Middling reviews are those not short enough to be tiny reviews but that aren't as in-depth or focused as deep dives or reviews of entire franchises. Those on this page are supernatural which includes ghosts, hauntings, demons, and a variety of otherwordly spooks. Headers are clickable drop downs with the review text beneath them.
A phenomenal and timely supernatural horror film that comments on gender taking cinema by surprise may not be new but the approach Obsession (2025) takes to being that phenom-movie invites the entire genre, if not the film industry, to step up to the plate and elevate their own game. With a budget under $1 million dollars, something unheard of today the director and writer, Curry Barker, brings tension, fear, and nuanced social commentary that is particularly applicable today to the big screen. Barker’s ability to do this however has already been established on YouTube in 2024 with his self-starred and self-created Milk & Serial, available to watch now free on the platform.
Curry Barker didn’t create Obsession alone however and the phenomenal cast and crew that brought the modern horror to life that includes producers James Harris, Haley Nicole Johnson, Christian Mercuri, and Roman Viaris. Additionally cinematographer Taylor Clemons coupled with music by Rock Burwell helps bring the Curry Barker created short, The Chair, to the full feature film. For a deeper dive led by a qualified diver into the domestic horror genre and how it directly and indirectly participated in the feminist movement origination of the 1970s I recommend Scream With Me by Eleanor Johnson. In Johnson’s book she describes how 6 films, including The Stepford Wives (1975) and Alien (1979), sparked conversation both broadly and at the metaphorical dinner table while providing examples of nuanced gender issues playing out that had been previously unshared on the big horror screen.
What is horrifying to one, like domestic issues with a partner might seem silly to another, particularly in a normally male dominated sphere like horror. Barker creates a universe where anyone can make any wish using a One Wish Willow toy and that one wish will come true. The endless directions and spin-offs from this idea have been touched on in interviews Barker has done but who has that One Wish Willow and what they wish for opens up many doors to conversations similarly to the domestic horror of the 1970s that did the same for the feminist movement.
The cultural parallels between the 1970s and today are stark not only in the horror realm but in society as well. Following the Gamer Gate controversy, explosion of online agitator communities, and subsequent 2016 election the already strained relations between and even within genders seemed to reach boiling points cyclically with the news cycle. The author of Men Who Hate Women, Laura Bates, infiltrated some of the extremist groups where the most misguided and harmful cultural perception about gender issues originate and spread. Those same toxic mentalities have been trickling down to create men like the Obsession characters, Michael Johnston who plays Baron “Bear” Bailey and Cooper Tomlinson who plays Bear’s coworker, Ian. The pair are part of a larger peer group which includes two other coworkers, one of which is Inde Navarrette playing Nikki Freeman and the other is Megan Lawless playing Sarah Harper, the daughter of the group’s boss.
From early on it becomes clear that Bear is likely experiencing what is described as the Loneliness Male Epidemic counterposed with Ian who is nonchalant about relationships with women and sees them as relationship counterparts to men rather than individual people. Bear arrives home from practicing him confessing his feelings to Nikki at a diner with Ian to discover his cat, Sandy, has overdosed and died after getting into a pill bottle. The bottle displays a clear, Sharpie-d warning to be careful, finding out it belonged to his grandmother who’s since passed and left him the apartment. Nikki calls him after he’s cleaned up Sandy’s body and he doesn’t tell her but rather worries about getting her a replacement necklace when hers falls down a drain mid-call. He sees an opportunity to confess his love to her after trivia that night and decides to open that conversation to her with a crystal necklace.
Like many domestic horror films what appears kind-hearted or romantic early on is actually selfishly motivated and begins the unraveling that abruptly upends the friend group’s lives. When the group meets up at the bar shortly after Bear purchases the One Wish Willow for $6.99 plus tax, intending to give it to Nikki after not vibing with any necklace options at the shop, he tells Sarah about Sandy and fails to pull the trigger on his confession to Nikki even when they’re separated from the group. Little comments, looks and hints are throughout the friend group’s interactions that detail what is happening just beneath the surface and later revealed. Everyone in the group is keeping something from the others despite the cordial interactions and friend-like banter they are still just coworkers with their own agendas.
The scene right after they leave the bar trivia night is one of the best ways the film shows the friend group dynamic before the much more intense party scene later on in the film. After they exit into the parking lot Nikki goes off to give a homeless man cash she’s taken from Bear, even crouching down to be face-to-face with him and treat him like a person when she gives him the money. While the other three stand away and during their interactions skirt around the unspoken Bear-Nikki confession everyone but Nikki anticipates. Sarah is clearly interested in Bear and believes Nikki just doesn’t see what a “catch” he is while Ian seemingly wants Bear to confess but also clearly doesn’t believe it will go well.
Following an orchestrated situation Bear is tasked with driving Nikki home instead of Ian but chickens out and doesn’t utilize the drive home to confess. He pulls up outside Nikki’s house and decides to try and confess his feelings as she’s exiting but it is awkward, weird, and completely misguided. During this scene Nikki shares some of her own goals and reiterates her plans, that she wants to be writer and is quitting their shared job. She drops hint after hint that he is a friend to her, if not a brother, and even sighs with relief when he lies and says he isn’t confessing feelings. The conversation goes so poorly he pulls what he thinks is a Hail-Mary and calls her Freaky Nikki as she walks up to her house, something that stops her in her tracks. She is upset and confused, Ian having noted earlier it wasn’t a kind nickname from their formative years, despite the audience never finding out why she was being called that.
