
Shelby Oaks Movie Review — A Near Perfect Debut from Chris StuckmannFrom writer-director Chris Stuckmann comes Shelby Oaks, a haunting exploration of loss, fear, and the supernatural that marks one of the most impressive horror debuts in years. Starring Camille Sullivan, Brendan Sexton III, and Keith David, the film follows a woman searching for her missing sister — one of the members of a paranormal investigation group known as The Paranormal Paranoids — as eerie footage and real-life horror begin to collide.I found Shelby Oaks to be a perfect horror debut — the kind that doesn’t just scare you, it stays with you. Stuckmann crafts an atmosphere thick with dread, mixing psychological terror, found-footage tension, and a deeply human story about grief and guilt.The movie truly got under my skin, evoking the unnerving realism of The Blair Witch Project and the existential unease of Signs. Every frame feels purposeful — from its chilling sound design to the way the camera lingers just long enough to make you doubt what you’re seeing.In this review, I break down what makes Shelby Oaks such a powerful debut, how Stuckmann balances emotion and fear, and why this might be one of the most effective horror films of the year.