cinematic freak out of In Memory Of, director Eric Stanze and the gang at Wicked Pixel Cinema have
made a belated return to experimental horror territory with 2024's Anxiety-- and needless to say, a lot has changed in the world since we last heard from them. Eric and his last film's star, Jackie Kelly (Tennessee Gothic), have gotten married, the world was permanently altered by an unprecedented pandemic, and the political landscape is violently fractured. All of those factors come into play to varying degrees in this film, which starts off with a rapid-fire montage of the Covid outbreak coverage that caused immeasurable mental strain on top of the physical toll. Isolating in place was a prime scenario for psychological horror that still hasn't been explored much, and here it gets tackled with a vengeance.
home improvement with his husband. Stress, insomnia, vague echoes of her Catholic upbringing, hereditary psychological issues, a tragic turn for Alan, and fears about the well-being
of her half-sister Abby (Miller) soon overwhelm here and she plunges into a nightmare world of occult visions, clawed monsters, plague doctors, and other disorienting threats that ultimately lead to murder - or do they?
pile up around her. The second half is where the familiar Wicked Pixel flair comes through (with Stanze himself, Emily Haack, and DJ Vivona on hand to remind you just in case), with lots of
macabre imagery and jagged editing keeping you off balance. Once again Kelly proves herself more than capable of anchoring a feature with her performance, here going to some painful emotional places on the way to an ending that diverges significantly from where these kinds of stories usually go.