WeSearch

‘Saccharine’ Review: Natalie Erika James’ Gross-Out Body Horror Is Stuffed with Great Effects and Way Too Many Ideas

Kate Erbland· ·4 min read · 0 reactions · 0 comments · 15 views
#film#horror#body image#generational trauma#sundance
‘Saccharine’ Review: Natalie Erika James’ Gross-Out Body Horror Is Stuffed with Great Effects and Way Too Many Ideas
⚡ TL;DR · AI summary

Natalie Erika James' film 'Saccharine' explores themes of body image and generational trauma through a body-horror lens. While the film is visually striking and features strong performances, it struggles with an overload of ideas and a lengthy runtime. The narrative centers on Hana, a medical student grappling with her body image and the consequences of her choices.

Key facts
Original article
IndieWire · Kate Erbland
Read full at IndieWire →
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand

Editor’s note: This review was originally published during the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Shudder will release the film in select theaters beginning Friday, May 22. Filmmaker Natalie Erika James has never shied away from a haunting: From her breakout hit “Relic” to her “Rosemary’s Baby” prequel “Apartment 7A,” the horror star is steadily carving out a real niche in “the call is coming from inside the house” chillers of all kinds. Her latest, “Saccharine,” feels just as personal as “Relic,” a generational trauma story for the ages, though the maximalist nature of the film offers a new twist on her filmography. But in her apparent eagerness to stuff all manner of ideas, themes, and gross-out scenes into the body-horror joint, James can lose sight of the real meat of her tale.

Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at IndieWire.

Anonymous · no account needed
Share 𝕏 Facebook Reddit LinkedIn Threads WhatsApp Bluesky Mastodon Email

Discussion

0 comments

More from IndieWire