From Isolation to Madness: 12 Movies About Liminal Spaces
The universe of the Backrooms and analog horror took the internet by storm by exploring the fear of the unknown within empty, repetitive, and liminal spaces. This sense of isolation, where the architecture itself seems to conspire against logic and sanity, has fueled a growing interest in productions centered on claustrophobia and geometric surrealism.
If you are fascinated by infinite mazes, distorted nostalgia, and the deeply unsettling feeling of loneliness, this list is for you!
Vivarium (2019)

A young couple looking for the perfect home visits a mysterious new suburban development where every single house is absolutely identical. When they try to leave, they realize they are trapped in an infinite maze of deserted streets and artificial skies, eventually being forced to raise a strange baby that appears out of nowhere. Vivarium masterfully combines a standardized, artificial aesthetic with a growing sense of existential dread.
Skinamarink (2022)

Two children wake up in the middle of the night to find that their father has vanished, and all the windows and doors in their house have mysteriously disappeared. As they try to make sense of the situation, rifts in reality begin to open, and a dark voice starts calling out to them through the shadows of their distorted home. Skinamarink is a radical, minimalist, and experimental horror experience.
Stalker (1979)

In a dystopian future, a guide known as a "Stalker" leads a writer and a professor into the "Zone," an isolated and forbidden territory where the laws of physics and conventional reality no longer apply. At the heart of this mysterious place lies "The Room," a space capable of granting the deepest, most intimate desire of whoever steps inside. Stalker is a masterpiece of philosophical and psychological science fiction.
Corner Office (2022)

Jon is a meticulous, bureaucratic employee who discovers a secret room, elegantly decorated in retro wood styling, hidden within the hallways of the brutalist corporate building where he works. The problem is that none of his colleagues can see the room; to them, Jon is just standing in a trance, staring blankly at a wall. Corner Office blends satirical corporate comedy with a psychological mystery.
Cube (1997)

A group of strangers wakes up trapped inside a surreal labyrinth made of thousands of identical cubical rooms, some of which contain brutal, high-tech death traps. With no idea how they got there, they must use logic, mathematics, and teamwork to decipher the pattern of the complex and find a way out. Cube perfectly combines mathematical suspense with survival horror.
Jacob’s Ladder (1990)

Jacob Singer is a Vietnam War veteran trying to rebuild his life in New York City while being severely haunted by fragmented flashbacks, grotesque hallucinations, and military conspiracies suggesting he was a guinea pig for chemical experiments.
As the line between his memories, the real world, and his worst nightmares dissolves, Jacob finds himself trapped in a decaying, cold, and inescapable urban landscape. Jacob’s Ladder is a visceral psychological thriller that dives deep into existential horror.
One Hour Photo (2002)

Seymour Parrish, known as "Sy," is a lonely, meticulous photo technician who has spent years developing film at a photo counter inside a massive, impersonal department store. Sy develops an unhealthy obsession with a picture-perfect family whose photos he regularly develops, beginning to project himself into their lives. One Hour Photo is a sharp psychological thriller focused on urban loneliness and modern alienation.
The Lighthouse (2019)

In the late 19th century, two lighthouse keepers are stationed on a remote, isolated island off the coast of New England to maintain the structure. As violent storms prevent them from returning to the mainland and the isolation stretches on, the forced cohabitation, alcohol, and the secrets of the mysterious lighthouse machinery trigger a mutual spiral into madness, paranoia, and mythological hallucinations. Shot in expressionistic black and white, The Lighthouse is a claustrophobic psychological horror masterpiece.
The Lodge (2019)

A woman with a deeply traumatic past travels to an isolated mountain cabin with her fiancé's two children during a harsh winter. After the father returns to the city for work, a severe blizzard traps them inside, and bizarre events begin to unfold: the power goes out, supplies and belongings mysteriously vanish, and time itself seems to freeze. The Lodge is an atmospheric horror film that constantly toys with religious fanaticism and the loss of sanity.
Mr. K (2024)

Mr. K is a traveling magician who, after performing a show and spending the night at a remote, decaying hotel, wakes up in the morning eager to leave. However, upon exiting his room, he discovers that he simply cannot find the reception desk or any exit door. As he explores the endless, ever-changing corridors, he encounters other bizarre guests and staff members who have already accepted this reality and created an absurd micro-society within the walls. Mr. K is an existential drama and surrealist mystery heavily inspired by the universe of Franz Kafka.
Barbarian (2022)

A young woman travels to Detroit for a job interview and books a rental home online to stay the night. Arriving at the location under a torrential downpour, she discovers that the house was double-booked by another man.
Deciding to share the space for safety, her night takes a terrifying turn when she discovers secret passages in the basement that lead to a dark underground labyrinth and monstrous secrets hidden beneath the house's foundation. Barbarian is a dynamic horror film that subverts expectations with every single act.
The Shining (1980)

Jack Torrance, a writer and recovering alcoholic, takes a job as the winter caretaker at the isolated and monumental Overlook Hotel, moving there with his wife and son. With the hotel completely empty and cut off by blizzards, the supernatural and malevolent forces embedded within the location begin to influence Jack's mind, driving him into a state of violent psychosis against his own family. Directed by Stanley Kubrick, the film is widely considered one of the greatest masterpieces in cinema history.
Conclusion
These works prove that the universe of the Backrooms taps into a very deep, primal fear: the fear of getting lost in places that should feel familiar, but have instead become empty, infinite, and indifferent to our presence. Liminal spaces offer a unique perspective on horror.
Whether you are a fan of psychological science fiction or intricate mazes, you will definitely find a movie on this list that suits your taste. See you next time!











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