Bear is embarrassed and panicked, worrying he has ruined his chance forever with Nikki after being too afraid to have the conversation. He remembers the One Wish Willow he intended to give to Nikki as she goes inside and in his deflated state he makes a poorly thought out wish. Bear wishes that Nikki loved him more than anyone in the whole world and breaks the stick. Almost immediately the camera angle shows Nikki staring from her front stoop, backlit so her face and features are obscured, something the film utilizes often to convey information to the audience about Nikki’s state. Before he knows it she’s at his window asking that he come inside, citing his cat’s death as a reason but accidentally saying her own cat died, mirroring him in that moment a little too well.
It is obvious that he knows something is wrong from this very first interaction with her post wish due to her increasingly creepy behavior, like putting her head down on the dash and almost snapping out of her daze a couple times and stating she doesn’t know why she’s doing what she’s doing. Despite the clear signs something is wrong with Nikki he brings her home and they end up in awkwardly in bed together. Nikki makes aggressive and uncharacteristic advances on Bear, even making out momentarily, before she freaks out screaming and jumps across the room from him. These momentary freak outs seem like the real Nikki breaking through, especially on the first night, and being absolutely appalled by her behavior but apologetic. After the first night however things become much darker when it becomes clear Bear plans to go along with this new but off relationship.
Personally the moment he made the wish I suspected he was the bad guy as someone familiar with Fairly Odd Parents and the 50-year twist. Following the first night weirdness Nikki creates a disturbing commemoration for Sandy in Bear’s apartment which includes Sandy’s dug up corpse arranged in a set up that more closely resembles a shrine than a memorial. At work the next day her odd behavior continues, noticeable enough to cause Ian to confront Bear about it, the shot showing them whispering in the back while Nikki watches Bear from the register. Ian and Sarah are completely taken aback by Bear and Nikki’s announcement that they are an official couple, something both didn’t expect as the outcome from Bear’s confession.
A montage of clips between Nikki and Bear show their relationship progress somewhat normally but underneath the picturesque veneer cracks show throughout. Nikki is always a moment or two away from a completely opposite reaction to the situation or blatantly staring at Bear while smiling creepily. It becomes even more clear that Bear sucks when he is annoyed and embarrassed by these instances rather than thankful he got everything he wished for, if not a little more. The “sunny days” of their relationship come to an abrupt halt however when Ian tells Bear as he is at a dinner date with Nikki. Ian reveals that Nikki lied about her behavior the first night resulting from a bad MDMA trip and the grief she feels about her estranged father being terminally ill.
Bear brushes Ian’s worries off, more interested in continuing his fake relationship than reality, but he isn’t able to shake the feeling something is off. He decides to bring it up with Nikki and question what is going on which results in one of the best scenes in the movie as Nikki abruptly stands while smiling and begins shouting at Bear that she thought they were having a nice dinner and stomping her foot like a child having a tantrum. Bear is so freaked out he grabs her hand and assures her it is a nice date and that nothing is wrong which only leads to even more horror later that night.
A chilling and disturbing shot that particularly highlights the situation Nikki faces Bear is atop her and they’re having sex. While she is moaning and sounds like she’s enjoying it her face is blank and withdrawn as a tear rolls down her cheek. Nikki is trapped within this wish and Bear is more than happy to reap the benefits while she suffers dehumanizing and soul crushing scenarios she has little control over. That night Bear awakes to Nikki standing in the corner in a horrifying scene as she skitters around the room’s corners like an uncanny valley doll. She informs him that she’s watching him sleep after he asks what she is doing and either screams or shouts at him when she isn’t replying quietly and sweetly. The contrast between her responses is a stark highlight of the inner turmoil Nikki, and women trapped in domestic peril, face while keeping a lid on the combustion occurring.
Nikki in a demonic voice tells Bear to go back to sleep and he fucking does which is yet another testament to not only how he plans to “handle” his relationship with Nikki but also how he handles life. He avoids situations that are uncomfortable or frightening even if it causes another personal great harm. In the morning despite being awoken in the most haunting way and discovering that his front door has been duct taped shut he is determined to go to work. This comes off like a man wanting more space from a frighteningly overbearing partner but just under the surface it is clearly the “real” Nikki revolting against Bear’s continuation of the relationship. This becomes more apparent when she begs him to stay and upon his leaving she stands, smiling at the door, even as she urinates onto the carpet. She looks pained behind her smile and like there’s an internal struggle occurring between her and whatever is possessing or controlling her.
This behavior Bear displays is not just with Nikki however and when he goes to work that day Sarah talks to him about his relationship. She notes the sudden changes with him and Nikki while also alluding to having something to tell him that would upset him. We learn at some point that this information includes Nikki telling Sarah she didn’t have romantic feelings for Bear and instead sees him as a brother. Bear entertains these conversations with Sarah, sometimes coming off he’s aware she has a crush on him, even though he supposedly has his dream girl, Nikki, literally obsessed with him at home. In a disgusting but pivotal moment Bear eats the sandwich Nikki packed for him and reads the riddle she put on the sticky note which states that the verdict is cat. In horror he realizes she has put Sandy’s dead body into his sandwich that he’s taken multiple bites of. Immediately Bear throws up into a trash can and after work calls Ian to confront him about having a party that night and not inviting Bear, which Bear learned from Sarah pre-cat sandwich discovery.
