Tarnation aka Creature Cabin (2017) is a gritty indie horror throwback that leans hard into isolation, occult terror, and practical creature chaos. After the tragic loss of her boyfriend, a grieving young woman escapes to a remote woodland cabin rumored to be haunted, hoping solitude will bring peace. Instead, she walks straight into a nightmare.
The cabin isn’t just haunted — it’s a gateway. As night falls, a cabal of demonic creatures and deranged cultists emerges, revealing a ritual designed to rip open the barrier between worlds and unleash hell on Earth. What begins as quiet psychological dread quickly spirals into blood-soaked survival horror.

Tarnation thrives on raw atmosphere, low-budget ingenuity, and relentless escalation. The film blends cult horror, creature features, and cabin-in-the-woods madness, favoring intensity over polish. Its demons are grotesque, its cultists fanatical, and its violence unapologetically brutal.
Fans of underground horror and grindhouse-style filmmaking will appreciate the film’s commitment to excess and bleak tone. It’s rough around the edges, but that rawness adds to its nightmarish charm.