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Movie Review: 13 Souls

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13 Souls Movie Review by Matt Boiselle

 

13 Souls – directed by Paulo Nascimento, written by Paulo Nascimento, Brittnay Johnston & Flavio de Castro Barboza, and starring Sienna Belle, Tim Shelburne & Brielle Tucker

Synopsis: After the death of her mother, 15-year old Agne moves in with her father and older sister into a house by a cemetery, when eerie and unexplained occurrences begin to happen.

Director Paulo Nascimento aims for a slow-burn supernatural atmosphere in “13 Souls”, and while the film delivers a few genuinely creepy moments, it never quite reaches the emotional or psychological depth its premise promises. Centered on young Agne’s (Belle) move into a cemetery-adjacent home after her mother’s death, the movie leans heavily into grief-fueled horror, but the pacing often drifts and the scares become repetitive before the final act arrives. The strongest element is the mood. Nascimento creates an oppressive sense of isolation with dim interiors, lingering hallway shots, and an almost constant feeling that something is watching from just outside the frame. The cemetery setting adds an eerie gothic flavor, and several nighttime sequences effectively build tension without relying on cheap jump scares. Unfortunately, the story struggles to maintain momentum. Agne is sympathetic enough as a lead, but the supporting characters — particularly the father and older sister — feel underdeveloped, making the family drama less impactful than it should be. The film hints at deeper themes surrounding mourning, trauma, and fractured relationships, yet rarely explores them beyond surface-level conversations and familiar horror tropes.

Where “13 Souls” really lands in “so-so” territory is its predictability. Horror fans will likely see most of the twists coming early, and the finale feels more conventional than revelatory. Even the supernatural mythology surrounding the house and cemetery never becomes as compelling or original as the setup suggests. That said, the movie isn’t without merit. The cinematography is solid, the sound design does a lot of heavy lifting, and there are enough unsettling visuals to keep genre fans mildly engaged. It’s the kind of horror film that works fine for a late-night watch but probably won’t linger in your mind afterward.

Overall, “13 Souls” is a competently made but ultimately forgettable supernatural thriller — atmospheric enough to hold your attention, yet too familiar and uneven to stand out in an overcrowded genre.

The film will be released on UK Digital on May 25th from Seven Tales.

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