and cinematographer Ical Tanjung transform this
Satan’s Slaves was a story about a mother’s pact with a demonic entity—a standard Faustian bargain with a heavy Islamic and Javanese mystical twist. Communion broadens the canvas. The film introduces the concept of a “Four-Week Communion,” a ritual orchestrated by the cult that worships the demon (known as the "Satan’s Slaves").
Tara Basro (Rini), Endy Arfian (Toni), Nasar Anuz (Bondi), and Bront Palarae (Bapak) Genre: Supernatural Horror / Cult / Period Piece Release Date: August 4, 2022 Streaming Platform: Available globally on Shudder 🏚️ Plot & Setting
It was the first Indonesian and Southeast Asian film to be released in the IMAX format , emphasizing its grand scale and sound design.