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Mind Body Spirit

Mind Body Spirit

Directed by Alex Henes, Matthew Merenda

Anya, an aspiring yoga influencer, embarks on a ritual practice left behind by her estranged grandmother, which devolves from spiritual self-help guide into something much more sinister.

An influencer goes on a terrifying self-discovery journey.

Cast: Sarah J Bartholomew, Madi Bready, KJ Flahive, Anna Knigge, Kristi Noory

Member Reviews

It’s was good, nothing to crazy but if you like found footage horror give this a watch 💯

Ink1298
6 days ago

I saw someone recommend this movie on tic toc and I have to say I’m incredibly disappointed. This could have done something really cool with the yoga aspect but instead they made another carbon copy boring ass found footage movie with nonsensical scares and a villain that makes no sense. Spoiler warning: What was even the grandmothers motive they imply that oh she wanted her granddaughters body but the. What you’d think she’d just keep on living life but she kills the friend for seemingly no reason she already had control of Anya’s body so why kill. It’s not like she was a serial killer when she was alive she was just some old lady who didn’t even do anything with her life when she was alive but wants to live again what’s the point

horroriveseenit
1 week ago

Average but at least no too long. The main character is the most annoying one since blair witch project

Waces
2 weeks ago

Phenomenal storytelling, great actors, really impressive production with what budget they had. I'm also biased because I do guided meditations and I've had them go spooky so this felt really personal lmao. Great commentary on wellness influencer industry as well.

rune
3 weeks ago

Given the other reviews, it seems they expected more from a film entitled Mind Body Spirit, as if it was elusive to being a hint-o'hoodoo with a side of budget cuts. However, sometimes finer things aren't needed to make a movie land. Black metal bands do it all the time. Everyone is always looking for a flashy hook in a world that recycles its information, but I feel they actually did well to capture what solitary practice can look like from the inside (minus the murder) and anyone that has studied metaphysics could understand the glory that springs from its oddly forms (speaking in the sense of Grandma's decor). We are our ancestors, as much as we aren't and shades of souls don't come in a cleanly, organized spice rack. Solitary practice is gory and finding yourself is treading hell while knowing you -don't- own the place. Your ego just wanted to believe that you did. An ego that is over-crammed with anger, resentment, jealousy, revenge, shame, humiliation, and ultimately, the door of malevolence by one sole factor - unawareness. You can be a helpless vic (low), adapt to the conditions of it (neutral), or powerhouse it (high). Mental illness wasn't her issue. In fact, I would have said that she was suffering more in the opposing: by being an average nobody that was snuffed by everyone else's practice of being a nobody, too, so all colors of the day bleed competition of who can be better at being average. The lack of emotion and connection was made evident to emphasize on it. It's far more "normal" (and accepted) to run into a nobody than it is to encounter a somebody and what differentiates the two is merely by knowing who you are (aware of self). Empathy is an achievement, not a freely given trait and crossing other entities of unseen forces, know exactly what to do with that when a person doesn't have it. In this case, our star actress wasn't just a nobody, but a less than nobody and it weighed against her to even reach mediocrity. So if you're going to be low, you might as well stop climbing and go lower. And sometimes the way down, looks a lot like the way up (as the movie provided). Some dark philosophies exist that if you're capable of shattering your own moral compass, you will reach maximum attainment and leapfrog from the bottom to the top at God mode. The means of shattering your compass is exactly what she did - commit murder. The slingshot effect. Not all ancestry should be praised, though most of us tend to be hopeful we come from enriching pasts. You never know what they left you with and what you have does vary based on perspective. She either f*cked up or she made the best decision of her life. Perhaps a pt II would be the reveal?

Legion
3 weeks ago