During the car ride phone call Ian informs Bear that him and Nikki weren’t invited because of how weird the relationship seems to the friend group. People they know are worried that Bear is taking advantage of Nikki’s state to worm his way into a relationship with her and that the couple is too codependent already. Ian notes Nikki’s weirdness as another reason they weren’t invited and that Bear would bring Nikki and vice versa if either were invited which causes Bear to protest. Bear is more concerned about the perception of the relationship rather than how it’s actually going, as things left on a very concerning note just that day. Like Bear has just noticed something is off, which would be highly unlikely post cat sandwich, he calls the One Wish Willow help line and asks if he can alter the wish. The unamused worker on the other line seems annoyed that Bear is going around the issue rather than being upfront about his role in things and the outcome he desires.
Bear is informed he can’t alter a wish and that the only way to cancel a wish is for Bear to die, which he doesn’t even consider momentarily. Bear does care about and ask however if the love between him and Nikki is real, and the trailer line that makes anyone watching furrow a brow is replied that just because Bear wished it for her doesn’t mean it isn’t real. Bear asks what happened to the real Nikki, another admission that he knows exactly what is happening with confirmation he only cares about how it impacts him. The answerer informs him that Nikki is there and then horrid, blood curdling disembodied screams are heard from the other end of the line seemingly coming from her. Bear avoids this and hangs the call up, freaked out and disturbed but resolved to attend the party and prove normalcy to everyone and himself. Inside the audience is shown the extent to which Nikki is physically suffering in addition to the obvious examples of her mental suffering. The entire day through the night Bear was at work Nikki stood in the same spot, her vomit, sweat, urine, and possibly excrement cover her but she still smiles. The carpet she stands in is smushy with liquid and looks like it has rotted in the short time.
Nikki acts like nothing is happening, acting like Bear’s concerns are related to her not putting in enough effort on her physical appearance as she should. She goes to shower when Bear tells her about the party and while she’s in the bathroom he informs her through the door that she isn’t invited, claiming it is a boy’s night. A demonic voice screams and responds as Bear tries to leave before Nikki forces her to come with him but it is quickly shown that not only did she come but she is wearing uncharacteristic outfit, another rebellion on real Nikki’s part that could double as a cry for help that her friends could see. Unfortunately for Nikki no one at the party is her friend and she escalates her shocking behavior to the point she smashes a bottle into her head, splitting her forehead open. We see Bear take her to the hospital but the staff won’t see her for unknown reasons as she dances manically. It is insanity that Bear’s reaction to both the party and outside the hospital is annoyance and embarrassment characteristic of abusers once a victim of abuse has responded to said abuse.
Rather than thinking of helping Nikki or reading between her lines to find the true meaning he texts with Sarah after the party and she requests he meet her so she can tell him the rest of the information she wanted to earlier at work. This asshole decides to sneak out once he thinks Nikki is asleep to meet Sarah and as he’s leaving the room the sleeping Nikki begins speaking, which is actually the real Nikki. She begs Bear to kill her while “she” aka whatever is possessing Nikki, is asleep, confirming that she can only do things when the possessed-Nikki isn’t in control like when she’s asleep. This makes the cat sandwich and memorial even more apparent cries for help from real-Nikki that Bear not only ignored but covered up or became upset about. He runs away to meet Sarah rather than doing anything about Nikki asking for help and confirming to him outright that she is possessed and that whatever “loves” Bear isn’t a human at all.
While with Sarah she reveals to Bear that Ian and Nikki had been casually hooking up off and on prior to Bear and Nikki getting together and that she, Sarah, had feelings for Bear. He seems genuinely interested in Sarah during this conversation, her requesting that Bear open her last remaining response from art school for her. Before Bear is able to do this however their moment is interrupted suddenly by Nikki running full speed at Sarah’s window, breaking it and smashing Sarah’s head into a brick over and over. Sarah’s face is completely obliterated and she is definitely dead as Bear screams on in horror which causes Nikki to try to comfort him. She tells Bear she’s going to take care of everything and in his shocked state he also goes to try and fix things, shaken into action by Sarah’s brutal murder. Unconcerned about covering up the crime or helping Nikki he goes back to the shop he purchased the One Wish Willow from with the intent to confront the owner.
Covered in Sarah’s blood and clearly shaken up Bear blames the shop owner for selling such a toy but he Uno-reverses that quickly and tells Bear not all wishes turn out bad and gestures to his shop as evidence. I loved that the movie itself makes it clear through people’s responses to Bear that he is doing something wrong even if he is in denial about that. He chose this outcome for Nikki and by extension himself and is now blaming everyone but himself including Nikki. Frustrated and not satisfied with the shop owner’s response he purchases two additional One Wish Willows due to being stopped by supernatural forces from breaking another stick and thus wish, he resolves to have someone else make a wish to counteract his wish, a suggestion from the owner as a solution. Bear urgently leaves and goes to Ian, trying to explain quickly what is happening and exactly what he wants Ian to do. Upset with Bear and unfazed by what Bear tells him about Nikki, including that he knows that Nikki and Ian hooked up, he sarcastically wishes for a billion dollars. To his delight and Bear’s dismay money stacks begin falling from the sky and landing on the ground around Ian and Bear as Bear falls to his knees defeated in his efforts.
After Bear leaves Ian’s place he finds that Nikki has mutilated Sarah’s body in his apartment and arranged a shrine to their relationship in the front entrance area. She has also put on Sarah’s dress from the night before and either tattooed on or drew on Sarah’s own tattoos and fashioned Sarah’s hair to her own head, becoming what she believes Bear wants. Bear asks Nikki to undo the wish with her own wish but she has a gun and when Ian comes in she one-shot-one-kills him upon his entry, leaving only Nikki and Bear while also showing the lengths to which possessed-Nikki will go to. Bear becomes even more frightened by her determination once she ties him up and vomits on him like her body is rejecting possession. He convinces her to let him go to the bathroom and in his peril decides to commit suicide by overdosing on the same oxycodone that killed Sandy earlier in the movie.
