Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, Jenna Ortega, Catherine O’Hara
It’s showtime—for the very last time. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Beetlejuice fulfills the prophecy and completes the unholy trinity, picking up the chaotic thread right where the last confrontation left off. The forbidden name has been spoken for the third, fateful time, but not just by one person—the magical instability of the universe itself has screamed it. As a result, the once-fragile barrier between the chaotic Afterlife and the mundane Living World completely collapses, transforming the sleepy, conventional town of Winter River into a psychedelic, macabre, and utterly supernatural playground.

Michael Keaton returns as the infamous “Ghost with the Most,” Beetlejuice, but his ambitions have grown far larger than just haunting a single house. Now possessing near-limitless power in the newly merged reality, he has crowned himself the self-proclaimed Emperor of the Merged Worlds. His realm is a beautiful, terrifying nightmare where the rules of life, death, and physics are merely suggestions.

Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder), now fully aware of the horrors and wonders of the supernatural, and her intensely curious daughter, Astrid (Jenna Ortega), must navigate a reality where sandworms swim effortlessly through the streets, bureaucratic ghosts hold traffic, and shrunken heads are bizarrely becoming the town’s newest, most unsettling fashion trend. Lydia, armed with her experience, and Astrid, with her fresh, Goth-inspired perspective, must learn to fight the escalating chaos.
Meanwhile, Delia Deetz (Catherine O’Hara) is, unexpectedly, absolutely thriving. The artistic madness of the underworld provides the perfect, grotesque inspiration for her avant-garde sculptures, and she finds herself embracing the supernatural chaos, much to the exasperation of her family.

Now, three generations of Deetz women—Lydia, Astrid, and Delia—must reluctantly unite to solve the ultimate, paradox-ridden riddle: how to banish a poltergeist who has finally gotten exactly what he wanted—absolute, unbridled freedom and ultimate power. Visually stunning, deeply macabre, and hilariously twisted with Tim Burton’s signature style, this finale is a chaotic, unforgettable spectacle that proves that when dealing with this ghost, three really is a terrifying crowd.