If there’s one factor we love, it’s a film that makes us yell, “Lady, LEAVE!” on the display screen. However Peacock’s Strung isn’t your common psychological thriller.
Premiering June 26 on Peacock, the brand new psychological thriller marks a chilling style pivot for director Malcolm D. Lee, who trades romantic comedies for razor-sharp suspense in a movie that’s equal elements glamorous, unsettling and unimaginable to foretell.
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“Alan McElroy wrote an incredible script that I simply couldn’t put down,” he advised MadameNoire. “It was such a page-turner. I used to be speaking on the script… I stated, ‘In the event that they wish to make this film, I wish to dip my toe on this water.’”
Produced by Tyler Perry and Jason Blum, Strung follows Layla (Chloe Bailey), a gifted violinist whose dream tutoring job for an prosperous Los Angeles household shortly spirals into one thing way more sinister as darkish secrets and techniques start to unravel.

Forward of the movie’s premiere, MadameNoire’s Managing Editor Danica Daniel sat down with Malcolm D. Lee and stars Bailey, Lynn Whitfield, Coco Jones, and Lucien Laviscount to speak purple flags, surviving psychological thrillers, the craziest issues they’ve completed for a paycheck, and why Strung could have audiences satisfied they’ve figured all of it out…proper earlier than the rug will get pulled from underneath them.
“I don’t assume the audiences are going to see what’s coming,” Lee teased. “We’re saying, ‘Have a look at this, take a look at this, take a look at this…’ after which—bam!”

The solid guarantees the trip is simply as unpredictable because the trailer suggests.
“I feel it’s a enjoyable curler coaster trip,” Jones shared. “One minute you’re laughing, then you definitely’re terrified… it’s actually enjoyable to undergo this emotional curler coaster collectively.”
For the legendary Whitfield, Strung gives one thing audiences have been craving.

“It’s nice escapism,” she stated. “You get riveted in, and earlier than it, the story unfolds in a approach you didn’t anticipate.”
The dialog shortly spiraled into every part from Lucien admitting he likes to “dabble in issues I in all probability shouldn’t,” to Whitfield’s knowledge about listening to your instinct, Jones revealing she as soon as jumped out of a aircraft for YouTube, and an surprising debate about whether or not my canine ought to begin an Solely Paws account.
In different phrases? Precisely the type of chaotic, hilarious power you’d hope for from one of many summer season’s most fashionable casts—earlier than Strung leaves you questioning every part you thought you knew.

