

A 3-minute fever dream where music becomes a door you can't unhear.
Calvin Lenox's 'The Door at the End of the Hall' follows a young musician through a dream of his in which he hears a mysterious song that seems to be coming from behind a locked door at the end of a hallway. Things start to fall into place when a strange voice begins to speak to him from behind the door.
Sound
The original composition IS the antagonist. Unsettlingly beautiful.
Direction
Lenox directed himself talking to himself. Solitary genius or warning sign?
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Lenox plays every role—literally a one-man production in service of a story about confronting oneself.
The 'locked door' trope here inverts expectation: the horror isn't what opens it, but that you already possess what you fear.
No ratings yet
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters