
If Hollywood ever sought to reinterpret the Salem Witch Trials as a supernatural epic, Sabrina: The Supreme Covenant (2026) would be the most ambitious attempt yet.
In this imagined story, Sabrina discovers that the Salem Witch Trials were not simply acts of human hysteria—they were an orchestrated purge led by a secret witch order aiming to eradicate “impure bloodlines,” witches born half-human and half-demon.

The Spellman lineage stands at the center.
When ancient inscriptions are unearthed beneath a ruined Salem chapel, Sabrina learns a chilling prophecy: “The descendant born of fire and shadow.” A prophecy pointing directly to her existence—a threat to the ruling witch hierarchy.
The film tackles mature themes: power, manipulation, historical erasure, prejudice, and the eternal question of whether justice can exist in a world governed by those who fear difference.

Visually, the imagined film paints magic as grand, terrifying spectacle:
– Black fire pillars erupting from the earth
– Witches spiraling mid-air while chanting forbidden rites
– The Salem Gate opening with suspended, wandering souls
– Operatic, reality-warping magical duels

The final antagonist, High Priestess Seraphine, embodies the rigid, authoritarian past. In the ultimate confrontation, Sabrina chooses not to preserve order—but to destroy the Covenant itself, releasing magic back into nature so every witch is born free from ancient laws.
A chaotic, breathtaking, cinematic conclusion.
Disclaimer:
All information about “Sabrina: The Supreme Covenant (2026)” in this article is purely fictional and has not been confirmed by any studio or official source.