Sponsored
Rent or Buy Blockbuster Hits
Aladdin's Revenge
Full Movie·2026·1h 15m·en

Aladdin's Revenge

Rub. Wish. Die.

Brett Bentman's Aladdin's Revenge brings back the cursed lamp and survivor Rachel for another round of deadly wishes. At 75 minutes, it's lean, mean, and divisive — exactly the kind of midnight-streamer that splits horror fans down the middle.

Streaming availability is being tracked

We update streaming services daily as platforms confirm rights. New theatrical releases typically appear on streaming 8-12 weeks after their cinema run.

Watch Trailer

Streaming availability data updates regularly. Verify the platform listing before purchasing.

Share:
Sponsored
Rent or Buy Blockbuster Hits
MO

Movie OTT Editorial

3 min read · Published May 30, 2026

1.0/10

Aladdin's Revenge (2026): A Sequel That Knows Exactly What It Is

Aladdin's Revenge landed on streaming February 17, 2026, and it's the kind of direct-to-digital horror-thriller that doesn't apologize for its 75-minute runtime or its B-movie DNA. Rachel—the sole survivor from the first film—thought she'd escaped the cursed lamp. She hasn't. Now stuck at a therapy retreat with a fresh group of vulnerable strangers, she's got to keep them alive while the lamp grants three more deadly wishes. The tagline says it all: "Rub. Wish. Die."

This isn't prestige horror. This is a film that understands its lane and stays in it.

Rachel's Comeback Nobody Asked For

Here's what works about the premise: a trauma survivor returning to the exact scenario that traumatized her is cruel in a way that most sequels don't bother with. Rachel's not just fighting a cursed object—she's fighting her own guilt for knowing what it does and still failing to stop it. That's a tighter character engine than the setup initially suggests.

Director and writer Brett Bentman doesn't waste time. The therapy retreat setting is smart storytelling—you've got built-in reasons for people to be emotionally raw and easy targets for supernatural exploitation. And Devanny Pinn, a name you'll recognize from indie horror circles, brings real grounded energy to the role. She keeps things watchable even when the budget shows, which matters for a film operating at this scale.

What I keep coming back to is how little the film tries to be something it's not. There's no pretense here—no attempt to elevate the concept beyond what it is: a magic lamp that kills people in creative ways. That self-awareness, without winking too hard at the camera, is exactly what saves a premise this thin.

Production Details That Actually Matter

Director: Brett Bentman (also wrote) Studio: B22 Films + ITN Studios Distributor: ITN Distribution Runtime: 75 minutes Cast: Devanny Pinn and ensemble

The film skipped theaters entirely. ITN Distribution took it straight to streaming—a choice that makes sense given the production footprint and the target audience. No theatrical release meant no box office to report and no awards-season machinery. The IMDb score sitting at 1/10 tells you something, though it's hard to say whether that reflects genuine audience disappointment or the particular cruelty of early online ratings for niche films. Probably both.

According to UpcomingHorrorMovies.com, reviewers called it a "delicious thriller" despite acknowledging that the wish-granting sequences feel rushed and some effects don't quite land. The budget ceiling is visible in places. But the editing keeps momentum—Bentman knows how to cut a scene tight enough that you don't sit still long enough to get bored.

Where to Actually Watch It

Aladdin's Revenge is currently streaming on Tubi and other ad-supported platforms following its February 2026 release. Tubi's the primary home—the platform specializes in exactly this kind of horror title. Streaming rights shift over time, so check Movie OTT's where-to-watch tracker for current availability across your region. The widget updates in real time as services add or drop titles.

If you're scrolling Tubi's horror section on a Friday night, this is the kind of lean, committed-to-its-premise film that rewards that specific mood. Seventy-five minutes. No bloat.

Is It a Sequel? Do You Need to Watch the First One?

Yes, Aladdin's Revenge is a direct sequel to Aladdin (2026). Rachel's trauma and her relationship with the lamp are central to why this film works—watching the first one gives you that context. That said, Bentman establishes enough backstory that you can jump in cold if you're desperate. The lamp does bad things. Rachel knows this. New people don't. Wishes go sideways. You'll follow it.

But honestly? Watch them in order. Each one builds on the last.

The Real Question: Should You Watch It?

This film isn't for casual viewers looking for polish. It's not for people who want a tidy three-act structure or satisfying character arcs. It's for horror fans who appreciate a 75-minute commitment from a director who knows his limits and works within them—no filler, no pretense, no budget padding disguised as style.

Devanny Pinn's solid. The premise commits. The pacing doesn't quit. Movie OTT tracks titles like this specifically because they build cult followings quietly, under the radar of mainstream coverage. That's the lane Aladdin's Revenge occupies—not for everyone, but for the exact people who'll get something out of it.

The thing nobody mentions is how much that matters in direct-to-streaming horror. You're not paying $15 at the theater. You're not committing two hours. You're spending 75 minutes on a free platform. That calculus changes everything.


Stream it now on Tubi. Use Movie OTT to confirm availability in your region before hitting play.

Get the weekly digest

Hand-picked films new on Movie OTT. One email per week, no spam.

If this helped you decide what to watch, share it:

Share:
Advertisement
Rent or Buy Blockbuster Hits

You may also like

Picked by team & crew