The Fear Review

Natalie Erika James Interview | Saccharine, Relic & Horror That Feels Physical

19 min · 21 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Natalie Erika James Interview | Saccharine, Relic & Horror That Feels Physical

Descripción

Natalie Erika James’ horror films don’t just scare you — they feel physical. After revisiting Relic and Apartment 7A for our Natalie Erika James spotlight week, we sat down with Natalie to talk about Saccharine, sensory horror, body horror, sound design, trauma, and the emotional themes running throughout her films. We also discuss: • the emotional layers behind Relic • building Apartment 7A inside the Rosemary’s Baby universe • the overwhelming food sequences in Saccharine • designing Hana’s transformation • using sound to create discomfort • her upcoming Apple TV+ series Ascension • and the horror films that shaped her love of the genre Huge thank you to Natalie Erika James for taking the time to speak with us. 📺 Watch: Full Episodes: https://episodes.thefearreview.com [https://episodes.thefearreview.com/] Shorts: https://shorts.thefearreview.com [https://shorts.thefearreview.com/] Around here, The Fear is Family.

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episode Saccharine (2026) | Horror That Gets Under Your Skin artwork

Saccharine (2026) | Horror That Gets Under Your Skin

Natalie Erika James returns with one of the most physically uncomfortable horror movies we’ve seen in a long time. In this episode, we break down Saccharine’s disturbing body horror, escalating “hungry ghost” imagery, unsettling sound design, and the deeper emotional themes underneath all of it. What starts as psychologically uncomfortable horror slowly reveals itself as something much heavier about obsession, self-worth, emotional hunger, and the things people consume trying to fill empty spaces inside themselves. We also discuss: • The cadaver and eating sequences • Why the sound design becomes part of the horror • Bertha and the movie’s psychological themes • The shift from psychological horror into supernatural escalation • Whether the ending actually works • Why Natalie Erika James continues to stand out in modern horror The visceral horror in Saccharine gets under your skin, and then what it’s really saying hits you hard. Special thanks to IFC and Shudder for providing us with a screener for review coverage. Around here, The Fear is Family.

22 de may de 202616 min
episode Natalie Erika James Interview | Saccharine, Relic & Horror That Feels Physical artwork

Natalie Erika James Interview | Saccharine, Relic & Horror That Feels Physical

Natalie Erika James’ horror films don’t just scare you — they feel physical. After revisiting Relic and Apartment 7A for our Natalie Erika James spotlight week, we sat down with Natalie to talk about Saccharine, sensory horror, body horror, sound design, trauma, and the emotional themes running throughout her films. We also discuss: • the emotional layers behind Relic • building Apartment 7A inside the Rosemary’s Baby universe • the overwhelming food sequences in Saccharine • designing Hana’s transformation • using sound to create discomfort • her upcoming Apple TV+ series Ascension • and the horror films that shaped her love of the genre Huge thank you to Natalie Erika James for taking the time to speak with us. 📺 Watch: Full Episodes: https://episodes.thefearreview.com [https://episodes.thefearreview.com/] Shorts: https://shorts.thefearreview.com [https://shorts.thefearreview.com/] Around here, The Fear is Family.

21 de may de 202619 min
episode Apartment 7A (2024) Review | Broadway Horror Meets Rosemary’s Baby artwork

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20 de may de 202616 min
episode Relic Isn’t Just Creepy… It Hurts | Relic (2020) Review artwork

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Relic starts as a deeply creepy haunted house movie. Then it slowly turns into something emotionally devastating. For the first entry in our Natalie Erika James Spotlight Week, we revisited Relic years after first watching it and this time it hit completely differently. Between the shadowy figures, claustrophobic hallways, body horror, and the emotional weight underneath everything, this movie got under our skin in a way we weren’t expecting. And somehow it still works as a genuinely scary horror movie the entire time. In this episode, we discuss: • Why Relic works as both emotional horror and a terrifying haunted house movie • The unsettling sound design and creeping atmosphere • The terrifying hallway and washing machine scenes • The body horror and practical effects • How the movie naturally escalates into something darker • The emotional meaning behind the ending • Why this movie changes after real-life experience • Our full Fear Review ratings Relic is currently streaming on Shudder and AMC+. Around here, The Fear is Family.   ▶ Watch full episodes: https://episodes.thefearreview.com [https://episodes.thefearreview.com/] ⚡ Watch our Shorts: https://shorts.thefearreview.com [https://shorts.thefearreview.com/] Around here, The Fear is Family.

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