Movie Review: Southern Scares
Horror

Movie Review: Southern Scares


Movie Review: Southern ScaresSouthern Scares Movies Review by Matt Boiselle

Southern Scares – written and directed by Paul Rowe, and starring Dee Wallace, Luke Smith & Mila Rose

Synopsis: Mystery, Horror & Southern folklore collide in the 1990s when a video store worker discovers chilling secrets found in her missing sister’s documentary series, Southern Scares.

First off, I’d like to thank Paul Rowe, the writer & director of this film for graciously offering it up for review, and to show that every horror movie doesn’t need to have gratuitous violence, sex or language to set its feet into the genre cement – and with that being said, here’s my take on “Southern Scares” – enjoy!

There’s a certain comfort in horror films that understand the power of atmosphere over spectacle, and “Southern Scares,” directed by Paul Rowe, leans heavily into that strength. Set in the 1990s, it wraps its mystery in VHS-era grain, small-town unease, and the kind of Southern Gothic flavor that feels both familiar and unsettling. Interestingly, it’s also positioned as something of a “gateway horror” film, and that label actually fits. With a PG rating and no gore, Southern Scares is clearly designed to be accessible to younger or more cautious viewers while still maintaining a genuine sense of mystery and creepiness. It’s horror-lite in terms of intensity, but not in terms of atmosphere or imagination. The story follows a video store worker who stumbles onto a disturbing trail of clues buried inside her missing sister’s documentary project, also titled “Southern Scares”. What begins as a personal search quickly turns into something much stranger, as folklore, regional myth, and fragmented footage begin to blur into a larger, more disturbing truth.

At its best, the film thrives on ambiguity. The documentary-within-a-story structure works surprisingly well, giving the narrative a found-footage-adjacent texture without fully committing to that format. There’s a creeping sense that the more the protagonist uncovers, the less reliable reality becomes — and that slow erosion of certainty is where the movie finds its tension. The Southern folklore elements are also a strong anchor. Rather than relying on generic horror tropes, the film pulls from regional superstition and local myth, giving the story a grounded but eerie identity. It feels like a story that could only exist in this specific setting, which helps elevate it beyond standard missing-person horror fare. That said, “Southern Scares” isn’t without its uneven moments. The pacing occasionally drifts, especially in the middle section where the mystery deepens but momentum slightly stalls. Some of the documentary segments are more effective than others, and a few exposition-heavy scenes undercut the film’s otherwise subtle approach. Still, the atmosphere does a lot of heavy lifting. The VHS aesthetic, the muted color palette, and the persistent sense of unease keep things engaging even when the narrative gets a bit tangled. The fact that it stays entirely free of gore also reinforces its “gateway horror” identity — it’s unsettling rather than shocking, eerie rather than extreme.

By the time it reaches its conclusion, “Southern Scares” doesn’t offer easy answers — but that feels intentional. It’s more interested in lingering questions, inherited trauma, and the stories people leave behind when they disappear. Overall, it’s a strong, moody indie horror entry that doesn’t always stick the landing perfectly but succeeds more often than it misses, especially as an accessible entry point into horror storytelling.

The film can currently be streamed on Amazon Prime and Apple TV.

View Original Article Here

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