Chris Stuckmann’s feature film debut, Shelby Oaks, breaks the stigma of YouTubers’ talents being confined to the internet.
YouTuber Chris Stuckmann’s Neon-distributed debut feature revolves around a woman searching for her missing sister.
Shelby Oaks, Stuckmann's professional directorial feature debut, anointed by horror auteur Mike Flanagan, will now be ...
Stuckmann raised $1.4 million on Kickstarter for this horror film, and his work ethic impressed Mike Flanagan, director of ...
Chris Stuckmann’s long-anticipated Shelby Oaks has finally arrived, and it’s a confident, atmospheric feature debut that ...
The movie picks up with Mia Brennan (Camille Sullivan) on the hunt for her missing sister, which eventually leads her to ...
After years of reviewing movies on YouTube, Stuckmann took the leap into the director’s chair to make a horror movie of his ...
Writer/director Chris Stuckmann makes his feature debut with a simplistic, underwritten supernatural thriller about a missing ...
It's an inch-long leap from Riley's tearful lament to Heather Donahue's legendarily snotty apologia in The Blair Witch ...
The internet is a scary place, but not in the way the Boomer generation imagined in the 1990s. In the darkest corners of the World Wide Web, you’re more likely to get radicalized by a podcaster than ...
The YouTuber's Kickstarter-funded 'Shelby Oaks,' from Neon, delivers some creeps, but mostly feels baldly derivative of prior, better horror efforts.
Polygon talks to Stuckmann about how he made Shelby Oaks on a budget, how Neon’s support changed the film, and more.