Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Box Office

Anchoring the Terror: Camille Sullivan on Bringing Chris Stuckmann’s Shelby Oaks to Authentic, Anxiety-Inducing Life

After more than a decade dissecting films on YouTube, Chris Stuckmann finally steps behind the camera – and the results are as gloriously unsettling as you might have imagined (our full review HERE). His debut feature, Shelby Oaks, is a found-footage horror that nods to many a familiar trope while boldly, assuredly, and triumphantly twisting them into something unpredictably, uncomfortably, and satisfyingly unique. Shot in Ohio and produced by Paper Street Pictures, the film unfolds like a fever dream of lost VHS tapes and buried memories, where documentary realism collides head-on with nightmare logic.

The story begins with the mysterious disappearance, twelve years ago, of a group of paranormal investigators known as the “Paranormal Paranoids.” Camille Sullivan (Hunter Hunter, The Unseen) plays Mia Brennan, drawn into a sinister search for her sister Riley – the Paranoids’ lead investigator – after a deeply unsettling visit to her doorstep. Long-buried fears resurface as Mia plunges down a rabbit hole of increasingly troublesome revelations, confronting the dark truth behind her sister’s disappearance and the fate of the ill-fated Paranoids.

With Mike Flanagan as executive producer, Stuckmann channels the gut-wrenching authenticity of Lake Mungo and the creeping paranoia of Ringu, while Sullivan’s anxiety-riddled performance beats at the film’s disturbingly authentic real heart. She navigates a dizzying array of formats Stuckmann dared himself to tackle – shaky handheld camcorders, polished widescreen shots, and everything in between – with uncanny ease. Every flicker of fear feels earned, giving the audience an emotional anchor that films of this ilk need to truly unsettle, the way only the finest found-footage horrors can.

Ahead of the film’s Friday release, CinemaChords’ Howard Gorman sat down with Sullivan to discuss what drew her to such a psychologically demanding role, the challenge of maintaining authenticity in terror across constantly morphing footage styles, and what it’s like working with a first-time filmmaker who knows horror down to its bones.


Comments

You May Also Like

Headlines

Mike Macari, executive producer behind the The Ring trilogy, is teaming up with rising director Virat Pal to bring the viral 2018 short The...

Box Office

Nearly a decade after the release of It Follows, the cult horror film that redefined the genre in 2014, lead actress Maika Monroe has...

Box Office

In a bold, high-octane reimagining of Stephen King’s 1982 dystopian novel, The Running Man is set to return to the big screen, directed by...

Music Interviews

After years of relentless hustle, Birmingham quartet The Clause are finally set to make their mark with the release of their debut album Victim...