Ask Your Own Question
What is the ending?
Who dies?
Is there a post-credit scene?
Yes, Scary Movie (2026) has a mid-credits scene.
After the main events conclude with the survivors regrouping at Sidney's house, the screen fades to black following the initial credits and cast photos. Tense strings swell faintly in the background, building anticipation as the frame cuts back to a brightly lit living room cluttered with news equipment--cameras, microphones, and scattered scripts on a coffee table stained with coffee rings.
Mindy Meeks-Martin, played with her signature wide-eyed intensity and a fresh bandage on her cheek from the final stab wound, sits poised in front of a makeshift green screen. Her face, still smeared with faint makeup from the chaos, lights up with exhilarated triumph; internally, she's buzzing from finally seizing the spotlight she's craved amid endless near-death scares, her reporter dreams no longer mocked. "Live from the scene of Woodsboro's latest bloodbath," she announces breathlessly into the lens, voice cracking with adrenaline-fueled glee, gesturing dramatically at the blood-spattered couch behind her.
Chad Meeks-Martin, her twin brother, hunches behind the camera on a tripod, sweat beading on his forehead under the hot living room lamps. His arm in a sling from his own brutal injuries, he winces with every adjustment, motivated by fierce protectiveness--he's endured Ghostface's knife for her before and won't let technical glitches steal this moment. "Angle's good, Mindy--don't trip over the mic cable," he mutters through gritted teeth, his eyes darting nervously to the windows, haunted by the kill count they just survived.
Gale Weathers pops into frame briefly from the kitchen doorway, wine glass in hand, smirking with reluctant approval; her nod acknowledges Mindy's growth from sidekick to star, a quiet emotional bridge to their shared trauma. Mindy launches into a hyperbolic recap--"Ghostface struck again, but we slayed!"--punctuated by Chad's awkward zooms and stifled laughs, the scene's humor underscoring their unbreakable sibling bond amid exhaustion. No Ghostface mask lurks, no sequel bait--just raw relief and levity rolling over the credits with "Twisting the Knife" by Ice Nine Kills and McKenna Grace blasting in, fading as the screen fully blacks out.