The Most Terrifying Prison Isn’t Hell—It’s Certainty: A Reflection on Heretic
Where Heretic could have been nihilistic and cruel, it earns a surprising amount of grace in its final moments. Without giving away the ending, the film pits two versions of faith against each other: the faith in doctrine (the rules) vs. the faith in people (the empathy).
Yes. But go in prepared. Heretic is not a jump-scare movie (though it has a few). It is a slow, suffocating blanket of dread. It asks uncomfortable questions and refuses to give you easy answers. It might make you examine the foundations of your own beliefs, whatever they may be. Heretic
4.5/5 – A razor-sharp, brilliantly acted thesis on doubt that proves the most dangerous monster in the room is the one who reads books. What did you think of the ending? Did you side with Reed’s logic or Paxton’s hope? Let me know in the comments.
Without spoiling the third act, the film brilliantly literalizes its metaphor. The house isn't just a house; it’s an engine of control. Reed has built a model of every organized religion ever conceived—a series of tunnels, false exits, and cages designed to prove that "freedom" is an illusion. It is a slow, suffocating blanket of dread
It’s the same argument you might hear in a freshman philosophy class. But delivered by Hugh Grant in a dimly lit study, surrounded by books and the smell of mildew, it feels like an existential bomb going off.
We’ve seen plenty of horror movies about haunted houses, masked killers, and demonic possessions. But the most unsettling horror film in recent memory—Scott Beck and Bryan Woods’ Heretic —isn’t about what goes bump in the night. It’s about what happens when two polite young missionaries knock on the wrong door and find themselves trapped inside a labyrinth of theological debate. leaving them raw and exposed.
The horror of Heretic is that Mr. Reed is not wrong. That is the terror. He weaponizes logic. He forces the sisters to confront the inherent absurdity of choosing one belief system over another. And in doing so, he strips away the armor of their faith, leaving them raw and exposed.
Heretic is essentially a three-hander psychological thriller that pivots on a single, devastating question: Which religion is the correct one?