This later scene in the bathroom is the first time Bear is about to do the right thing but just when the audience feels he might somewhat redeem himself by freeing Nikki he goes to make himself throw up the pills. Apparently Bear’s ultimate decision is to carry on in the relationship and make do with the situation despite the murders of both Ian and Sarah. In the middle of Bear putting his fingers down his throat he suddenly stops similarly to when Nikki did earlier in the movie as she walked up to her house and stands to go out to the living room. Out there he embraces with Nikki, suddenly mutually interested in the relationship and informing her they will get through things together which makes her really happy.
Before the couple can make the next move however Bear begins to succumb to the pills, foaming at the mouth and laying his head on Nikki’s lap. As Bear dies Nikki screams and cries in sorrow, begging Bear not to leave her, but ultimately he does die which makes Nikki grab the gun and put it in her mouth to end her own life. Just as suddenly as every other wish-shift she snaps back to herself and begins to take in the wretched scene around her. She is understandably distraught and pushes Bear’s body off her lap onto the floor into the same spot Sandy had been in when Bear found her dead earlier. Nikki continues screaming and crying as the film draws to a close, all but her dead from their foursome and only her facing the consequences of the preceding events.
Barker has said in multiple interviews that the original ending was Nikki killing herself in a Romeo and Juliet style outcome but also filmed the current ending which is what ultimately made the cut. I love that she is alive at the end and that that survival alludes to her saving herself by using the One Wish Willow to make Bear love her more than anything and stop himself from intervening in his suicide. She is thus freed by his death which cancels out his wish and despite the dire circumstances she finds herself in she is the Final Girl that survives. Inde Navarrette’s performance as Nikki warrants her Final Girl status, with what can only be described as the best breakout horror performance in a very long time if not ever. The way Navarrette talks about the character even reveals the depth she brought to the role and the insight she provided to her performance.
Nikki is the true victim in the film while Bear is the true villain and it uses gender relations to obscure this which only adds to the commentary, some male audience members leaving with the impression she is the monster. Some walked away with the idea that girls are crazy am-I-right as opposed to seeing how the male characters didn’t pay mind or attribute value to their female peers when it came to both Nikki and Sarah. The male characters are solely worried about relationships with their female peers that they can then leverage for status amongst other men rather than seeing them as real people with their own dreams and passions. From jump we learn that Nikki wants to be a writer and that Sarah is applying to art school to pursue tattooing with histories in the town that are leading them to aspire to be more. On the other hand Ian and Bear literally never talk about further aspirations or dreams, they are one dimensional characters that have transparent desires and behaviors. They don’t see these women as aspiring artists or counterparts but as possible partners to sleep with, date, or even domesticate.
The men in the movie either ignore their aspirations or only care as it serves them, like Nikki being asked to share a novel passage with the partygoers or Sarah’s art school dreams being a joke to them. Sarah is consistently offering herself up for rejection to chase her dreams whereas Bear can’t even withstand a minor rejection from someone who genuinely seemed to care about him as a friend. Bear didn’t care about being friends with either woman, only showing interest in Sarah when he knew she had interest in him, the early scene where she comforts him about Sandy at the bar coming to mind readily that he doesn’t even make note of. Nikki and him don’t align in any obvious ways, her even teasing him about his drink choice at the bar, but he still thinks that is his dream girl even though he’s known her a long time and has pursued friendship with her. Bear’s intentions with Nikki are never pure or love based but only relate back to what he perceives as status symbols he needs to achieve like a relationship with an attractive woman other men desire. Something that stood out over and over is how little Bear knows about Nikki, being told most information about her from Ian or Sarah, displaying that even though he felt entitled to a shot with her he wasn’t even viewing her as a real, individual person while befriending her.
Bear is the quintessential Nice Guy who doesn’t understand why women don’t want him despite only pursuing one type of or literally just one woman. He doesn’t view women as people but rather extensions of men but also believes he is a good guy, two contradictory beliefs. His cognitive dissonance is not uncommon today, many Twitter warriors clearly resonating with him upon leaving the theater, feeling like poor Bear shouldn’t have had to deal with that crazy, obsessed girlfriend. In reality Nikki isn’t and is never obsessed, but Bear is most definitely so obsessed he’d use supernatural forces to corral her into having feelings for him. In addition to this his issue is never that Nikki is under some sort of possession but rather how that possession is impacting the relationship negatively for him and hoping that she just figures it out so they can be together as-is. Freeing her doesn’t even occur to him until two of his friends are dead in his apartment whereas viewers are able to discern that as an obvious option to rectify the situation and his selfish wish.
Are jump scares, either visual or audio, included? Yes, often Nikki switching between a quiet, cheerful toned speech and screech-yelling in a demonic voice interrupts already tension filled scenes. Additionally Obsession utilizes camera angles that capture an oblivious or distracted Bear in the foreground while Nikki makes uncanny movements or advances in the background. Do we see grotesque elements that unsettle and make uneasy? Yes, the image of Nikki standing in the same spot with the day’s bodily fluids on her chin, white shirt, socks, and the floor beneath her is haunting, Bear eating his own rotting cat’s corpse made me nauseous, and Sarah getting her head smashed in come readily to mind which are only some of these gore moments. Do the interactions with the Curious Kat company and One Wish Willow seem supernatural? Absolutely, something otherworldly is clearly going on that appears to be happening to anyone who correctly makes their wish, for better and for worse. The call between Bear and company employee alludes to the various other iterations that could exist in a One Wish Willow based universe, which fingers crossed we see soon.
