Welcome to Oregon (Population: Confusion)
Let’s start with this: The Oregonian (2011) isn’t so much a horror movie as it is a 90-minute concussion. Directed by Calvin Reeder, this “film” (a term I’m using generously) stars Lindsay Pulsipher as an amnesiac woman wandering through what appears to be Oregon, but might also be purgatory, a fever dream, or a rejected David Lynch student project.
It premiered at Sundance, because of course it did — that’s where movies go when they’re too weird for cable and too bad for Netflix. Reeder reportedly financed part of it through Kickstarter, which feels poetic: a bunch of people kicked in money and got a headache in return.
The Setup: Car Crash Meets Brain Crash
The story, such as it is, begins with our nameless protagonist (credited only as “The Oregonian”) waking up after a car crash. She’s bleeding, disoriented, and wandering a rural highway. So far, so normal — until you realize this movie’s idea of a plot is “woman walks around and occasionally screams at trees.”
She doesn’t know who she is, where she is, or why every person she meets looks like they escaped from a cursed Denny’s commercial. From there, she trudges through meadows, gas stations, and nightmares stitched together with the editing rhythm of a broken metronome.
If you’ve ever wanted to watch someone wander through Oregon like they’re trapped in a Twin Peaks escape room, congratulations — this is your masterpiece.
The Atmosphere: Pacific Northwest Fever Dream
Reeder clearly wanted to make an “atmospheric horror film.” Unfortunately, he confused “atmosphere” with “random nonsense filmed in a forest.” The cinematography is all washed-out greens and shaky close-ups, as if Oregon itself is trying to escape the camera.
The film has that lo-fi grain that hipsters mistake for profundity. Every frame looks like it was shot through a kaleidoscope made of sadness. At times, it’s almost impressive — not because it’s beautiful, but because you keep wondering how it managed to get less coherent with each passing minute.
The sound design doesn’t help. The audio alternates between dead silence and ear-splitting static, creating an experience somewhere between watching a film and being slowly electrocuted.
The “Plot”: A Meditation on Wandering Aimlessly
There’s no real narrative here. Our Oregonian simply wanders. She encounters bizarre strangers who appear, mumble something cryptic, and vanish before you can figure out whether they were supposed to mean something or were just lost locals accidentally caught on film.
There’s a man called “The Omelette Man,” who offers her scrambled eggs with the enthusiasm of someone who’s forgotten what eggs are. There’s a guy named Herb who may or may not be her spirit guide, a few strangers who stare at her like they’ve been hypnotized by a toaster, and a red-haired woman who seems to exist solely to add “color” — both literally and figuratively.
Every interaction feels like a riddle written by someone who failed English and hates you personally.
At one point, The Oregonian screams at a house. At another, she licks a tree. Later, she cries in front of a goat. None of these scenes are explained, justified, or revisited. They just… happen.
The movie doesn’t progress so much as it loops. You keep waiting for a revelation — a clue, a flashback, something — but all you get is a sense of existential dread and mild nausea.
The Horror: Existential or Accidental?
Technically, The Oregonian is a horror film. Realistically, it’s horrifying only if you’ve ever feared wasting your own time. There’s no villain, no ghost, no monster — unless you count “pretentious filmmaking” as a supernatural force.
Instead of scares, the film offers “disturbing imagery.” Translation: it throws random weirdness at the screen and hopes you’ll assume it’s deep.
Blood? Check.
Farm animals? Check.
Distorted faces and screaming? Double check.
A man making unsettling noises while cooking breakfast? Unfortunately, yes.
The result is less The Shining and more What If Public Access TV Had a Breakdown.
There’s one particular scene — the “Omelette Scene” — that’s supposed to be shocking. It involves an old man making eggs in a way that could generously be described as “unhygienic performance art.” It’s disgusting, yes, but not in a way that feels meaningful. It’s like watching someone weaponize brunch.
The Oregonian Herself: Lost, Confused, and Relatable
Lindsay Pulsipher (True Blood, The Hatfields & McCoys) does her best with what she’s given, which, in this case, is absolutely nothing. She wanders through woods, screams occasionally, and stares into space like she’s trying to remember if she left the oven on.
To her credit, Pulsipher’s performance is oddly compelling — mostly because she seems just as baffled as the audience. Her expressions oscillate between “What the hell is happening?” and “Am I still in this movie?”
She’s the emotional anchor of the film, but it’s like being the most stable person in an asylum. Her confusion mirrors ours, which makes her oddly sympathetic. By the end, you’re rooting for her — not to find answers, but to find the nearest exit.
The Symbolism: Pretension in the Fog
If you ask Calvin Reeder what The Oregonian is about (and God help you if you do), he’ll probably say something like, “It’s an allegory for trauma and rebirth.” Translation: “I don’t know either.”
The film throws around symbols like confetti at a funeral. There’s a red door that might represent salvation, or blood, or a metaphor for menstruation. There’s a recurring shot of a goat that could symbolize nature, sacrifice, or just budget-friendly livestock.
Even the title is misleading. “The Oregonian” suggests something regional — like folklore or Americana — but this film could take place anywhere people have trees and existential crises.
It’s less “psychological horror” and more “film school student discovers surrealism and refuses to edit.”
The Ending: You Survived. Barely.
After what feels like several lifetimes, The Oregonian finally limps to a conclusion — though “conclusion” is probably too strong a word. Our heroine encounters more strange visions, stumbles into more fog, and then screams at something unseen. Fade to black.
That’s it. No answers. No resolution. Just the faint sense that the director fell asleep mid-edit.
It’s the cinematic equivalent of being told a joke with no punchline. You sit there in stunned silence, waiting for something — anything — to make sense. It never does.
The Filmmaker: Calvin Reeder, Agent of Chaos
Calvin Reeder clearly has a vision — unfortunately, it’s one shared only by people who’ve inhaled too much bug spray. He’s aiming for David Lynch meets Terrence Malick, but ends up closer to Lynch after three concussions and a dare.
You can sense the ambition — the desire to make something artsy, disturbing, and mysterious. But ambition without discipline just leads to chaos. And The Oregonian is chaos distilled — an arthouse smoothie made of fog, blood, and regret.
Reeder’s follow-up projects continued this surrealist streak, proving that some lessons in clarity were never learned.
Final Thoughts: Not So Much a Movie as a Cry for Help
Watching The Oregonian feels like being trapped in someone else’s nightmare — except they’re narrating it through interpretive dance and bad sound design. It’s not scary, it’s not deep, and it’s not even interestingly bad. It’s just… there.
The film wants to be profound but ends up profoundly boring. It’s the kind of movie that critics pretend to understand to avoid looking stupid. Don’t fall for it. If anyone tells you it’s “brilliantly abstract,” just hand them a flashlight and tell them to go wander the woods too.
By the end, you’ll envy the Oregonian’s amnesia. Forgetting this film would be a mercy.
Rating: 🚗💥 1 out of 5 hallucinatory goats — one point for unintentional comedy, none for coherence. It’s less “cinema” and more “head injury simulator.”

