

A young woman accepts a job on a property with a traumatic history. Upon her arrival, she soon realizes that the nightmares of her childhood are connected to the evil in the house.
Acting
Ryan Destiny carries every frame with exhausted, searching vulnerability.
Direction
di Grado treats the house like a second protagonist—watch how it breathes.
Director
Daniel di Grado
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Oracle quietly joins a wave of Black-led horror (His House, Kindred) where haunting is inseparable from systemic exclusion—Shay's isolation as the only Black employee isn't atmospheric, it's structural.
The 85-minute runtime isn't just tight storytelling; di Grado has said in interviews he wanted the film to feel like 'a nightmare you can't shake before morning.' The compression mirrors Shay's own dissociative gaps.