Next On The Bold and the Beautiful Spoilers Monday, November 24 | B&B 11/24/2025

In Next On The Bold and the Beautiful – 11/24/2025, the sun-washed glamour of Los Angeles becomes the backdrop for one of the most harrowing chapters in the saga. The movie opens with a sweeping aerial shot of the beach, deceptively serene, before cutting sharply to flashing sirens, shouting voices, and the frantic chaos of a moment that will haunt the Forrester and Spencer families for years: Luna Nozawa is missing, possibly dying, after a terrifying nighttime collision.
The story unfolds in the aftermath of a violent confrontation at the luxurious beach house—a confrontation where emotions boiled over, police lights filled the air, and Luna, trembling and overwhelmed, bolted into the darkness. Before running, she confessed the truth to Will Spencer: she had lost their unborn child. The confession detonated like a grenade. Will was gutted, battling grief and betrayal all at once, and Luna fled, desperate and broken.
But Luna’s escape is only the beginning of the nightmare.
As she sprinted down the fog-coated road, headlights pierced the gloom. A car came barreling toward her—too fast, too sudden—and the film freezes just before impact, drawing the audience into a moment suspended between hope and catastrophe. Was it an accident? Or did someone intend to strike her down? In true Bold & Beautiful fashion, nothing is straightforward, and every character becomes a suspect.
The crash ignites a frantic search along the coastline. What was moments earlier a scenic paradise is transformed into a crime scene flooded with investigators, flashlights sweeping across the sand. Ridge Forrester leads the frantic efforts, barking orders like a general at war, while Brooke Logan paces in desperation, whispering prayers for Luna’s life. The Spencer clan, too, is thrust into turmoil, their wealth and power useless against the possibility that they might have lost someone connected to them in such a tragic, public way.
But then the film introduces its first twist: no body is found.
Only a scattered trail—footprints, tire marks, fragments of torn fabric—suggests Luna may have survived the collision long enough to drag herself away. The mystery deepens when search teams stumble upon something unexpected: a discarded necklace, half buried in the sand, and beside it, a folded scrap of paper containing a cryptic phrase. It’s enough to suggest foul play. Enough to suggest someone else reached Luna first.
The movie then jumps to Forrester Creations, where another subplot unfolds like a thriller within a thriller. Dee Sharp, locked in a high-stakes meeting with Carter Walton, awaits the arrival of Daphne Rose, the ethereal singer whose haunting voice is set to anchor their new perfume campaign. Daphne bursts into the room breathless, bringing a chilling update: Luna is gone, the beach house is in chaos, and the police have launched a full-scale investigation. The news rattles Dee, who maintains a tough exterior but secretly harbors a soft spot for those caught in Luna’s orbit—particularly Remy Price, the brooding doctor who once loved her.
Determined to keep Remy out of the growing storm, Dee considers warning him privately, even though he swore to keep them apart forever. But Remy senses the truth anyway. And in one of the film’s most gripping sequences, he abandons the ER, jumps into his car, and races to the shoreline—only to find emptiness. Just footprints. Just silence. Just the crashing waves where Luna may have vanished.
Meanwhile, the movie teases a darker possibility: Luna may not have lost her baby at all. Rumors swirl among the characters that her confession to Will was a calculated lie—a way to free herself from the Spencer dynasty and the suffocating chains that would bind her to their world forever. As investigators comb through the beach house surveillance, grainy footage shows a shadowy figure helping Luna flee moments before the crash—someone linked to her mother, Poppy Nozawa, whose underground network might be protecting her.
And then, as Thanksgiving approaches, the film floods the screen with contrast: lavish holiday decorations set against families fractured by fear. The Forresters gather for dinner, but every toast tastes bitter with the knowledge that Luna may be gone forever. Bill Spencer, always the opportunist, may use his media empire to shape public perception. Meanwhile, Steffy Forrester uncovers a clue hinting that Luna’s disappearance might be tied to corporate sabotage aimed at Forrester Creations.
The film closes on a cliffhanger—Luna’s fate unresolved, alliances cracking under pressure, and a holiday season poised to explode with revelations that will change every family involved.
