Eli Roth’s “Ice Cream Man” has moved from announcement stage to full summer-release mode, with a new teaser trailer arriving April 13 and a wide theatrical launch set for Aug. 7 across more than 2,000 North American screens. The film stars Ari Millen as a mysterious vendor whose frozen treats send children in a quiet town into violent chaos, giving Roth a high-concept setup that trades on suburbia, childhood ritual and sudden bloodshed. The rollout comes through Roth’s The Horror Section banner in partnership with Iconic Events Releasing, with the teaser landing less than two weeks after the release date and poster were unveiled.
The trailer sharpens the sales pitch. It shows Bayleen Bay turning hostile after children consume the ice cream man’s products, with adults forced into panic as kids become the source of danger. Roth, who co-wrote the film with Noah Belson, has described the project as an idea he carried for years and now sees as his “most terrifying and insane” picture yet.
That language fits the footage, which leans into chaos, mob behavior and child-centered menace rather than a conventional stalk-and-slash pattern. Trade coverage around the release also points to music from Snoop Dogg, a score by Brandon Roberts and Nas as an executive producer, details that give the indie horror launch an unusual commercial sheen.
There is a business story here too. “Ice Cream Man” is the first film to reach theaters under The Horror Section, the genre label Roth launched to back unrated theatrical horror. That makes the August opening a test of whether a filmmaker-led horror brand can still cut through in multiplexes without leaning on a major studio franchise.
Market chatter has framed the title as a notable sales item since early 2026, and Studiocanal’s Sixth Dimension has since acquired select international rights, signaling confidence that Roth’s name still travels in the global genre market after the mixed commercial and critical fallout from “Borderlands.”
Roth has also tied the film to his experience as a father, saying the story draws from fears that come with raising children. That angle gives “Ice Cream Man” a clearer emotional hook than its lurid title suggests. The premise recalls killer-child horror and corrupted-suburbia movies, yet the current campaign is selling the picture as a fresh original built for a crowded theatrical summer, one that aims to turn parental dread into a crowd-pleasing splatter event.





















































