Backrooms (2026) directed by Kane Parsons. I am unfamiliar with the original creepypasta or the short videos by Parsons that it relies upon as foundations, so I can only explore other echoes I see in the film. First, the "backrooms" feel like some of the landscapes in the Portal 2 videogame. Literature-wise, I get vibes of The Yellow Wallpaper (Charlotte Perkins Gilman), Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (Lewis Carroll), Slade House (David Mitchell), The Fall of the House of Usher (Edgar Allan Poe). Are there nods to fellow contemporary horror filmmakers? Maybe. If so, then especially Barbarians and Weapons (both by Zack Cregger). It's a psychological horror film, but I found it more weird than scary. It even has its moments of absurd humor, at which I found myself laughing out loud. A couple of segments of "found footage" remind me of The Blair Witch Project. It may sound like a bunch of parts of things smashed together, much like the backrooms themselves, but I think it works as its own thing, too. I liked it.
(I think it may also take a few jabs at "artificial intelligence," but that may just be my own bias coming through.)
((It is also a meditation on memory and mental illness, while remaining fairly neutral on the latter; it lets the characters be who they are, for good or ill.))
Viewed at The Grand Cinema, Tacoma.
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