-2023-2023 | The Tank

There’s also an ecological undercurrent. The creatures are not evil; they are survivors, adapted to the dark, stagnant environment humans created. In a strange way, the family are the invaders, drilling into a sealed habitat. Walker never preaches, but the imagery of water contamination, concrete prisons, and disturbed ancient life lingers. Upon release, The Tank earned mixed-to-positive reviews, with particular praise for its practical effects and sustained dread. Rue Morgue called it “a swampy, satisfying throwback to ’80s creature features,” while Bloody Disgusting noted its “uncompromising third act.” Audiences were split—some found the pacing too slow, others celebrated its patience.

The Descent , The Host , Sweetheart , and anyone who’s ever heard a drip in the basement and decided not to investigate.

Released quietly in April 2023, Scott Walker’s independent horror film bypassed the multiplex for VOD and select theaters—but for those who found it, The Tank became an unexpected gem. It’s a film that asks a deceptively simple question: What if the monster under the bed was actually under the floorboards? The plot is lean and mean. Ben (Luciane Buchanan’s real-life partner, Matt Whelan) inherits a remote, crumbling coastal property in Oregon after his estranged mother’s death. Along with his wife, Jules (Buchanan), and their young daughter, they hope to restore it—a classic “fixer-upper” dream. But the house comes with baggage: a sealed, flooded basement and a cryptic deed restriction prohibiting any excavation of the land. The Tank -2023-2023

★★★½ (out of 5) Watch if you dare: With the lights off and the volume up—preferably not in a house with a crawlspace.

Walker, a veteran visual effects artist (credits include The Hobbit trilogy), deliberately chose practical suits and animatronics. The result is a monster that feels tactile. When a creature’s claw drags across a concrete wall, you hear the scrape. When it surfaces from murky water, it leaves a film of organic residue. This isn’t a sleek Hollywood mutant; it’s a believable, horrifying evolutionary throwback—perhaps a relic from a warmer, wetter epoch, sealed away by the home’s original owner. The film’s real antagonist, however, is the setting. Walker shoots the Oregon coast as a character itself: fog-soaked mornings, relentless rain, and the groaning of an old house settling. The cinematography by Simon Riera keeps the camera low and tight, mimicking the confined crawlspaces and flooded sumps the family must navigate. There’s also an ecological undercurrent

Sound design plays an equally crucial role. Dripping pipes. The rumble of the water heater. And below it all, a slow, rhythmic thump-thump —something large moving through submerged concrete corridors. By the time the creatures fully appear, the audience has already been submerged in their world for forty minutes. Beneath the teeth and slime, The Tank offers a quietly resonant subtext. The tank itself is a man-made structure—a relic of a previous owner’s dark solution to an inconvenient problem. The film asks: What do we bury to protect our future? And what happens when the past refuses to stay buried?

But in the months since, The Tank has found a second life on Shudder and digital rental. It’s become a word-of-mouth recommendation for horror fans tired of ironic, meta-commentary monsters. This is a film that takes its premise seriously—and gets its hands dirty. The Tank (2023) is not a perfect film. Its dialogue occasionally creaks, and a few character decisions defy logic (as they must in the genre). But as a piece of atmospheric, practical-effects-driven horror, it succeeds admirably. It understands that true terror is not what leaps from the shadows—but what has been living in them all along. Walker never preaches, but the imagery of water

In an age of bloated blockbusters and CGI ghosts, sometimes the most effective terror is the kind that waits in the dark, covered in slime and silence. The Tank (2023) dives headfirst into that primal fear.

Naturally, they break the rules. A broken water line forces Ben to drill a new well. That’s when the ground literally trembles. The old septic tank—a massive, concrete-lined pit—has been breached. And something has been sleeping in the muck for decades. Where The Tank distinguishes itself is its commitment to practical effects. The creatures (biologically inspired by axolotls and other neotenic amphibians) are slimy, pale, and claustrophobically real. They don’t stand on hind legs or deliver monologues. Instead, they move like drowned predators—undulating through flooded tunnels, sensing vibration, and striking with a wet, bone-crunching efficiency.