Nix (2022) blends psychological terror with dark folklore, following the unraveling of a fractured family haunted by something they refuse to confront. The story centers on Jack Merrin, a father still carrying the scars of a traumatic childhood event that was never fully explained. When he was a boy, his mother disappeared into a dense forest during a violent storm, and Jack has lived with the belief that something supernatural took her. Decades later, he is determined to protect his own daughter from the shadows of the past—shadows he fears are returning.
Jack’s daughter, Lila, is an aspiring photographer who captures strange phenomena near the forest where her grandmother vanished. At first, the disturbances seem harmless: distorted reflections in water, whisper-like breezes in still air, and silhouettes where no one stands. But Lila’s fascination slowly slips into obsession, mirroring the same behaviors Jack remembers from his mother before she vanished. Jack begins to panic, believing history is repeating itself.

Local folklore blames a creature called the Nix, a shapeshifting spirit said to lure grieving or vulnerable people into the wilderness, trapping them between reality and illusion. Most residents dismiss the stories as campfire myths, but an elderly hunter claims the Nix feeds on unresolved guilt, taking the form of those its victims long to see. The hunter’s account shakes Jack, who has spent his life avoiding the pain of his mother’s disappearance.
As Lila’s behavior grows erratic, the boundary between hallucination and haunting starts to crumble. She insists she sees her grandmother in the forest at night, calling to her with a voice soft enough to feel real. Jack struggles to contain his fear while confronting his own buried memories—visions of a figure beckoning him as a child, promising safety if he followed deeper into the trees.

The tension escalates when Lila vanishes during a storm eerily similar to the night Jack’s mother disappeared. Jack and the hunter enter the forest in pursuit, navigating shifting paths, disorienting sounds, and glimpses of people they lost long ago. The Nix manipulates their emotions, forcing Jack to relive the guilt he never resolved.
The climax weaves the emotional and supernatural threads together as Jack finally confronts the entity. To save his daughter, he must accept a truth he spent decades denying: some wounds demand to be faced, even if the cost is unbearable. Nix ends on a chillingly ambiguous note, leaving viewers questioning whether the creature was real—or a manifestation of a family’s generational trauma.





