My quick rating - 6.4/10. Strange Harvest is one of those flix that quietly dares you to believe it. Presented entirely in a mockumentary style, it opens not with a jump scare or a murder, but with someone calmly explaining a strange, possibly unsolvable puzzle. That framing choice might sound dry on paper, and I’ll admit it nearly put me off at first, but it didn’t take long before the film had me anxiously awaiting the next kill.
The series begins on July 19th, 2010, with a welfare call to 911 that uncovers a chilling scene in the San Bernardino suburbs. A family of three was found bound, drained of blood, and deliberately arranged under a symbol painted on the ceiling using blood. Detectives Joe Kirby (Peter Zizzo) and Lexi Taylor (Terri Apple) immediately recognize the symbol as the calling card of a killer who vanished 15 years earlier. Naturally, that killer has a name that sounds unsettling even before you know what he does - Mr. Shiny. And it isn’t long before he’s back in business.
What follows is a chilling combination of true crime procedural and horror. Victims appear in grotesque ritualistic circumstances - pickled in a swimming pool full of living leeches and hanging flayed in a public park. What's strange is that despite all this horrific gore on screen, there is very little actual horror content in this film. It is all in crime shots, recovered video footage, and still photographs that feel all too real. Some of these are bone-chilling moments that aren’t necessarily so due to over-the-top presentation, but with a matter-of-fact tone that speaks to a real documentary.
Writer-director Stuart Ortiz deserves a lot of credit here. If you weren’t told this was fictional, it would be incredibly easy to mistake Strange Harvest for something ripped straight from the ID Channel or Netflix’s true crime library. The two lead detectives are especially effective, bringing exhausted determination and credibility that anchors the more cosmic elements of the story. The sunbleached suburbs of the Inland Empire setting add to the uneasy feel of being lifeless and oddly exposed.
As this all unravels, it would appear that Mr. Shiny's murders might deal with something much more sinister: cosmic phenomena and forces beyond human explanation. The film never fully explains everything, and that works to its benefit. I couldn’t help but think of Se7en while watching, not because this reaches that level, but because even prompting that comparison feels like an achievement.
Strange Harvest is a slow burn that would rather build up some sense of dread. It is not always an easy watch, especially if you have the patience to sit through some of the awkward early scenes, but once the mythology gets in your system, it will stick around after the credits roll. It might not be perfect, but it's well worth the watch for those into true crime documentaries with a dark twist.


















