Introduction: Welcome Home, Please Ignore the Gary Busey in Your Attic
Hider in the House asks a simple question: what if Gary Busey lived in your attic? The correct answer is: call the police, burn down the house, and move to another continent. But this film thinks it’s a psychological thriller, so instead we’re forced to endure two hours of Busey-as-bogeyman, peering through vents and sabotaging marriages like a deranged suburban raccoon with a head injury.
It’s the kind of movie that thinks “psychological tension” means letting Gary Busey breathe heavily into a walkie-talkie while staring at Mimi Rogers with the intensity of a malfunctioning Roomba.
The Plot: Fatal Attraction Meets Home Depot
Tom Sykes (Gary Busey) is a freshly released psychiatric patient who decides the best housing option isn’t a halfway house or apartment but someone else’s attic. He moves into the Dreyer family’s new suburban dream home, like a cross between Santa Claus and a termite infestation.
From there, Tom spies on Julie Dreyer (Mimi Rogers), teaches her son fighting techniques, sabotages her husband Phil’s (Michael McKean) credibility, and kills a dog named Rudolph. Yes, this movie kills the family pet, instantly earning it a place on the cinematic naughty list.
The neighbors grow suspicious, but instead of calling the cops, they poke around until Tom stabs them. Eventually, Julie discovers Tom’s little attic Airbnb operation. There’s a violent showdown, Phil gets nearly killed, Julie shoots Tom, and the police finally show up—about 90 minutes too late, which is also how the audience feels.
Gary Busey: When Method Acting Goes Too Far
Gary Busey famously said this was a “NAR film”—No Acting Required. Translation: the studio paid him to play himself. And you know what? He wasn’t wrong. Tom Sykes is less a character and more a documentary of Gary Busey being Gary Busey: erratic, sweaty, and prone to terrifying monologues.
His performance is like a car crash—you don’t want to look, but you also can’t blink because something even worse might happen if you do. One moment he’s crying like a toddler denied dessert, the next he’s strangling the family dog. It’s “psychological realism” if the psychology in question is “rabid possum.”
The studio originally wanted Tom to be sympathetic—a tragic figure driven by loneliness and childhood abuse. But by the final cut, he’s just a walking PSA about why you lock your attic.
Mimi Rogers: Trapped in the Wrong Movie
Mimi Rogers plays Julie, the mother and supposed protagonist. She spends most of the movie either fending off Busey’s stalker energy or arguing with her clueless husband. Rogers does her best, but she looks like she’s constantly wondering how her agent convinced her to take this role.
Julie isn’t written as a smart final girl—she’s written as a doormat with a mortgage. By the time she finally fights back, the audience is screaming at the screen: “Please kill him, Mimi! Not for your family—for us!”
Michael McKean: Comic Relief in a Tragedy
Michael McKean, better known for This Is Spinal Tap and Better Call Saul, plays Phil, Julie’s husband. He’s meant to be the skeptical everyman, but instead comes across as the human embodiment of a shrug. His biggest character trait is not believing his wife when she says something’s wrong—which, in fairness, is the only realistic part of the film.
When Tom frames Phil to make him look like a bad guy, you half-expect McKean to just leave voluntarily. Honestly, it might have been the smartest move.
The Writing: When Fatal Attraction Meets a Lifetime Original Movie
The original script apparently ended with Tom realizing his monstrous nature and sacrificing himself. That might have been poignant, maybe even moving. But the studio, terrified of subtlety, demanded a “Fatal Attraction” ending where the psycho just goes full psycho and gets shot.
So instead of tragic nuance, we get Busey grunting his way through murder and manipulation until Julie blasts him. It’s not cathartic, it’s exhausting—like running a marathon in quicksand while someone shouts “Busey!” every five minutes.
The Horror: A Thriller That Forgot to Thrill
For a psychological thriller, Hider in the House is shockingly free of psychology and even more free of thrills. What it does have is:
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Lots of attic crawling: Tom spends so much time in insulation that he should’ve gotten asbestos poisoning instead of a bullet.
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Dog murder: Instant audience alienation. Hollywood Rule #1—don’t kill the dog unless your villain is reallyirredeemable. And even then, it’s lazy.
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Unintentional comedy: Watching Gary Busey whisper “I’m your friend now” into a vent is less scary than imagining him at your local PTA meeting.
The supposed tension is just endless shots of Busey lurking, breathing, and staring. Hitchcock made “the man who knew too much.” This is “the man who did too little but stared too hard.”
Production Trivia: The Real Horror Show
A psychologist was hired to make Tom’s character “realistic.” That lasted about five seconds before Busey announced, “No Acting Required.” From there, it was just chaos. The director wanted nuance, the studio wanted cash, and Busey wanted to crawl around attics like an overgrown gremlin.
Even the filming location feels cursed. The house itself looks less like a cozy suburban dream and more like the kind of place a true-crime documentary would open with. You half expect the narrator to say, “It was a quiet neighborhood… until Gary Busey moved into the attic.”
The Ending: Relief, Not Resolution
Julie finally shoots Tom. He briefly survives because apparently bullets don’t stop Busey, but then the cops finish the job. The family survives, the audience exhales, and everyone wonders why they didn’t just burn the house down in the first ten minutes.
Instead of a powerful finale, the film limps to the credits like Jason Voorhees without his machete. It’s less a climax and more a mercy killing.
Final Thoughts: Hider in the Trash Bin
Hider in the House is a movie that proves one thing: you can put Gary Busey in an attic, but you can’t make him scary—you can only make him weird. What should’ve been a taut psychological thriller becomes a parody of itself, with Busey chewing insulation instead of scenery.
The scariest part of this film isn’t the murders. It’s the realization that someone thought this script was worth $3 million and Mimi Rogers’ time.
Verdict: A creepy premise strangled by studio meddling and Gary Busey being… well, Gary Busey. If you want a real psychological thriller, rewatch Cape Fear. If you want attic horror, just hire an exterminator.