In spite of all the traditional horror elements present in Obsession that make it great the true fear and terror is Nikki’s story and outcome. I cannot imagine being trapped inside my own body while an imposter makes me say and do things against my will at the behest of the boy I’d thought of as a dear friend just prior. To find out from the position of being trapped behind your own eyes that all the people you thought of as friends wouldn’t even stop you from smashing a bottle into your own head multiple times is heartbreaking and terrifying at the same time. To think back on all the days and nights she spent with them and that they never really liked her, saw her as an object to obtain, or as competition for a man’s attention is a nightmare.
Nikki is literally dying in front of them and they are annoyed that she can’t just play whatever role they cast her in against her will, no one is her friend, especially not Bear. It is mentioned that he’s known her roughly 7 years ever since she moved to town yet at a party filled with the people she’s known for that long don’t care enough to intervene when she starts dating a guy she doesn’t like and proceeds to wear ill fitting leather shorts and a neon pink zebra print shirt suddenly. Basically I feel bad for Nikki and a bit for Sarah even though her inserting herself into the relationship to try and steal Bear is not good behavior it is not warrant what she got. Ian sucks but is who he says he is and Bear in my opinion is a spineless “Nice Guy” who is a true villain through and through.
Back in 2024 I covered Milk & Serial as part of a larger post reviewing the horror movies from that year and wrote, “—that such a good horror movie could be made with less than $1,000 makes me raise an eyebrow to every multi-million dollar production that flopped horribly,” and Obsession only further proves that point. Many are now raising an eyebrow at the film industry after watching Barker’s newest release as it is predicted to double the opening weekend budget during the 2nd weekend, something mostly unheard of in modern cinema. In addition to this feat the film has broken records already, making over $100 million on a budget less than $1 million for the first time in the last century. Let that sink in: no movie that spent less than a million dollars has become this big within the last 100 years. Barker has shown twice now that good, unique horror that is particularly modern and poignant can be made today no matter the budget if the reins are put in the right hands, his showing to be particularly adept at bringing horror to life in film.
Set in Britain, His House is about 2 refugees, Rial portrayed by Wunmi Mosaku and Bol portrayed by Sope Dirisu, who are South Sudanese and from there travel through the English Channel from France to strive for a better life. On their journey they lose their daughter, Nyagak portrayed by Malakia Abigaba, who drowns before making it. Running from a war that broke out between 2 tribes they then arrive in the UK and spend time in a detention center facing a subpar living situation while they struggle with PTSD symptoms. Both are granted temporary asylum and after a 3 month wait period they’re granted asylum and feel that their woes have ended, going to their new accommodations on the outskirts of London.
When they arrive they find their new home is sparsely furnished and dilapidated, junk and trash from previous residents crowding even their yard. They are placed under strict probation and face deportation back to South Sudan if they don’t comply perfectly including a minuscule £75 stipend they must survive on. From early on Rial views their situation as a sad and mournful circumstance full of grief which is the opposite of Bol. Bol wants to fully embrace their new culture and forget about the past entirely, moving on from the trauma and focusing on having children.
Already upon arriving the couple faces racism from their neighbors, who are less than happy to have refugees living nearby. Their case worker is the one British person they speak in depth with, portrayed by Matt Smith, but it becomes clear that he isn’t a saint when he tells them he hopes they’re the good ones, stereotyping the refugees he works with and approaching the couple as if they’re beneath him. The system that has been set up makes it so that he does lord power over them and Bol jumps fully into assimilation. On the other hand Rial is resistant to leaving behind who they are to follow this new path that is way more uncertain.
An entire psychological horror movie could follow just Rial and Bol’s experiences in England and interactions with the people there. Like most Western countries the clean and “polite” veneer covers a decaying root that is spreading and rotting the whole thing slowly. The racism is permeated through the system they go through all the way through the opportunities available to them once they are given citizenship on leashed terms. They’ve done nothing in life to suggest they are more or less safe than any other person and in fact have gone through a review process that domestic citizens typically don’t face, further ensuring that immigrants attempting proper channels are more vetted than the average citizen.
Unfortunately for the couple they are also in the midst of a haunting in their home, seeing their dead daughter and a man coming from the walls. Rial gets to the bottom of things and believes they are haunted by a witch who has followed them because they owe her a debt in order to have their daughter back. They don’t know what the debt is however and Bol interprets it as ridding themselves of everything they brought from Sudan, burning it all. This doesn’t solve their problems however but it does drive them apart, Bol finally getting upset enough to go to Mark and request a different place, claiming theirs has rats.
Mark doesn’t believe him or care about his cause and instead Bol rips the home apart trying to find the witch, or apeth, but just gives Mark reason to threaten their status. Rial wants to go back home to Sudan but Bol is upset by this and traps her inside their house, summoning the apeth to talk to it directly. When he does it tells him that he owes the debt of a life and it offers him to trade his own life to give his daughter life again but he refuses this deal. After he refuses he’s trapped in a comatose state while Rial escapes the house in his subdued state.
