The desert winds are howling once again, carrying a scent of decay and ancient power that can only mean one thing: the O’Connells are back. The Mummy 4: Curse of the Golden Sands reignites the legendary franchise, proving that some secrets are best left buried—and some heroes only get better with age. As a forgotten pharaoh from the First Dynasty awakens to reclaim a world that has long forgotten his name, the sands of the Sahara prepare to run red.

Brendan Fraser returns to his career-defining role as Rick O’Connell, radiating a rugged, seasoned charm that only decades of tomb-raiding can forge. No longer just the brash adventurer of his youth, this Rick is a tactical veteran whose aim is deadlier than ever and whose fists still pack the weight of a runaway steam engine. But the true eclipse of the desert is Evelyn Carnahan-O’Connell (Rachel Weisz). Reappearing with a lethal, sophisticated elegance, Evelyn has traded her library dust for “desert-chic” combat gear that screams both high fashion and high lethality. She is no longer just a scholar of the dead; she is a master of the battlefield, navigating treacherous labyrinths with a grace that is as hypnotic as it is dangerous.
The stakes have never been more supernatural. The “Golden Sands” curse is unlike anything the O’Connells have faced before. This ancient hex has birthed a legion of mummified warriors capable of liquefying into sentient dust and reforming at will, making them literal ghosts in the desert—impossible to pin down and terrifying to behold. To stop a celestial alignment that threatens to plunge the Earth into a permanent, sunless tomb, Rick and Evy must reunite with the perpetually panicked yet surprisingly resourceful Jonathan (John Hannah) and the stoic, ever-watchful Ardeth Bay (Oded Fehr).

Blending high-octane archaeology with state-of-the-art visual effects and the classic, tongue-in-cheek O’Connell wit, The Mummy 4 is a pulse-pounding revival that balances nostalgia with modern grit. It is a world where ancient mythology collides with heavy-caliber firepower, proving that while history is written in stone, it is defended with glamour, grit, and a double-barreled shotgun. In the dunes of 2026, the O’Connells remind us: death is only the beginning, but a loaded gun usually helps.