
I finally got around to seeing the horror film Obsession with my wife, and good lord, I was not mentally prepared for what this movie was about to do to me.
I kept hearing people talk about how great it was, how disturbing it was, how it was one of the best horror movies of the year, and I figured, alright cool, let’s see what all the hype is about.
I expected a film that was creepy and intense. What I didn’t expect was to walk into a full-blown psychological nightmare that felt like getting trapped inside somebody else’s toxic relationship while their inner demons are chewing through the walls. This movie is absolutely insane in the best and worst ways possible.
The wild thing is that Obsession actually starts off pretty charming. It eases you in with this awkward romantic setup involving Bear, a painfully shy music store employee who’s been secretly in love with his friend Nikki for years.
When he gets his hands on a supernatural object called the “One Wish Willow” and wishes for Nikki to love him more than anything else in the world, you already know things are going to go sideways.
This thing slowly tightens around your neck and then suddenly starts squeezing like a maniac. Once the horror fully kicks in, the movie transforms into this grotesque spiral of supernatural chaos, emotional destruction, and brutal body horror that had me staring at the screen thinking, “What in the hell am I watching right now?”
Also, my wife kept side-eyeing me through the second half of the film clearly wondering why I would take her to such a brutally insane horror movie.
What makes the movie work so well is that it isn’t just throwing gore and jump scares at the audience every five minutes. The writing and acting actually pulls you into these characters. Bear is pathetic in a painfully human way, and Nikki becomes this horrifying reflection of obsessive love taken to its absolute breaking point.
The movie takes the whole “careful what you wish for” concept and mutates it into something insanely uncomfortable. There were moments where I genuinely felt anxious watching it because it hits on emotional dependency and loneliness in such a raw way.
Then suddenly somebody’s face is getting smashed and mangled and blood is spraying everywhere. The tonal whiplash somehow works. It’s disturbing, funny, tragic, gross, and weirdly heartbreaking all at once.
I’ve got to talk about Inde Navarrette because her performance is unreal. She completely throws herself into this role of Nikki in a way that feels fearless and she will make your skin crawl. There are scenes where she goes from lovable and sweet to deeply terrifying within seconds, and every twitch, stare, movement, and emotional breakdown feels completely committed.
You can tell why people are calling this a star-making performance because she absolutely owns this movie. Even when the film goes completely off the rails into full nightmare territory, she somehow keeps it grounded emotionally. Honestly, I don’t think the movie would’ve worked nearly as well without her going this hard.
And then there’s director Curry Barker, who clearly understands how to stage horror in a way that gets under your skin. Some horror directors rely too much on cheap shocks, but Barker knows how to create lingering discomfort.
There are scenes in this movie that just sit there and marinate in pure dread until you feel trapped in them. Then he flips the switch and unleashes total bloody madness. The movie gets nasty. Like seriously nasty.
There were moments where the audience in my theater sounded like they collectively wanted to crawl under their seats. At the same time, Barker injects this darkly comedic energy throughout the film that keeps it from becoming emotionally exhausting. It’s almost like watching a deranged anti-romantic comedy get possessed by evil spirits.
What really surprised me is how relatable some of the awkward social moments felt before everything descended into hell. The dialogue and interactions have this grounded realism that makes the horror land even harder later.
You buy into the loneliness. You understand the desperation. Then the movie weaponizes those emotions against you. That’s what stuck with me afterward. Underneath all the supernatural insanity and grotesque horror imagery, Obsession is really about emotional possession, unhealthy attachment, and the terrifying need to be loved no matter the cost.
It takes themes people actually deal with and drags them into this horrifying fantasy nightmare. That’s why it lingers in your brain.
I also love that the movie isn’t afraid to get weird. Horror movies sometimes play things too safe because they want broad appeal, but this thing fully commits to its madness. There are elements in Obsession that made me laugh out loud simply because of how absurdly uncomfortable they were, and then seconds later I’d feel guilty for laughing because the movie suddenly becomes horrifying again.
The movie constantly keeps you off balance. One minute it feels like a twisted rom-com and the next minute it feels like a demonic panic attack. The transitions shouldn’t work, but they totally do.
By the end of the movie, I felt like I’d survived something. I loved it, but I also kind of hated how effective it was. It’s one of those horror movies that crawls into your head and refuses to leave. I honestly can’t stop thinking about certain scene and I hope they aren’t burned into my brain forever.
If you’re a horror fan looking for something safe and comfortable, this ain’t it. But if you want a horror movie that swings for the fences, punches you in the face emotionally, drenches itself in supernatural insanity, and leaves you sitting in silence afterward wondering what the hell just happened, then Obsession absolutely delivers.
This movie is dark, brutal, hilarious, upsetting, and completely unforgettable. I had an awesome time watching it, even while it was making me miserable. That’s horror magic right there.






