Ratings: 4.1/10
Runtime: 1h 41min
Genres: Horror
Director: Adrian Bobb, Ali Chappell, Richard Lee
Writer: Adrian Bobb, Matthew Campagna, Ali Chappell
Cast: Kate Vernon, Corteon Moore, Erika Prevost
Language: English
Something’s wrong in the marsh. You feel it before you see it. In God of Frogs 2026 directors Adrian Bobb, Ali Chappell and Richard Lee don’t ease you in they shove you under. A body surfaces bloated. Meanwhile the town nearby keeps pretending nothing’s changed which makes it worse. So the air looks wet heavy almost chewable. However beneath that quiet rot something ancient shifts. So Frogs gather in unnatural swarms. They watch. They wait. The film snaps between silence and chaos. So one moment a whisper the next a scream that cuts deep. However Performances hit hard raw unpolished and sometimes uncomfortably close. You can almost smell the mud the decay the metallic sting of fear. Moreover the camera lingers where it shouldn’t forcing you to stare longer than you’d like. Is it folklore? A curse? Or something far older something that doesn’t care what you call it? The film doesn’t hand you answers. However Instead it drags you through dread and lets you sit in it. There are flaws. Some pacing stumbles. Yet when it bites it bites deep. Ultimately God of Frogs sticks not because it’s loud but because it feels wrong in all the right ways. That uneasy pull makes it a standout among afdah movies.