Instead of being outside of their house in Sudan though, Rial enters a classroom from home where she meets old friends. Rial’s friends and her are attacked and become victims in a massacre that she survives because she’s able to find a place to hide. Bol is able to get to her and the couple escape the area as things escalate and become more dangerous. When they get to the bus to leave though they find out only people with children are being allowed to leave so Bol decides to abduct a child, who is revealed to be Nyagak, the child that has been portrayed as their daughter.
The couple claims that Nyagak is their daughter and are allowed onto the bus because of this, leaving her actual mother behind in the war torn South Sudan. Gunfire breaks out and implies that no one left in their area survived the massacre, including Nyagak’s mother. When the three are making their way across the channel Nyagak falls into the water along with others, the journey dangerous and unsafe. Neither Rial nor Bol is able to rescue her and she drowns, and once confronted with the truth of their past Bol gives in and agrees to pay the debt with his life so that Rial can live.
Beginning to accept the witch into him as one, sacrificing himself for Rial, Nyagak enters, having returned. Rial can’t let Bol go though, and saves him by slitting the apeth’s throat and giving up having Nyagak back and absolving those sins. The couple both live and cut to Mark doing an inspection of the house, finding it repaired and cute with Rial and Bol both affirming they intend to make it their home. They tell him the truth that Rial was able to kill the apeth who had been haunting them but Mark doesn’t take them seriously, brushing it off as some sort of cultural humor he doesn’t understand or care to understand. Bol informs Mark that the couple is choosing to live alongside their ghosts from home, even Nyagak, together.
Whether intentional or not it became clear that Rial and Bol faced different challenges, Rial with more challenges even, based on their genders. While Bol was given a box of donations upon arriving at a local pub Rial was followed, mocked, and told to go back to Africa by boys while trying to visit a doctor. While both experience hardship based on race, class, and immigration status only Rial faces the additional hardship for being a Black woman in a Western culture. This then is a perfect cause and effect situation of the 2 refugees' outlooks and desires when it comes to their new life.
While Rial wants to retain as much of home as possible and retain their culture Bol is happy to ditch their past and embrace the UK, heightened discrimination towards Rial and all. These socioeconomic elements add depth and layered anxiety to the horror scenarios, not only am I worried about the haunting but I’m worried they’ll be deported and/or die due to non-supernatural circumstances.
The witch or apeth is another key horror element, to no shock, and is portrayed through a rotting hole in one of their walls that Bol sticks his arm into. He only finds a cord however and proceeds to pull until it becomes a rope, and then that rope becomes seaweed mixed with other marine life and a doll tangled in all of that, one example of how the witch haunts them with their past in realistic feeling hallucinations. The ending is a neat wrap up of events if not surprising because I would’ve guessed Rial would pick Nyagak over Bol but also sorta seeing that the lead is buried with their connection or lack of connection to the child.
Now His House is highly regarded as a piece of Black horror pushed the genre closer to social consciousness plots that do more than just jump scares. Available to watch on Netflix as a Netflix distributed movie His House is well worth a watch if not for the beautifully displayed scares and keen use of horror imagery then the superb acting performances alone. Winning multiple awards and nominations for the acting, directing, storytelling, production design, and effects this movie is a gem worth the watch.
On the surface The Skeleton Key (2005) comes off as an average horror thriller film of the time, taking audiences along to question the main character’s sanity and if supernatural elements could be the root cause. Kate Hudson portraying Caroline Ellis is a 25 year old who recently lost her father unexpectedly while pursuing the roadie tour life which is the reason for her sudden change to working in the hospice industry. At the start of The Skeleton Key Caroline loses a patient that hits particularly close to home when no one arrives to claim his things, a common circumstance of the residents she’s been working with. Disillusioned with the industry but still wanting to pursue nursing school she takes up a position as a live in hospice caregiver in the remote swamps of Louisiana after answering a help wanted ad in the paper. For the pay of $1,000 a week she moves into this mansion to care for Ben Devereaux, the elderly husband of Violet Devereaux, who suffered a stroke that left him unable to speak or move.
Violet, portrayed by Gena Rowlands, comes across as old-fashioned off rip, particularly when she’s introduced to Caroline by the couple’s lawyer Luke Marshall portrayed by Peter Sarsgaard. The couple hired Luke around the same time that Ben, portrayed by John Hurt, had a stroke and he is handling their affairs like hiring hospice care, like Caroline. Caroline learns quickly that she’s the 5th person to come through to help the couple, finding it hard to deal with Violet and leaving the position. She feels a responsibility for Ben that only intensifies as the movie progresses, revealing along the way the strained relationship she had with her father that has upended her life. Her commitment to her deceased father in an attempt to right wrongs she doesn’t commit helps keep her trapped in the boiling pot she’s found herself in, being cooked alive 1 temperature degree at a time until it’s too late. Before this is revealed however the film uses Caroline’s investigation of her weird new employer and their mysterious property coupled with the increasingly bad vibes between her and Violet to make audiences question the plot’s reality similarly to Caroline.
Once Caroline has taken the job she drives her red VW bug into the swamps down a tree lined street with Spanish moss adorning the old branches overhead, quintessential Antebellum imagery. Rather than tell her about the house or the property’s history up front Violet only alludes to things being amiss and brushes off Caroline’s questioning about some of her odder habits like stowing away every mirror in the house. Prior to moving into the Devereaux home however Caroline lives with her friend, Jill, in the French Quarter of New Orleans, where she’s moved to from Hoboken, New Jersey following her dad’s death. Jill, portrayed by Joy Bryant, mentions that Caroline’s father would be proud of her striving to help people, particularly the elderly, when she decides to take the position but Jill is also a touchstone to local knowledge for Caroline and thus the audience. When she hears of the location she is immediately taken aback, making sure to note the swamp context of the area.
