Movies News Talk
Netflix's Outside: A zombie apocalypse Masking a Far Deeper Horror!
Netflix's Outside isn't your average zombie flick. Sure, there are zombies, but the real monsters are far more terrifying: the lingering effects of abuse and trauma tearing a family apart. The film follows the Abel family's struggle to survive both the undead horde AND the toxic control exerted by Francis (Sid Lucero). As they retreat to his childhood home, the zombie apocalypse acts as the backdrop, revealing far deeper terrors that will shake viewers deeply.
Iris (Beauty Gonzalez) wants out, aiming to bring their sons, Josh (Marco Masa) and Lucas (Aiden Tyler Patdu) to safety, while Francis manipulates and controls to maintain dominance over everyone else. He's not only controlling; he is actively emotionally abusive; his increasingly erratic and destructive behavior turns into this terrifying exploration around family violence, as those deep secrets of abuse and trauma get uncovered. By the end, this family thriller reveals why this film is among Netflix's best horror releases, despite that seemingly simplistic premise which ends up hiding much, much more that truly will shake every viewer to their very core!
Francis' abusive control escalates dramatically during the film’s climatic third act. The arrival of Corcuera (Enchong Dee) begins unraveling Francis’ careful lies. The truth about Delta camp and Diego's death gets exposed; forcing Francis’ complete reliance on deceit to collapse in spectacular fashion; he begins taking incredibly rash and increasingly disturbing measures in response.
Francis’ actions reflect a desperation for control: He murders and then cooks the dog for some utterly unfathomable reason; he then steals Corcuera's uniform; and the memories of childhood abuse resurface; culminating in that tragic yet ultimately effective murder of Corcuera for no clear or justifiable reason. This pivotal murder is just another tool that this terribly troubled father chooses for securing control.
Stealing the uniform isn't just about clothing. Lucas' beloved soldier action figure made Francis strive to portray that protector role desperately needed within this family environment. It was ultimately undone entirely because his incredibly flawed attempts backfired terribly, not getting the intended effect that this disturbed individual desires and resulting instead into furthering that terrible loss of control completely unraveling this tragic individual.
Despite Francis' descent into horrifying madness, a surprising act appears unexpectedly late into the story! While trapped in the basement, reliving those deeply traumatizing childhood memories of his abusive father, Iris and Lucas's screams unexpectedly snaps him from his complete detachment into trauma-fueled panic, motivating a rare show of concern for family. This brief return of his humanity—after amputating Lucas's injured arm and a critical attempt to maintain family safety– makes him consider caring more for everyone.
There might be other contributing reasons here. Breaking the door to that horrific basement – where those earliest abusive events happened— symbolizes some possible effort towards working through his trauma. He then shows more humanity: perhaps having the strength and awareness to fully release that inherited toxicity from his own past and his incredibly difficult upbringing. And after being a product of severe, generational trauma; overcoming all of that while being surrounded by others suffering his abuse becomes one of his main plot motivations late into the storyline!
That Rolex watch is way more important than it seems. Francis took it from his dead father; now wearing it. And in the last scenes we see Francis again; and we see that Rolex close up – highlighting a key message – one concerning generational abuse! That watch symbolized the cycle. His father abused while wearing that watch; Francis used it for abusive control.
Josh's decision to leave it untouched next to Francis’ corpse might imply breaking the cycle! He escapes it differently than his father; achieving a much more wholesome path to recovery. This shows hope— and just the right levels of resolution in a far darker storyline!
The final moments, show Iris and Lucas waiting patiently as Josh gets help. Iris then sings their wedding song—a seemingly out-of-place, incredibly moving choice given how broken the marriage became.
She’s actually making a desperate plea. This song expresses that love; hoping he shows kindness one final time—bringing Lucas to safety. She needed that one last act. This is really not simply nostalgia! Her longing; the choice to use that moment; really enhances what this dark story might imply for those involved, and why these final events greatly affect her.
Outside isn't simply a zombie film; the larger thematic arc revolves around the devastating impact of those elements relating to abuse, trauma and inherited toxicity. Francis becomes his abusive father. This film highlights exactly why. That watch is key. The violent tendencies, copying behavior is really crucial, yet so is the act of attempting to break this awful cycle; this key element creates those important thematic undercurrents within the movie. His past ruined his family. That scene ending in those horrific losses was powerful in showing these horrific results.
And yet hope exists— for Josh and Lucas and Iris's escape– a sign showing this cyclical trauma finally ended. They broke the cycle and move forward towards recovery! Even after facing immense challenges and profound losses.
Outside is both horrifying and emotionally devastating – an intensely gripping exploration into those terrible consequences related to abuse, generational trauma, yet offering glimmers of hope even through unimaginable challenges that truly made this a haunting masterpiece.