Devil’s Believer: Rise of the Fallen (2027) — First Trailer ignites with an omen: an ancient cult completes the last rite, and the veil between realms tears open. As cities flicker with unholy signs and skies bruise with ash, the world tilts toward damnation. In the chaos, two names surface like a prayer and a warning—Gabriel Cross and Marcus Kane.

Keanu Reeves’s Gabriel Cross is a haunted exorcist who’s broken too many doors—and too many rules—to save souls others had written off. Scarred by a past possession he couldn’t prevent, he works in the margins: abandoned chapels, hospital basements, catacombs where faith echoes thin. His methods are ruthless, his faith complicated, but when the sigils start burning through stone, he’s the one they call.

Dwayne Johnson’s Marcus Kane is steel given purpose—a battle-hardened protector branded by a prophecy he never asked for. He’s not a priest; he’s the shield. From war zones to disaster sites, he’s learned that belief isn’t words—it’s what you’re willing to stand in front of. As the cult rallies fallen angels from the abyss, Marcus becomes the hinge between human grit and something older than fear.

The trailer races across forgotten cities and firelit wastelands: rituals in flooded subway tunnels, knives of light drawn in the dark, a bridge collapsing as wings of shadow sweep overhead. Between realms, an infernal battlefield blooms—spires of ember, rain that hisses like serpents, and a throne of bones awaiting a king who should never rise. Every clash tightens the noose: Gabriel’s forbidden rites versus Marcus’s bare-knuckle faith.

Together they form a volatile pact—discipline and force, doubt and devotion—hunting the cult’s high priest through relic markets, monastery vaults, and the midnight heart of a desert storm. Over the roar, the line that anchors the trailer lands like a verdict: “When the fallen rise, only believers can stand against them.” It’s not about certainty; it’s about choosing to stand.
