The Haunting Power of Belief: Folklore and Spirituality in Asian Horror

Out in the remote villages of South Korea, Indonesia, and Thailand, belief isn’t just tradition—it’s infrastructure. In this month’s episode of Sitting in the Dark, guest host Andy Nelson takes Pete Wright, Tommy Metz III, and Kynan Dias on a journey into three modern horror films that weaponize spiritual legacy: The Wailing (2016), Impetigore (2019), and The Medium (2021). Each film presents a different lens on the collision between folk belief and contemporary life, and none of them offers easy answers.

The panel dives deep into the disorienting tone shifts of The Wailing, where slapstick cops and demonic rituals clash with devastating consequences. They unpack the haunting beauty and brutal tradition behind Impetigore, a film that begins in a toll booth and ends in generational damnation. And The Medium, with its immersive mockumentary format, challenges our understanding of family, fate, and whether gods actually have your best interests at heart.

What unites these films? An unnerving thesis: belief might not protect you—it might damn you. These aren’t stories of good versus evil. They’re stories about what happens when spiritual systems—old and new, global and local—overlap and collapse. And in the end, maybe the most terrifying realization is that all these spirits, deities, and curses… simply don’t care what you believe.

Join us this month as we stare into the spiritual void, question the value of ritual, and contemplate the horror of legacy itself.

Film Sundries

About the show

Sitting in the Dark hunts horror by theme — three films yanked across decades, budgets, and subgenres and dropped into a single triple feature to crack open what these movies are actually doing to us. Chelsea Stardust, Tommy Metz III, Kynan Dias, and Pete Wright do the digging. Part of The Next Reel family.

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