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Surgeons of Horror

~ Dissecting horror films

Surgeons of Horror

Tag Archives: Enzo Tedeschi

It Will Find You (2026): A Supernatural Curse Rooted in Generational Trauma and First Nations Storytelling

02 Tuesday Jun 2026

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

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aaron pedersen, aboriginal horror, books, chris broadbent, Enzo Tedeschi, film, horror, ky;ah day, luke ford, movies, reviews, umbrella entertainment

“Some things don’t stay buried. They wait.”

Horror has always thrived on inherited fear.

Curses passed from parent to child. Sins revisited across generations. Ancient evils clawing their way into the present through bloodlines unable to escape the past. Yet for all the genre’s fascination with ancestry and buried trauma, relatively few Australian horror films have explored those ideas through an authentically First Nations lens.

That is where It Will Find You finds its greatest strength.

Directed by Chris Broadbent and Enzo Tedeschi, this independent supernatural horror may operate within familiar genre frameworks, but it distinguishes itself through cultural specificity, emotional sincerity and a willingness to foreground Aboriginal storytelling rather than simply use it as aesthetic dressing.

The result is a film that occasionally shows the limitations of its budget yet consistently punches above its weight through atmosphere, mythology and heart.


The Horror of Inheritance

The story follows Emily, a young woman whose decision to move out of home inadvertently awakens a generational curse dormant for twenty-five years. As those around her begin dismissing her experiences as paranoia or psychological instability, Emily is forced to reconnect with her ancestry and confront the vengeful “giniirr” — a supernatural force demanding repayment for ancestral sins.

The premise itself is not radically new. Horror cinema has explored family curses countless times before. Yet It Will Find You succeeds because it roots those familiar ideas within cultural identity and intergenerational memory.

This is not simply a monster story.

It is a story about disconnection.

About fractured lineage.

About the danger of severing oneself from history and community.

The supernatural threat becomes inseparable from cultural trauma, giving the film emotional resonance beyond its scares.


A Powerful First Nations Voice

Perhaps the most refreshing aspect of It Will Find You is the way it foregrounds Aboriginal mythology without reducing it to exotic spectacle.

Too often genre cinema approaches Indigenous spirituality from the outside looking in, transforming sacred traditions into mysterious background texture for predominantly non-Indigenous narratives. Here, the mythology feels integrated into the emotional fabric of the story itself.

The film understands that horror works best when the supernatural carries symbolic weight.

The “giniirr” is frightening not merely because it stalks or kills, but because it represents unresolved history returning to demand acknowledgement. The curse operates almost as a manifestation of generational pain — something inherited, suppressed and ultimately impossible to ignore.

That thematic undercurrent gives the film surprising depth.


Kylah Day Holds the Centre

At the heart of the film is a compelling performance from Kylah Day.

Day carries much of the film’s emotional burden, grounding the supernatural chaos with vulnerability and determination. Emily’s fear feels genuine precisely because the performance never drifts into exaggerated horror theatrics. Instead, Day plays the role with an emotional realism that keeps the audience tethered to her experience even when the narrative veers into more familiar genre territory.

There is also something quietly powerful in the way the character’s journey mirrors the film’s broader thematic concerns. Emily is not merely fighting a monster; she is attempting to reclaim understanding of who she is and where she comes from.

That search for identity becomes the film’s true emotional engine.


Atmosphere Over Excess

Working with a clearly limited budget, Broadbent and Tedeschi wisely avoid overreaching.

Rather than relying heavily on visual effects spectacle, It Will Find You leans into atmosphere, tension and suggestion. Shadows linger longer than expected. Silence carries weight. The Australian landscape itself becomes part of the unease, simultaneously beautiful and isolating.

There are moments where the film’s ambitions visibly stretch against its financial constraints, particularly in some of the larger supernatural sequences. Yet there is also a sincerity to the filmmaking that compensates for those rough edges.

The directors understand mood.

More importantly, they understand restraint.

The horror often works best not when the film explains everything, but when it allows uncertainty and folklore to bleed together.


A Familiar Framework with a Distinct Identity

There are undeniably moments where It Will Find You falls into recognisable supernatural horror rhythms. Audiences familiar with modern possession and curse narratives may anticipate certain narrative turns before they arrive.

Yet dismissing the film on those grounds would overlook what makes it noteworthy.

Its identity.

Its perspective.

Its voice.

The film does not reinvent supernatural horror, but it does enrich it by telling a story rarely explored within mainstream Australian genre cinema. That alone gives it significance.

And when the emotional sincerity, strong central performance and cultural depth align, the film becomes genuinely affecting.


