Directed by: Curry Barker
Starring: Michael Johnson, Inde Navarrette, Cooper Tomlinson, Megan Lawless
Obsession is low budget, but it isn't cheaply made. It is simple, taut horror with the universal theme and warning of: Be careful what you wish for, because you just might get it.
We begin with Baron (Johnston), a twentysomething who is desperately in love with his co-worker Nikki (Navarrette) and can't find it in him to communicate his feelings to her. Nikki is a kind soul who isn't aloof or mean but has clearly placed Baron in the friend zone. One evening, he buys a toy called "One Wish Willow" from a novelty store which he uses to grant him his wish that Nikki would love him above all others. He should've worded it differently.
Nikki begins acting strangely. She doesn't just love Baron, but she grows obsessed with him. She doesn't want him even to use the bathroom for fear of letting him out of her sight. She acts possessed by an otherworldly spirit. Nikki can no longer be reasoned with. When Baron calls the customer service number on the One Wish Willow package, the man on the other end matter-of-factly tells him that there is no way to reverse the wish and lotsa luck young man. The number of inexplicable behavioral events keep piling up, and Baron is helpless to stop them. The only way out is the inevitable, and does Baron want to go down that road?
The true victim in Obsession is Nikki, who did not ask for this to happen to her, and didn't deserve it. The Nikki that "loves" Baron is not the one he fell in love with and fantasized about possessing. She is but a vessel of an evil supernatural being that makes Baron and his friends regret that he made that selfish wish. Obsession is truly scary and effective, because it's told clearly and with care. Is there gore? In one or two specific scenes, yes, and that's par for the course. The scene where Nikki disposes of a potential rival is a genuine jump scare with a brutality no one is prepared for.
Obsession grows all the scarier because it is still somewhat grounded in reality despite the obvious intrusion of the supernatural. The performances are by unknown, but natural actors who inhabit the movie with conviction. When the ending finally plays out, we realize just how much we sympathize with Nikki and why.