Jeepers Creepers May 2026
The original song, written by Harry Warren and Johnny Mercer for the 1938 film Going Places , is about being so overwhelmed by emotion that you lose your words. "Jeepers creepers, where'd ya get those peepers?" croons Armstrong. It is warm, whimsical, and innocent.
The horror begins not with a jump scare, but with a game of "Catch the License Plate." When a rusty, blood-splattered truck tries to run them off the road, Darry’s curiosity overrules Trish’s caution. They turn back. They discover an old church with a pipe leading into the ground. Darry peers inside and witnesses the Creeper dumping wrapped bodies down a chute. Jeepers Creepers
This is the genius of the first act: Jeepers Creepers is a detective story that turns into a survival chase. Unlike slasher victims who wander into basements, Darry and Trish act rationally—they go to the police. But the police don't believe them. By the time Sheriff Dan Tashtego (a brilliant cameo by horror icon Tom Tarantini) realizes the truth, it is too late. The original song, written by Harry Warren and
And the next time you are driving down a lonely rural highway, and you see a rusty old truck with no windshield in your rearview mirror? Don’t look back. Just drive. And for God’s sake, don't stop at the church. The horror begins not with a jump scare,
If you have never seen the original Jeepers Creepers , watch it for Jonathan Breck’s physical performance. Watch it for the terrifying efficiency of a monster who doesn't monologue—he just sniffs, selects, and devours. But watch it with open eyes, knowing that the man behind the camera adds a layer of darkness that no screenwriter could have invented.