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Movie Review: Strawstalker

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Strawstalker Movie Review by Matt Boiselle

Strawstalker – written and directed by George Henry Horton, and starring Branika Scott, George Henry Horton and Dallas Steinback

Synopsis: When a fame-hungry couple moves into an ideal L.A. home, their new dream life spirals into nightmares as an ancient scarecrow begins to stalk them.

Directed by George Henry Horton, “Strawstalker” is a found-footage horror satire that blends supernatural scares with a sharp jab at influencer culture. The film follows a fame-obsessed couple who move into a seemingly perfect Los Angeles neighborhood, only to find themselves stalked by a mysterious scarecrow that appears to feed on lies, ego, and online performance. What starts as content creation quickly spirals into paranoia and chaos. The movie’s biggest strength is its self-awareness. The film understands how naturally horror and influencer culture fit together. Livestreams, staged reactions, fake online personas, and constant filming create a believable modern setting where the characters are too obsessed with attention to recognize the danger around them. The scarecrow itself is surprisingly creepy thanks to its practical, grimy design and the film wisely avoids overusing it early on, which prevents overindulgence.

The central performances are intentionally irritating at times, which works for the satire but can occasionally become exhausting. Some scenes drag on a little too long, especially during the first half, and the improvisational dialogue won’t work for everyone. Still, once the supernatural elements fully kick in, the movie becomes far more engaging. Visually, the film handles the found-footage style better than many recent entries in the genre. The camera work stays coherent, several background reveals are genuinely effective, and the movie balances comedy and horror better than expected. While it clearly borrows inspiration from films like “Deadstream” and “The Blair Witch Project”, it still manages to carve out its own strange identity. At the end of it all, “Strawstalker” isn’t groundbreaking horror, but it’s mildly entertaining, weirdly clever, and creepy enough to stand out from the endless wave of films that are attempting to employ this same strategy. Fans of found footage and internet-age horror satire will probably have a good time with it – worth a one-timer, at best.

The film is currently available to be seen on VOD services.

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