Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Horrorbuku (2026) - Horror Film Review


Horrorbuku
is the second of two films brought to my attention for review from filmmaker Eric Shapiro (Intrusive). Both this and Intrusive were also watched for review on the same day. This one, written and co-directed by Shapiro alongside Tony Pietra Arjuna (Shadowplay) is a definite film of two halves, with the story in both over-lapping slightly but both very different in style.

The first half's wraparound has struggling author, Anthony (Shapiro) at a therapy session, recounting to his therapist the very odd experiences he has been having lately. Suffering writer's block and with a family to care for, his third novel in a horror trilogy was put on the back-burner, until the discovery of a creepy wooden mask reignited his passion for his fiction trilogy, even if it is a bit troubling that Anthony believes the mask speaks to him. Not long after the mask, he speaks of being visited by another figure, this one being a doppelganger of himself (of course, also Shapiro), albeit it, one that has all the confidence of a jacked-up coke fiend. Anthony finds himself caught in a conflict between the two; the mask wanting him to finish his trilogy, the copy wanting him to scrap it and work on his 'great American novel'.

Initial impressions weren't the strongest, I noticed some distracting background interference in early scenes, and at first the story was a bit hard to follow. This however was a movie that steadily improved, from the first second to the last, it was constantly getting better in quality. What was constant throughout was the amazing score. The music here was sublime, it was great enough that I found myself unconsciously tapping away on the side of my headphones to the low-fi beats. Music really can add so much to a film. So, the first half is an indie odd-ball drama with slight horror elements. The mask was a great looking prop and the sound design for the voices it spoke with were excellent. Shapiro playing both himself and his confident clone also worked well, injecting some humour into these early scenes. It all culminates with a crossover into the second story. Much like with Intrusive, this second story occurs roughly around the halfway point.

That second half moves the setting to Kuala Lumpur (by coincidence I spent several hours in the airport there earlier this year...was very humid!). Horrorbuku transforms into a supernatural Malaysian crime drama of all things! This section was near impossible to look away from, I was captivated by the unfolding story. Teenage siblings, Faris (Gen Darwish) and Dania (Zarith Zalikha) are preparing for a trip, meanwhile their crime-boss father; Amir (Josiah Hogan) is trying to get away from his criminal lifestyle. There was a fun blend of supernatural and crime drama here, I especially liked the look of the entities (gave a real Squid Game guard feeling). There were a couple of exciting and well choreographed fight scenes, and the change in location from America breathed new life into Horrorbuku, even if the change in styles did feel a bit jarring.

Much like with Intrusive, Horrorbuku is at the top of end of good, just missing out on excellent. It starts with humble beginnings as a 6/10, but by the strong finish was a solid 8/10, with the median line bringing it down to the score you see below. Another very interesting film that is a tiny bit arthouse in style, but without the pretentiousness that can come with that subgenre. Horrorbuku is due to come to streaming platforms later this year.

SCORE:

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