Alright, horror junkies, the Monster train keeps rolling. After Dahmer made stomachs turn, the Menendez brothers had everyone yelling at their screens, and Ed Gein just dropped with his skin-suit nightmares, season 4 is already cooking. This time? Lizzie Borden, the chick with the axe and zero chill. Production’s underway, cameras are hot, and the cast list is straight fire. Here’s the full scoop—no fluff, just facts and juicy guesses.
Monster Season 4 Release Date Speculations
Netflix stays quiet like a crypt on exact dates, but the clues are screaming fall 2026. Filming kicked off in L.A. this October, so the crew’s deep in the fake blood and Victorian corsets right now. Past seasons moved fast—Dahmer hit in 2022, Menendez in 2024, Gein this September. If Murphy’s machine keeps the pedal down, expect Lizzie swinging that axe on your TV by next Halloween season. Tudum drops the real bombs when they’re ready, so stalk that page like it owes you money.
Monster Season 4 Cast Updates
Ryan Murphy doesn’t mess around with casting, and this lineup is stacked. Check the roster:
- Ella Beatty as Lizzie Borden – The Great girl steps up as the Sunday school teacher turned murder suspect. She’s got that quiet-crazy vibe down pat.
- Charlie Hunnam as Andrew Borden – Jax Teller grows a beard and gets cheap with the cash. Daddy Borden’s about to feel that axe.
- Rebecca Hall as Abby Borden – Stepmom’s getting 19 whacks, and Hall’s bringing the ice-queen energy.
- Billie Lourd as Emma Borden – Lizzie’s big sis, riding loyalty hard until the trial tears it apart.
- Jessica Barden as Nance O’Neill – The actress buddy who stirred up scandal faster than tabloids.
- Vicky Krieps as Bridget Sullivan – The maid who saw everything but kept her mouth shut. Until court.
Word on the street? Sarah Paulson’s circling a cameo as Aileen Wuornos.
Monster Season 4 Potential Plot
Fall River, 1892. Hot August day. Andrew and Abby Borden catch an axe to the skull—40 whacks total, give or take. Lizzie’s in the house, claims she’s innocent, gets acquitted, then lives rich and weird until she dies. The show’s not here for history class though. Expect:
- Family fights over money that hit harder than the murders.
- Lizzie’s post-trial glow-up: theater pals, sapphic rumors, zero regrets.
- Flash-forwards tying Borden to modern lady killers.
- Courtroom scenes so tense you’ll forget to breathe.
Murphy and Ian Brennan always dig into why people snap. This one’s gonna ask if Lizzie was a victim, a villain, or just ahead of her time. Either way, the nursery rhyme’s getting a remix.