Mike Mendez's 2000 cult classic The Convent is a film that blends horror, comedy, and a dose of nostalgia into a wildly entertaining ride. Though it might not have garnered the mainstream attention of its counterparts in the early 2000s horror-comedy resurgence, it has built a loyal following over the years. With its self-aware tone, an unrelenting dedication to camp, and buckets of blood, The Convent is a love letter to horror fans who don’t take themselves—or their films—too seriously. Set in a creepy, abandoned convent, the film opens with a flashback to the 1960s where a rebellious young woman, Christine (Adrienne Barbeau), storms the convent with a shotgun and a Molotov cocktail, taking out a group of nuns who seem possessed by some demonic force. Fast forward forty years, and the dilapidated convent is now a local legend, a hotspot for urban explorers, misfit teenagers, and fraternity initiations. Our central group of college students, led by the reluctant Clorissa (Joanna Ca