

Evading police at a remote farmhouse after fumbling a robbery, four criminals discover that the family living there is not who they appear to be.
Practical Effects
Creepy doll work that punches above its budget weight
Direction
Roselli squeezes genuine tension from farmhouse claustrophobia
Director
Kris Roselli
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in 12 days on a $50k budget in rural Pennsylvania, with the farmhouse location secured through a crew member's actual family connection.
The doll motif deliberately mirrors 70s folk horror like 'The Wicker Man,' positioning the cult as an ancient feminine force consuming masculine criminality.