The final 15 minutes are brutal, strange, and will absolutely divide audiences. Without giving anything away, the film poses a horrific question:
The three of them were like branches of the same dying tree. They had tried to grow in different directions, reaching for sun and air, but the roots were tangled deep in the Oklahoma mud, coiled around secrets that refused to stay buried. What Josiah Saw
Some viewers will find the ending nihilistic. Others will see it as a twisted form of grace. Personally, I found it hauntingly perfect—a logical, horrifying conclusion to a story about people who were never given a fighting chance. The final 15 minutes are brutal, strange, and
In the modern landscape of horror cinema, where jump scares and franchise reboots often dominate the conversation, a quiet, disturbing breed of film dares to look inward. These are not movies about monsters under the bed; they are movies about the monsters sitting at the dinner table. Vincent Grashaw’s 2021 Southern Gothic tragedy, What Josiah Saw , belongs firmly to this latter, more haunting category. It is a film that lingers like a curse—a slow-burn, three-act structure that peels back the layers of a broken family living on a cursed patch of land. Some viewers will find the ending nihilistic