Iron Lung (2026): While the YouTube to movie director pipeline has already introduced some excellent new blood to the cadre of horror genre filmmakers, it also has enabled the return of the vanity project, this time with an in-built audience your past vanity filmmaker could only have dreamed of.
On one hand, I applaud YouTuber Mark Fischbach falling in love with a horror videogame and deciding to use his influencer clout to finance and create his own movie adaptation of it instead of becoming a serial killer or MAGA techbro. My problems start when he then takes on the role of director, writer, executive producer and co-editor of the project, while not being very good at any of these roles. He then proceeds to turn out a film that moves slow like molasses – this is about an hour longer than the material warrants – lacks the visual flair needed for something that mostly consists of shots of Fischbach or some sexy, sexy dials and screens, and which focusses on one single actor who simply isn’t good enough to carry a two hour movie on his shoulders. Much of which could have been avoided in a project where someone would have been in a position to say “no” to the auteur’s bad ideas, or could have convinced him to hire an actual actor for the lead role, a screenwriter for the script, and so on, and so forth.
Personally, I’d also have loved some professional sound editing, but then I’m too old for this shit anyway.
Paura il diavolo and Blue Fear (1993): On the other hand, these first SOV short-ish features by British DIY filmmaker Darren Ward, mostly made with friends and family, show much more of a coherent vision than Fischbach’s endless meandering shots of his own face, even though these, too, are amateur productions completely in thrall to their influences.
In Paura’s case, these influences are mostly from the gory side of Italian horror – Lamberto Bava’s Demons and Fulci are clearly involved – and Evil Dead, so this is predominantly a showcase for some fantastic homemade effects, but also already shows a filmmaker with an eye for the creation of mood through colour and shadow, a flair for concise and expressive editing (hi, Mr Fischbach), all clearly visible even with the limitations of the Shot on Video style and the damn fuzzy VHS source the Blu-Ray was sourced from.
In a sense, Blue Fear is a bit a of a regression for Ward, mostly because here, he’s in full-on giallo mode. Which is more than fine in the highly effective and ridiculously stylish (this is SOV!) slash and stalking and dream sequences that actually suggest a young director sharpening his visual tools. However, a giallo also needs a plot and therefore needs acting, and here, Ward doesn’t seem as secure in his abilities to get the desire results yet, leading to some awkwardly edited and slow dialogue sequences, certainly not helped by the lack of actual actors on the project. Family and friends can only take you so far in this regard, unless you’re called Bridges or Carradine.

