My quick rating - 6.4/10. Hokum takes a familiar horror setup, tosses it into the Irish countryside. Then adds a witch, a haunted honeymoon suite, and Adam Scott being perpetually uncomfortable, and hopes atmosphere can carry it the rest of the way. For the most part, it does.
A very dehydrated person is seen walking in the desert along with a kid. He sees a circle made in the desert sand. The cliched phrase from any horror movie rings out, "We're close." Meanwhile, novelist Ohm Bauman (Adam Scott) is typing away at a keyboard, revealing that this desert adventure is part of the story he's writing. From there, we head to Ireland, where the scenery immediately starts earning its paycheck. Rolling landscapes, quiet roads, and a quaint little inn provide the perfect backdrop for things to inevitably go very wrong.
Ohm arrives intending to scatter his parents' ashes, but it doesn't take him long to get caught up in some local legend about a witch haunting the inn's honeymoon suite. We spend some time getting to know him, and the movie makes one thing crystal clear. Ohm is not a believer. It also makes another thing clear, he can be kind of a jerk. His interactions with server Fiona (Florence Ordesh) don't exactly paint him as "World's Best Customer."
After a surprising turn leads to Fiona's disappearance, the film shifts into mystery mode. Ohm teams up with the elderly Jerry (David Wilmot) to investigate the infamous honeymoon suite, which sounds like the worst Airbnb review imaginable.
This is where Hokum shines. The atmosphere is fantastic. The sound design works overtime creating tension, and several creepy shots genuinely land. There are moments that might even make seasoned horror fans jump. When Ohm eventually finds himself trapped inside the suite, Adam Scott essentially gets a one-man horror showcase and absolutely delivers. He spends much of the film reacting to increasingly disturbing situations, and he's excellent. Also, bonus points for the unexpectedly clever MacGyver-style clock solution.
The film asks an interesting question about who the real monster might be: man or witch. The witch herself is handled well, with plenty of mystery left intact. The production values are strong across the board, and the cinematography is consistently impressive.
Unfortunately, some of the basement-related developments feel undercooked. While the witch benefits from ambiguity, other elements are left so unexplained that they feel less mysterious and more unfinished. Likewise, the rewrite Ohm makes to the story we see at the beginning eventually makes sense, but I'm still not entirely convinced it serves much purpose beyond connecting the opening and ending. And there are easier ways to open a glass bottle. Just saying.
In the end, Hokum is an enjoyable blend of ghost story and witchcraft horror that can't hit the heights its reputation suggests. The hype may have worked against it. When I ran across such glowing reviews, I expected something exceptional. Instead, I got a solid, polished horror movie filled with ideas we've seen hundreds of times before. Not bad by any means, just not quite magical enough to cast the spell it was aiming for.

And yes, Adam Scott was great. In case I forgot to mention that.
https://jackmeat.com/hokum-2026/