The Prognosis:

It Will Find You may not possess the polish or scale of larger studio horror productions, but its strengths lie elsewhere. Through committed performances, effective atmosphere and a powerful engagement with First Nations storytelling, the film transforms familiar supernatural ingredients into something culturally resonant and emotionally grounded.

A horror film shaped not simply by ghosts and curses, but by ancestry, memory and the lingering scars of inherited trauma.

Even when uneven, it remains compelling.

And in a genre landscape increasingly hungry for fresh voices and perspectives, that matters.

  • Saul Muerte

Retrospective: The Tunnel (2011)

19 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

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andy rodoreda, bel delia, BitTorrent, carlo ledesma, Enzo Tedeschi, found footage, horror, influencer, julian harvey, luke arnold, movies, reviews, shudder, shudder australia, steve davis, the tunnel

It’s hard to believe that it’s been 13 years since The Tunnel was released and broke new ground in the process. It’s been well documented how the creative team were seeking new ways to both fund and distribute their feature film. It was a bold enterprise that would be distributed through BitTorrent, exposing the film to millions for free, which some people in the industry found reprehensible. Furthermore, writer/producer partners Julian Harvey and Enzo Tedeschi would venture into enterprising means to seek funding by selling individual frames of the film for $1 before the cameras had even started rolling.

What is clear and fundamental to their success however was the passion, dedication, hard work and talent that was on display. All of which was the driving force for success as Tedeschi states, The Tunnel would provide him with the means to build his career upon. And while that declaration stands true, the fact that  each crew member was able to lean into their talents, whether it is Harvey and Tedeschi’s skills as not only storytellers but a deft hands in the editing room to spin a yarn with descent effect; or utilising a camera guy as one of their performers, Steve Davis, a talent in both areas; one he would leverage off a collective group of equally talented actors, Bel Delia; Andy Rodoreda; and Luke Arnold, each with their own unique take on their characters, and the collaboration of the troupe to support and strengthen one another lifts their performance off the screen. There’s also Julian and Enzo’s knack at keeping an eye on the bigger picture, combined with a focus on the finer details to work alongside Tedeschi plus keeping the film on track, especially when it started to escalate and gain traction fast.

It helps that The Tunnel also had a proficient director in Carlo Ledesma to provide the glue and unite all these elements together in order to make the film a reality.

What they established together was a defining moment, not just for Australian cinema but on a global scene too. They fought against the odds in what was deemed a controversial move at the time. The resistance was great, but they stood strong in their quest and produced a film that still stands strong today.

Yes, there have been advancements in technology in a relatively short space of time since its release, and in many ways the landscape remains the same, but the breakthrough The Tunnel created was a significant shift in filmmaking mentality and provided opportunity for other creatives to think outside of the box and seek alternative ways for their creativity to shine through.

– Saul Muerte

The Tunnel is currently streaming on Shudder and thankfully you can also get an insight into how the creative team pulled together and embarked on their intrepid journey with a fantastic behind the scenes documentary, The Tunnel: The Other Side of Darkness; also currently streaming on Shudder.

Megan Riakos on creating women’s horror anthology, Dark Whispers Vol 1

27 Sunday Oct 2019

Posted by surgeons of horror in MonsterFest

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Andrea Demetriades, Briony Kidd, Dark Whispers Vol. 1, Enzo Tedeschi, Leonie Marsh, Megan Riakos, MonsterFest

When director/producer Megan Riakos took the helm as President for Women in Film & Television NSW, little did she know that she was on the verge of establishing a potential pathway of hope for women in the industry.
With a feature film already on her credits, Crushed, which was incredibly well received, Megan would team up with Leonie Marsh and Briony Kidd to produce a horror anthology that would unite Australian female directors and writers in a powerful collection of stories that shake the soul.
Dark Whispers Vol. 1 is currently screening as part of Monsterfest Australia 2019 and Megan recently chatted with the Surgeons team ahead of the Sydney event to dissect and discuss the creative process involved.

Megan Riakos interview:

Megan Riakos, Director and Producer – Dark Whispers Vol. 1

One of the key strengths behind this anthology, is the strength in the storytelling, pulling from various aspects across the Australian landscape to combine and make a cohesive and powerful narrative of our great southern land.
When it came to selecting the stories that would bind together for
Dark Whispers Vol. 1, what specifically were you looking for?

