The Goblin Project (1993): A Found Footage Horror Legend on VHS
The Goblin Project (1993) – A 1990s Found Footage Horror Experience
The Goblin Project is the second chapter in The Cursed Goblin saga, shifting the myth into the unsettling world of 1990s found footage horror. Designed to feel like a recovered VHS tape, this short film dives deep into urban legend, analog decay, and supernatural terror.
They Went Looking for a Legend… They Became One
In 1997, filmmaker Katering Whitman and her crew vanished while investigating a disturbing cold case: the 1933 factory murder allegedly committed by a cursed goblin. What remains is a recovered VHS tape containing the final hours of their investigation—and the horrifying truth behind the legend.
Found Footage Meets Goblin Folklore
The Goblin Project blends the raw immediacy of found footage cinema with the dark mythology established in the first film. The cursed goblin legend resurfaces decades later, proving that some stories refuse to stay buried. Fans of supernatural investigations, urban legends, and mythical creature horror will feel right at home.
Authentic 1990s VHS Aesthetic
To achieve maximum authenticity, the film was shot using a period-correct 1990s Panasonic video camera. Analog distortion, natural tape hiss, tracking errors, and low-resolution imagery recreate the unsettling texture of VHS-era horror, delivering a truly immersive analog experience.
For Fans Of
If you love the atmosphere of The Blair Witch Project, the unsettling mystery of Analog Horror, or the “lost tape” aesthetic of Skinamarink, this film was made for you.
Cast and Crew
Starring: Lara Lusnich, Tamara M. Balmaceda
Written, Produced & Directed by: Mariano Cirigliano
Production: 6ATOS PRODUCCIONES
The Cursed Goblin Saga Continues
The Goblin Project expands the mythology of The Cursed Goblin, connecting past and present through fear, folklore, and cursed history. Each chapter of the saga explores a different era, cinematic style, and form of terror—yet all are bound by the same malevolent creature.
The legend didn’t end in 1933. It evolved.
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