It’s Goth Girl Summer in Los Angeles

Gabbriette and the cast of ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ embrace moody method dressing

Gabbriette arrives at a private screening of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" in Los Angeles, California.
(Image credit: PG/Bauer-Griffin / Contributor via Getty)

It’s an interesting quirk of LA—a place quite literally within The Golden State—that goth culture is one of the city’s biggest (unofficial) exports. Sure, you’d be forgiven for picturing perma-tans and platinum blondes when someone mentions Hollywood. But anyone who’s spent any time there will tell you: that city is run by goth girls. And Gabbriette, a native Californian (and fiancée to The 1975’s Matty Healy), is their dark mistress.

She follows a long line of glamour ghouls: Vampira (iconically buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery), Elvira (whom Vampira—real name Maila Nurmi—once sued for impersonation), heck, even Lily Munster and Morticia Addams (the TV adaptation at least) were born in the so-called City of Angels.

Perhaps it only makes sense, then, that goth culture should burst from the shadows—not in October, a month already devoted to the undead—but in the heat of summer, like a sartorial Nosferatu. And if you needed proof that goth has gone macabre-mainstream, look no further than the press tour for the reboot of the 1997 cult classic I Know What You Did Last Summer.

Gabbriette arrives at a private screening of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" in Los Angeles, California.

Gabbriette arrives at a private screening of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" in Los Angeles, California.

(Image credit: PG/Bauer-Griffin / Contributor via Getty)

The film itself is a smorgasbord of eldritch hallmarks. For starters, it’s a slasher, and the original—shot in the ’90s (very goth)—stars a pre-Buffy the Vampire Slayer Sarah Michelle Gellar. Also, the killer’s weapon of choice is a fish hook. Menacing. There are frights, thrills, and of course—fashion.

At a private screening of the film, Gabbriette—who stars in the remake—assembled a coven of gloomy It Girls, including Alana Haim, Jesse Jo Stark, Devon Lee Carlson, and Kylie Jenner’s bestie, Anastasia Karanikolaou.

Anastasia Karanikolaou, Gabbriette, and Devon Lee Carlson are seen leaving a screening of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" on July 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California

Anastasia Karanikolaou, Gabbriette, and Devon Lee Carlson leaving a screening of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" in Los Angeles

(Image credit: Photo by PG/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images)

For the event, which was held at a members-only club in LA, the saturnine starlet stuck to her funereal fashion formula: a micro mini dress with a keyhole cutout, paired with glossy patent leather peep-toe platforms by Christian Louboutin—their blood-red soles winking lasciviously with every step.

Gabbriette Bechtel attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Columbia Pictures “I Know What You Did Last Summer” at The United Theater on Broadway on July 14, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Gabbriette at the Los Angeles Premiere of “I Know What You Did Last Summer” at The United Theater on Broadway in Los Angeles, California.

(Image credit: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin / Contributor via Getty)

For the official LA premiere, she doubled down on nocturnal style codes in a raven-black lace-up corset and matching satin trousers, a look that conjured memories of Jennifer Love Hewitt’s 1998 outfit during the press tour for I Still Know What You Did Last Summer.

Jennifer Love Hewitt autographs copies of the "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer" soundtrack on November 18, 1998

Jennifer Love Hewitt autographs copies of the "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer" soundtrack on November 18, 1998

(Image credit: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

Welcome—if you dare—to Goth Girl Summer.

Shop Goth Girl Summer Styles

Mischa Anouk Smith
News and Features Editor

Mischa Anouk Smith is the News and Features Editor of Marie Claire UK.

From personal essays to purpose-driven stories, reported studies, and interviews with celebrities like Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and designers including Dries Van Noten, Mischa has been featured in publications such as Refinery29, Stylist and Dazed. Her work explores what it means to be a woman today and sits at the intersection of culture and style. In the spirit of eclecticism, she has also written about NFTs, mental health and the rise of AI bands.