After giving a tour and her responsibilities Violet gives Caroline a skeleton key to the house, harkening back to the title of the film, but she quickly discovers through snooping around in the attic that the key doesn’t open a door hidden behind bookshelves. Her attention is drawn to it when it starts rattling after Violet sends her up there to fetch a type of seed for her garden but ultimately she leaves the door closed but mentions it to Violet. Violet is visibly disturbed by Caroline’s questioning and seems hesitant to provide answers, making it seem that whatever the secret is must be rather juicy which peaks Caroline’s fascination even more. Having found a sheet one night with “help me” written in mud on it after she finds Ben on the roof in the rain just before he jumps off of it she tries to ring the alarm bells to Luke. He’s rather dismissive and makes his stance rather clear that he believes Violet has a right to do what she thinks is best when it comes to her husband, even if Caroline disagrees.
Not deterred in the slightest Caroline decides to investigate the attic herself and she decides to use a bobby pin to try and pick the attic door lock. Having been told by Violet that she and Ben had never opened the door since they purchased the home, she's a bit shocked to pull out a piece of key that perfectly matches a piece of the skeleton key she has. After she removes this bit she reenters her own key that has the piece still intact and is able to unlock it, releasing a gust of dust and must from the closed space. She finds all kinds of witchcraft like materials and old dolls around the attic along with jars of what appears to be dead creatures or organs plus a box of old records. They look custom recorded and one sleeve catches her eye for the symbol on it and she decides to take this one. She narrowly escapes without getting caught with the record and goes to listen to it back at her New Orleans apartment.
The record says it's made by Papa Justify portrayed by Ronald McCall, and is the recording of a sacrifice ritual which Caroline loads up and begins listening to. She is entranced but spooked by the sacrifice ritual she’s listening to on the record and is only snapped out of it by Jill. Out that night Jill again provides local knowledge and tells Caroline what hoodoo is and where she can find a practitioner, Jill’s family member. Despite her knowledge however she wants nothing to do with the mystic and warns Caroline to leave it alone also. After the attic incident Violet opens up to Caroline about the property’s history and former residents which sheds some light on what Caroline found in the attic. She makes a point to say throughout her tale that it’s just a retelling and that she was never told the story from the brother and sister they purchased the home from in 1962. Violet explains that in the early 1900’s a wealthy family lived on the property with their 2 young children and 2 servants, Papa Justify and Mama Cecile, portrayed by Jeryl Prescott. One night they throw a party and when they can’t find the children the drunk party guests search the estate for them but discover them in the attic with both Justify and Cecile.
When the party guests open the attic door the kids are in the center of a candle ring, the room clearly set up for some sort of ritual and the both servants are convulsing in a trance state. The guests instantly become an angry mob and drag Justify and Cecile out to the yard and lynch them in one of the trees. They light both on fire and the incident is known in the area for the cruelty of the people who lynched the servants. The children went on to then sell the house to the couple in 1962, Violet and Ben, after their family’s bank had fallen on hard times and then died shortly after while in care homes. She explains that she and Ben just left the room as is and have respect for the ghosts of Justify and Cecile that they say roam the property and are still the owners of that room. She tells Caroline the reason for the mirrors being stowed is that you can see the ghosts moving around in them.
Caroline decides that despite not believing in hoodoo herself there might be some benefit to the mind-body connection and Ben believing that ghosts have cast a spell on him could mean that the solution to his ailment is spell work he believes in. After he has a convulsion attack when she shows him a mirror she is convinced that if she can complete a protection ritual on him he won’t be in a comatose state and can tell people what Violet is doing to him, thus saving him. When she does complete the ritual he’s able to speak and tells her to help him and get him out of there so she goes to talk to Luke about the situation. She hopes he’ll have more information or back her up but instead he seems hesitant to get involved past being their estate attorney and answering Caroline’s questions. It is revealed when she finally goes to him with what she feels is proof and Ben hidden in the garden shed to keep him away from Violet that Luke is actually Papa Justify.
Caroline sees beginner law books at his apartment right before finding the same ring that was Justify’s in his desk drawer. He confirms her fears when he chokes her out and takes her back to the property to finish whatever he and Violet have planned. Caroline still doesn’t get it when she goes back to the house and ends up walking directly into the trap they’ve set for her despite Violet having fallen down the stairs and being severely injured. Caroline performs a spell that Violet slipped to her that she believes will protect her but what it actually does is trap her in the center of the attic where they intend to perform the sacrifice. She realizes far too late that she is the sacrifice and not Ben like she’d been so worried about and Violet informs her that everything is only possible because she believes in the magic now and that they’ve been working to get her to that place so that it would work.
Violet successfully steals Caroline’s body and it’s revealed that Violet is actually Mama Cecile and that both her and Justify are just stealing the next set of bodies in their line. Both of them had switched places with the children who were the ones actually lynched and burned by their family. Having survived as the siblings, the couple then took on the lives and identities of Violet and Ben, the couple that purchased the home from them which they’d inherited after the sibling’s parents passed away.
Now that Violet and Ben are aging they have scouted and found people that they can swap places with. Once switched into Caroline’s body Cecile laments she wanted Justify to find her a Black body this time but he notes that Black people don’t stay at the job when things get spooky, calling back to a Black nurse earlier who was shocked Caroline was even still messing with the Devereaux couple based on her experiences with them.
