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Serial Killer Mockumentary Strange Harvest Slashes With Flair, But Loses Potency in the End

Serial Killer Mockumentary Strange Harvest Slashes With Flair, But Loses Potency in the End
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The most impressive thing about Strange Harvest, the new serial killer horror faux-documentary from one-time Grave Encounters co-director Stuart Ortiz, is how slickly it shapes itself into the familiar stylistic delivery of the American true crime docuseries genre, even when its actual content goes far beyond what is considered acceptable even in that grisly, questionable form of entertainment. Horror fans should appreciate the technical triumph of what Ortiz has assembled; one of the most pitch-perfectly designed and edited tributes (parodies?) that America’s lust for violent “true stories” has produced to date. It sounds, looks and feels so much like the sort of docuseries you’d see on Netflix or HBO that someone who didn’t know what they were watching could be forgiven for being entirely fooled by Strange Harvest, at least for a little while … and I have no doubt that there will be some gullible viewers out there who manage to convince themselves beyond all logic that what they’ve seen is “real,” just as I once witnessed a group of people swearing that they’d just watched a real demonic snuff film in a multiplex while walking out of a screening of Paranormal Activity. It’s an impressive recreation of a familiar format–but at the same time, Strange Harvest ultimately struggles a bit to maintain the chilling atmosphere that at first seems effortless.

What we have here is a perfect short film premise, easy to appreciate and admire in judicious doses, that has been stretched and strained to get it to feature length for theatrical release. This has the unfortunate side effect of taking performances that at first amplify the stylistic parody, and progressively making them ring more artificial and stilted throughout. Clever techniques are less impressive the tenth time that you see them. Shock value decays. Strange Harvest starts very strong, but eventually finds itself being dragged across the finish line via sheer determination.

With that said, it genuinely does an impeccable job of mimicking the format of so many true crime/serial killer documentaries as it tells the tale of a killer by the name of “Mr. Shiny,” who we’re told terrorized the Inland Empire of Southern California in the 1990s and early 2010s. Using a similar selection of tropes and techniques that are catalogued in frustrating Sundance standout documentary Zodiac Killer Project, Strange Harvest draws you into the comforting patter of a familiar genre in its early moments, setting up several gruesome tableaus and a macabre mystery to be uncovered. Fake news chyrons play up the local panic about the killings. Stock footage of the sort that Zodiac Killer Project dubbed “evocative B roll” unspools to give scenes flavor and grit. We’re presented with so many well-executed elements: 911 call recordings; lifestyle photos and recordings of victims and eyewitnesses; police body cam footage; file photos and crime scene photography; infographics illustrating the killer’s movements and methods. All the amusing little documentary cliches are there, such as establishing shots of the star detective interviewees walking into frame and sitting down, affixing a microphone and sipping from a water bottle, in what inexplicably appears to be an abandoned warehouse. It could scarcely nail the details of this done-to-death format more accurately.

So too do the performers largely deliver exactly what Ortiz must have wanted from them. Our primary reference point is the interviewed recollections of two detectives (Peter Zizzo, Terri Apple) who investigated the killings and hunted for the elusive, clue-leaving “Mr. Shiny,” and their delivery strikes just the right tone–they both are able to channel exactly how police figures so often sound in these documentaries, being polite but no-nonsense, stiff and non-charismatic in the way they speak as they carefully consider what exactly they’re saying for liability reasons. The longer this goes on, however, the more the carefully constructed characters seem to slip away as they repeat certain elements of their delivery, leaving a more distinctly “actorly” impression that threatens to break the immersion. It’s no surprise, perhaps, that the assembly of actors playing smaller bit parts (witnesses, family members of victims, expert consultants) come off as ultimately more convincing, because they’re allowed to be more naturalistic in their short appearances.

The “horror” side of the film, meanwhile, comes across in the form of some found footage-style attack video that is captured, but especially in the crime scene photography that is splashed up across the screen with absolutely no considerations given for content or good taste. Especially in the early going of Strange Harvest, these sequences are extremely macabre and quite effectively creepy and gross–particularly in the aftermath of the first ritualistic killing we stumble upon in police body cam footage, in which an entire family has been drained of blood in a way that feels disturbingly realistic. The way the film will suddenly smash cut with no warning from talking head interviews to shockingly gory photographs of freshly butchered corpses is enough to get a legitimate jump out of its audience, because it cleverly breaks the self-imposed reserve typically featured by this style of documentary–they might show you some photos of a bloody bed or handprint, but rarely will they show you actual, gory death photos, given the concern for victim sensitivity and the potential legal pitfalls of breaking that taboo. This tool, however, becomes another example of diminishing returns for Strange Harvest despite great practical FX, eventually becoming predictable as we page through the death toll of a long list of murders–you come to expect the smash cut to an over-the-top gory demise, with the result going from shock to an unintentional undertone of dark comedy.

Or is it unintentional? One begins to wonder, watching Strange Harvest, if the entire thing has been intended as a critique and condemnation of the type of viewer who delights in this sort of content. Here, Ortiz has essentially crafted the type of perfect boogeyman documentary that the most devoted sickos of the true crime genre would probably pine to discover, relishing in a doc that doesn’t spare the gory details where so many others don’t go far enough to give them their fix. If this is indeed calculated to be a satire of the true crime consumer who gets off on real life violence and atrocities, then Ortiz has nailed the joke, though it may be a bit on the subtle or inscrutable side, liable to fly over the head of the people being satirized. For what it’s worth, I suspect that Ortiz mostly just wanted to make a creepily entertaining horror film with a gimmick that registered as at least somewhat novel–and Strange Harvest is a success on that front.

Still, you can’t look past all of the rough edges, something obvious from the first image on screen, which proclaims in perfectly oxymoronic fashion that “the following is considered one of the most unreported cases in Southern California history.” Most unreported, huh? So too do the in-jokes (a “Ur Self Storage,” in clear reference to The Silence of the Lambs), or the killer’s derivative letters to the police, so full of Lovecraftian babble that they sound like Ghostbusters’ Keymaster proclaiming the coming of Gozer, frequently detract from the sense of realistic menace that Ortiz is trying to achieve. Perhaps the creepiest, most taut version of Strange Harvest would have been half the length, excising some of what becomes repetition. Sometimes a bumper crop is just about quality, rather than quantity. The final result remains an intriguing curio, one that horror geeks with an appreciation for skilled parody should find fascinating, but it can never quite live up to the white-knuckle effectiveness of its own opening moments.

Director: Stuart Ortiz
Writer: Stuart Ortiz
Stars: Peter Zizzo, Terri Apple, Andy Lauer, Matthew Peschio
Release date: Aug. 8, 2025


Jim Vorel is Paste’s Movies editor and resident genre geek. You can follow him on Twitter or on Bluesky for more film writing.

 
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