Lee Cronin’s The Mummy (produced by Warner Bros., not Universal, which owns the rights to the original characters) radically reimagines what can be done with a mummy film, bringing the character back towards its roots in body horror. Unlike so many of the cold opens in most of the mummy films that begin with a back story of how and why the mummy was created and/or was cursed, this film begins with a cold open, not in the ancient past, but in the recent past, where a family encounters a tomb in their basement. The story then shifts to a different family, whose members we follow for the rest of the film. This family includes a father who is an investigative reporter (Jack Reynor), his pregnant wife (Laia Costa), and their son (Shylo Molina) and daughter, who are all temporarily living in Cairo. The story kicks in after Katie (Natalie Grace), their daughter, disappears from their backyard one day, only to be found in a mysterious sarcophagus eight years later, deformed and pale. Once they bring their daughter to their current house in Albuquerque in the United States, Katie slowly starts to reveal much more about what she has transformed into.