Overview

On the trail of a missing girl, an ex-cop comes across a secretive group attempting to summon a terrifying supernatural entity.

"The first night you hear him. The second night you see him. The third night he finds you."

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The average rating for this movie is 6.178


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Review by: Dean

The Empty Man is an ambitious and deeply unsettling film that defies the typical boundaries of the horror genre. What begins as a seemingly standard urban legend mystery quickly spirals into a massive, multi-layered descent into cosmic dread and nihilistic occultism. The film’s structure is masterfully unconventional, starting with a gripping prologue in Bhutan that establishes an ancient, untouchable evil before shifting into a gritty, neo-noir investigation in the American Midwest. The atmosphere is the film's greatest achievement—it is thick, heavy, and relentlessly grim. The world-building around the Pontifex Institute and the concept of "tulpas" is intellectually stimulating, moving far beyond simple scares to explore deep philosophical questions about identity and a "great binding nothingness." The sound design is equally legendary, featuring a haunting collaboration with dark ambient pioneer Lustmord, whose industrial soundscapes make the silence feel as threatening as the visuals themselves. James Badge Dale delivers a powerhouse performance as the weary ex-cop James Lasombra, bringing a grounded reality to a story that eventually shatters the concept of reality itself. While its long runtime and dense mythology might be a lot to digest in one sitting, The Empty Man is a standout for those who crave complex, high-stakes horror that lingers in the mind like a fever dream. It is a bold, uncompromising work of art that rewards those looking for something much deeper than a surface-level thriller.

Reviewer rating: 9.0


Actors


James Badge Dale

James Lasombra


Marin Ireland

Nora Quail


Sasha Frolova

Amanda Quail


Samantha Logan

Davara Walsh


Ron Canada

Detective Villiers

Trailer