Ultimately Justify and Cecile are 2 Black characters that don’t have real lines and are more used as a prop for the white actors on screen rather than the actual main characters. This movie is a weird one in that it’s about Black people sort of but also definitely made by and for white American audiences. Black people are used as the Magical Negro trope throughout the movie and it leaves an uneasy feeling that not only are Black people erased in real life but also in fictional life also. The flashes of Cecile and Justify looking menacingly in the estate are almost all the viewer gets about them that isn’t shared from a white actor. It feels like a way to take advantage of Black stories without dealing with Black people or any of the caveats that racists don’t want to deal with. The culture is interesting but the real people are not savory enough for their vision.
I don’t hate this movie but it is a hard one for me to enjoy while I watch Kate Hudson be inappropriately dressed for her job as a live-in caregiver and then perfectly done up despite living in the Bayou. Belief cannot be suspended enough to fully enjoy the film but Gena Rowlands provides a performance worthwhile, possibly the main saving grace of the film. The Skeleton Key can be a bit spooky at times but the scares never reach past haunted nightmares unless the travesty of stealing life is enough spook to keep you. Again, don’t hate this movie, but also don’t believe it should be anywhere near any lists about Black horror despite it usually making an appearance.
The decision to make the most recent installment of Hell House LLC, titled Lineage, a regular movie rather than a found footage movie raised doubts and questions from initial announcement. While other Hell House installments opted to lean into the hoke and charm of a low budget film that was palpable through a found footage style this newest installment set out to take the story deeper and open storytelling possibilities to a new level not available in the prior format.
My takeaway is that this was a huge mistake and lacked a fundamental understanding of what people sought from the prior films. Unfortunately I spent the night of August 20th in the shittiest theater in town (the only one that is an AMC and thus had the early theatrical release of the new movie) confused about what I was even watching. Very few times in my life have myself or my husband decided that a movie wasn't worth sitting in the theater to complete it and instead left but this is one of those times, I walked out about 40 minutes into the movie.
Violet, portrayed by Gena Rowlands, comes across as old-fashioned off-trip, particularly when she’s introduced to Caroline by the couple’s lawyer Luke Marshall portrayed by Peter Sarsgaard. The couple hired Luke around the same time that Ben, portrayed by John Hurt, had a stroke and he is handling their affairs like hiring hospice care, like Caroline. Caroline learns quickly that she’s the 5th person to come through to help the couple, finding it hard to deal with Violet and leaving the position.
She feels a responsibility for Ben that only intensifies as the movie progresses, revealing along the way the strained relationship she had with her father that has upended her life. Her commitment to her deceased father in an attempt to right wrongs she doesn’t commit helps keep her trapped in the boiling pot she’s found herself in, being cooked alive 1 temperature degree at a time until it’s too late. Before this is revealed however the film uses Caroline’s investigation of her weird new employer and their mysterious property coupled with the increasingly bad vibes between her and Violet to make audiences question the plot’s reality similarly to Caroline.
After fighting to stay awake while also being misled by AMC that 25-30 minutes of trailers and advertisements would play before the 7 PM showing, we walked into the theater within the first 5 minutes, the movie already playing to the sparse crowd. Ourselves and three other pairs sat in uncomfortable silence as little happened on screen, neither scares nor decent plot building occurred during the time I spent there. The main character, whose name I didn't really catch and I don't care to look up, didn't fit into the profile of former main characters of the franchise and my brow remained furrowed in confusion as to why we were even following her.
Her roommate seemed half her age and I couldn't discern whether she was meant to be a college student or a young adult at a moment of redesign, neither was made clear during the movie and I felt she wasn't being made relatable enough to be an interesting character. Most of what I saw was her walking around Abbadon, the town where the movie took place and she lived, as one of the 3 clowns from the basement of Hell House followed her. The plot seemed to focus on this clown which also confused me as a fan of the other films who'd anticipated being at Hell House or at least around Hell House rather than following the clown like a slasher focused on said clown.
The main character's therapist broke HIPPA to further the plot and overshared about her other client whom she said was also seeing this clown around town, something she referred to as "Abbadon eyes" but brushed off as a shared delusion. This guy who the main character runs into in the therapist's waiting area after her own session is then followed and the clown, in less than scary fashion, appears in his house and a found footage interlude makes it clear he's been killed by the clown. When I first heard Abbadon's eyes I had to turn away and stop myself from laughing at how absurd and nonsensical the story was playing out.
I felt silly, which isn't something you typically want to feel when watching a horror movie that follows up a quite decent found footage franchise full of scares. I honestly don't care what happened after this and we left around the 3rd standoff between the main character and the clown, appearing to her as a distasteful Halloween direction outside of a random home on her walk around town. I burst out laughing in the lobby after holding in my confused chuckles and ultimately felt like we'd wasted money and time, only thankful that it was a wasted Wednesday rather than a weekend.
What I can recommend is not spending money to see this movie, especially in theaters but I would extend that to not signing up for Shudder if you're only doing so to watch Lineage. I genuinely feel this bad experience will make it difficult to enjoy the other films in the franchise, already skipping past them today when in recent weeks I'd opted to put them on in the background or as fun rewatches.
I'm not sure why any of the decisions that were made were the decisions made and it's also possible I'm missing key information that could've made the watch better but this isn't a good movie. I would even be tempted to say this is a bad movie and one of the worst I've seen in a while, which is unfortunate because the last few years have been stellar for horror. I'm disappointed and don't have faith in the Hell House franchise any longer.