
Horror has always been a genre where the strangest ideas can somehow become absolute classics. Killer tires? Sure. Possessed dolls? Absolutely. Sentient killer condoms? Believe it or not, that’s been done too. So when I heard Mouser centered around a mentally ill woman being manipulated by a demonic cat, I was more than willing to give it a chance.
Unfortunately…this kitty never quite landed on all four paws.
Written and directed by Mary Patel-Gallagher, Mouser follows a troubled woman haunted by visions of a sinister feline that whispers increasingly violent suggestions into her ear. It’s a premise that promises psychological horror with a healthy dose of dark absurdity, but somewhere between those two lanes, the film never quite decides which road it wants to stay on. To its credit, the movie certainly swings for the fences. It’s refreshingly original in an era where haunted houses and possessed nuns seem to arrive every other weekend. The performances are committed, especially considering some of the increasingly bizarre situations the cast is asked to navigate, and there are moments where you can genuinely appreciate the ambition behind the concept. The problem is that I spent more time trying to decide whether I was supposed to be unsettled or chuckling.
The demonic cat itself quickly becomes less menacing and more…well…a very opinionated life coach with terrible advice. Every time it appeared, I found myself drifting further away from the tension and closer to wondering if this was secretly a horror-comedy that forgot to tell the audience. That’s not necessarily a criticism of the filmmakers—it may simply mean I wasn’t the target audience. Horror is wonderfully subjective, and there will undoubtedly be viewers who embrace the film’s surreal, offbeat energy far more than I did. Visually, there are flashes of creativity, and Patel-Gallagher deserves credit for refusing to play things safe. I’d rather watch a filmmaker attempt something genuinely weird than churn out another paint-by-numbers supernatural clone. Unfortunately, originality alone isn’t enough if the execution never fully convinces you to buy into its world.
By the time the credits rolled, I wasn’t angry or frustrated—I was mostly scratching my head. Mouser isn’t a bad movie in the traditional sense. It’s simply one of those films where the quirky premise and tonal choices kept me at arm’s length instead of pulling me into the madness. Maybe that’s on me. Maybe I’m just more of a dog person.
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