V H S 85 2023 -
Watch it alone. On an old TV, if you can find one. And when the tracking wavers during the quiet parts… do not adjust the picture.
And it is terrifying.
In the sprawling, grimy graveyard of modern horror franchises, the V/H/S series has always been the strange, feral cousin—the one you don’t invite to dinner but can’t stop watching through your fingers. By 2023, the series had already time-traveled through the 1990s ( V/H/S/94 ) and the 2000s ( V/H/S/99 ). But with V/H/S/85 , the anthology didn’t just revisit a decade; it dissected its rotting heart. V H S 85 2023
The final wraparound reveal—that every tape we’ve watched was a snuff collection belonging to the documentary’s “scientist,” who has been broadcasting his “research” into empty airwaves—lands with a quiet, sickening thud. There is no final girl. No police raid. Just the hum of a VCR in an empty room, waiting for the next viewer. Watch it alone
★★★★½ (4.5/5) Best watched with the lights off and your hand hovering over the eject button. And it is terrifying
The genius of V/H/S/85 is its understanding of the year itself. 1985 was a hinge point: Reagan-era optimism colliding with the Satanic Panic, the rise of home video (and the “video nasty” moral crusade), and the creeping awareness that technology could betray you. The characters in these segments are not jaded; they trust the camera. They believe recording something makes it real, containable, evidence. The film’s ultimate cruelty is showing that the camera does not protect you. It simply ensures someone will watch you die. Later. In a basement. On a cracked 19-inch screen.
Where previous entries leaned into camp or nostalgia, 85 weaponizes the very limitations of its format. The year is, of course, 1985—the peak of the home camcorder boom, when families recorded birthdays and serial killers recorded basements. Director David Bruckner (returning to the franchise he helped launch with 2012’s Amateur Night ) and his cohort of filmmakers—Scott Derrickson, Gigi Saul Guerrero, Natasha Kermani, and Mike P. Nelson—treat the VHS artifact not as a gimmick but as a ghost. The tracking errors, the blown-out highlights, the haunting moment when the tape runs out and snow fills the screen: all of it becomes a language of dread.