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Home | News | Review: “Velvicide” Rewrites the Rules of the Psychological Thriller

Review: “Velvicide” Rewrites the Rules of the Psychological Thriller

THE VERDICT: ★★★★☆ (4/5)

A chilling, meta-narrative descent into the mechanics of trauma that proves “escape was only the first act.”
DIRECTED BY: Kenneth Perkins
STARRING: Gia Rose Henry, J.D. Starnes, Jon Devlin
RUNTIME: 1h 40m
DISTRIBUTOR: BayView Entertainment

In a cinematic landscape often saturated with “elevated horror,” director Kenneth Perkins has delivered something genuinely destabilizing with Velvicide (2026). This isn’t just another survivor story; it’s a surgical dissection of memory and the lethal ways we attempt to reclaim our own narratives.

The Setup
The film opens on Velvet Stevens (a haunting Gia Rose Henry), a woman who has survived a brutal abduction. Years later, she agrees to sit for a true-crime documentary to recount her ordeal. But as the cameras roll, the “truth” begins to leak. The documentary crew soon realizes that Velvet isn’t just retelling her past—she is actively rewriting it in real-time, pulling everyone into a deadly game of psychological warfare.

Performance and Style
Gia Rose Henry carries the film with “serious range,” according to early praise from the cast and crew. She oscillates between fragile victim and calculating master of her environment, making the audience question if she is truly the “victor” or just a different kind of monster. Perkins utilizes a claustrophobic, “smart style” that emphasizes the terror in the spaces between the dialogue.

Why It Works
The Meta-Twist: By using the framing device of a documentary, the film critiques our society’s obsession with true crime.

Atmospheric Dread: The cinematography leans into a gritty, unsettling realism that makes the psychological shifts feel visceral.

Unpredictability: Unlike typical slashers, Velvicide trades jump scares for a slow-tightening noose of tension.

FINAL THOUGHTS:
Velvicide is a standout for the year, blending the intellectual rigor of a stage play with the raw impact of a midnight movie. It asks the uncomfortable question: when you fight a monster, how much of yourself do you leave behind in the cage?

 

FANDANGO

https://athome.fandango.com/content/browse/details/Velvicide/4857179

 

FAWESOME

https://fawesome.tv/movies/10752577/velvicide

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