Horror In The High Desert
is that film.
Released in 2021 to little fanfare, this indie found-footage mockumentary has since become a word-of-mouth sensation, generating a fervent cult following. The phrase itself— Horror in the High Desert —has transcended the title of a movie to become a descriptor for a specific brand of dread: the terror of vast, empty spaces and the mystery of those who vanish into them. Horror in the High Desert
Horror in the High Desert is not a perfect film. Its pacing is glacial. Its acting is stiff. Its sequel raises almost as many questions as it answers. But to judge it by those metrics is to miss the point entirely. is that film
Critics who disliked the film called it “slow,” “anticlimactic,” and “reliant on a single jump scare.” But fans argue that the final jump scare (if you can call it that—it’s more of a slow, dawning dread followed by a sudden sprint) is earned by the preceding hour of suspense. Horror in the High Desert is not a perfect film