I worked with Briony Kidd, festival director of Stranger With My Face International Film Festival (SWMFIFF) on the curation of the anthology and we received submissions via the general callout as well as approaching people directly to ask them to submit. Briony’s work on her festival meant she was privy to some great films that weren’t on my radar and gave us a good cross-section of films to consider. When submissions closed, we created a long list for discussion based on the film’s horror characteristics, as well as the quality of directing, acting, production values, script and originality.
There was no set theme required for these films beyond it being a horror film by a female identifying director who is a resident or citizen of Australia.
We curated the films that resonated with us and that would complement the other films in the anthology.

Your vision overall was to shed light on the wealth of female talent in the industry, which has this great myth that there is a shallow pool out there.
How did you go about shattering this myth and in what way do you hope that
Dark Whispers will transform the cinema audiences expectations?

The very act of creating a women’s horror anthology and kicking off the project with a call out to the Australian screen industry for horror films by women generated a discussion around the issue and now with the festival release, it is helping to recalibrate our expectations of who can be a horror filmmaker.
At our Melbourne Monster Fest screening we had several emerging women horror filmmakers in the audience who said that up ’til they point, they felt like they were the lone female horror maker amongst their peers and that they felt hopeful seeing a whole bunch of other women out their creating really great content.
I am a firm believer in ‘If you can see it, you can be it”.

The Creative team from Dark Whispers Vol.1

With 10 fellow directors involved in the short features in the film, how much weight did you allow them to let their creativity flourish?

We discovered these films when they were fully complete, so had no impact on how they were made, however I was heavily influenced by each film when it came time to write and direct the wraparound segment which tied each segment together. 

You have spoken about recent inspirations from anthologies, A Night of Horror and XX.
What did you learn from these films and how did that impact on your direction?

There is a rich history of horror, thriller and sci-fi anthologies over the years from the likes of Twilight Zone & Creepshow to the more recent Southbound, Black Mirror, ABC’s of Death and Holidays and they all use their own devices to create a cohesive bond around the Anthology.
As an audience member, I really enjoy it when there are “easter eggs” that tie otherwise disparate chapters together – whether it be a prop, a stylistic choice, a reference to a time or place or character that pops up in a different episode.
The two anthologies in particular that gave me the impetus to actually make Dark Whispers are A Night of Horror and XX which both came out about the same time.
A Night of Horror was also curated from existing films and I really enjoyed the way they developed their wrap around, referencing each proceeding film with the horror element within it – This project showed me that it was achievable to create a really great project with a low budget and I knew it was something that I could take on, especially once Enzo Tedeschi, the creator of that anthology, come onboard as Executive Producer on the film. XX was also a big inspiration – it was one of the first female horror anthologies out there and I wanted to do an Australian version for the horror filmmakers being overlooked here.

You’re a creative artist yourself and direct the segments called The Book of Whispers that unite the ten tales together.
What inspirations do you draw from in the creative process and what challenges did you face when creating this anthology?

Due to the broad call out for horror films, I wasn’t able to start working on the wrap around segment until we had locked in the final 10 films.
It was at that point that I started breaking down the inherent themes and similarities the films shared.
Many of the films explored longing, grief, regret and navigating life.
There were several films about family, kinship and motherhood and I was curious about the idea that we carry dark lessons with us from one generation to the next and we need to learn how to deal with carrying the darkness in life without succumbing to it.
The concept at the centre of the anthology is around a haunted book which is passed between helped to unify the diverse chapters within it.

Andrea Demtriades as Clara in Dark Whispers vol 1 segment, The Book of Whispers.

The Book of Whispers centers around one character played by the magnificent Andrea Demetriades.
How did she become involved in the project and what was it like working with her?

My producing partner Leonie Marsh and I were brainstorming ideas about who could play our lead Clara and we both thought of Andrea Demetriades. We have loved seeing her work on Crownies, Pulse and Janet King and thought she would be perfect for the role.
Working with Andrea was wonderful, we only had one day to shoot all her scenes and she jumped right in and nailed it.

What has been the reaction you have received so far, and could we expect a Vol.2? Are there any other future projects on the horizon?

We are proud of Volume 1 and are really pleased with the response during our festival release.
We will gauge how we go over the following six months but are definitely planning a Volume 2 – whether that be a second horror anthology or perhaps steering over to explore science fiction.
Keep your eyes peeled for the next instalment, in whatever guise that might be!

Dark Whispers Vol.1 will be screening at Monsterfest Australia 2019, where cast and crew will be available for a Q&A post film screening time below:

SUNDAY 3rd NOVEMBER, 6.15PM
Event Cinemas, George St, Sydney

Movie Review: Dark Whispers Vol. 1

Saul Muerte
Lead Surgeon
Editor, writer, podcast host

” I was curious about the idea that we carry dark lessons with us from one generation to the next and we need to learn how to deal with carrying the darkness in life without succumbing to it.”

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