The Confession – A Genre-Bending Journey into Grief, Guilt, and the Supernatural
Writer-director Will Canon returns to the horror sphere a decade after Demonic with The Confession, a straight-to-streaming supernatural thriller that refuses to stick to one lane. Instead, it fuses ghost story chills, investigative mystery, time-bending twists, and raw family drama into a single, emotionally charged tale.
The story follows Naomi (Italia Ricci), a widowed rock musician who relocates with her young son Dylan (Zachary Golinger) from California to her rural Texas hometown after financial struggles and painful memories make city life impossible. Her plan is to focus on her next album while staying in her late father Arthur’s home. But Arthur — a deeply religious man — had taken his own life in the nearby lake, and Naomi soon discovers a chilling cassette tape he left behind. On it, Arthur confesses to killing a man named Royce Cobb to protect their family from a malevolent force. Now, Cobb has returned from beyond the grave, and he’s targeting Naomi and Dylan.
From its first act, The Confession hints at familiar “creepy child” horror tropes, but Canon shifts the focus toward Naomi’s investigation with her childhood friend, journalist Grayson (Scott Mechlowicz). The pair delve into Arthur’s past, uncovering dark secrets that ripple through their small-town community. This mystery is far more compelling than the film’s secondary subplot involving Dylan’s increasingly unsettling behavior — a thread the marketing heavily promotes but which feels less impactful on-screen.
Canon’s juggling of genres is both the film’s strength and its weakness. The blend of paranormal suspense, procedural sleuthing, and intimate family struggles creates a rich narrative stew, but moments of tonal whiplash puncture the tension. One scene, for example, awkwardly transitions from a clumsy, forced attempt at suspense to a genuine moment of horror involving Dylan’s disturbing actions at school.
What elevates The Confession beyond standard streaming fare is Ricci’s commanding performance. She plays Naomi with grit, vulnerability, and a refusal to be patronized — whether she’s shutting down a condescending police officer or defending her parenting to the school principal. Golinger also impresses, delivering moments where it’s genuinely unclear whether Dylan is speaking or something far darker is controlling him.
Ultimately, The Confession is less about jump scares and more about the horrors of loss, guilt, and fractured relationships. While it may not fully decide whether it’s a ghost story, a small-town mystery, or a family drama, its blending of genres keeps you invested in its central enigma: What evil could push a devout man to murder? The answer unfolds in a way that lingers long after the credits roll — much like a hearty but slightly overstuffed stew.
The Confession is now available to rent or buy on major digital platforms, including Apple TV and Amazon.



















