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The Endless: You Can Go Home Again (But Maybe You Shouldn’t)
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Science Fiction Film Club
The Endless: You Can Go Home Again (But Maybe You Shouldn’t)
A disturbingly cheery cult, cosmic horror, and classic Southern California weirdness.
By Kali Wallace
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Published on June 10, 2026
Credit: Rustic Films / Snowfort Pictures
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Credit: Rustic Films / Snowfort Pictures
The Endless (2017) Directed by Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead. Written by Justin Benson. Starring Justin Benson, Aaron Moorhead, Callie Hernandez, and Tate Ellington.
Note: You know to expect spoilers in all of my Film Club articles, but this one deserves an extra warning, especially because it’s an indie film that many people haven’t seen or heard about. I’m going to spoil the plot extensively, because I think it’s a very cool movie with lots to discuss. I’m also going to talk about Resolution (2012), a related movie from the same filmmakers. I won’t go into as much detail, but discussing how they are related is in itself a spoiler for the ending of Resolution.
If you haven’t watched them yet and prefer to avoid spoilers, all you need to know is that they are both great films, they are freely available all over the internet, and you should watch them.
When the COVID-19 pandemic began in early 2020, I was living in San Diego. Just a few months earlier, my roommate (whom you know as Reactor anime columnist Leah Thomas) and I had very abruptly had moved into a cute, witchy 100-year-old cottage, after some roofers at our previous apartment dropped an air compressor through the roof and left a two-foot hole in the ceiling with a nice asbestos-framed view of the California sky. The very typical SoCal landlord tried to tell us that a surprise skylight was not reason enough to move without providing thirty days notice. We disagreed. The 100-year-old cottage we found to rent had cockroaches and some oddball neighbors, but aside from those quirks it was genuinely lovely. It was a good place to be living when the world ground to a halt.
But even a nice place to live can start to feel weird when the whole world has gone weird. By the time we were celebrating Halloween by making a short horror film about our cute little house being possessed by a Nicolas Cage-worshipping death cult, it was impossible to ignore something we had both suspected for years but had dismissed until the pandemic came around.
What we realized is this: Time doesn’t pass normally in San Diego.
Yes, yes, technically time passes the same there as it does anywhere else. Probably. Mostly. The sun rises and sets, deadlines come and go, cats remember their mealtime every day. In theory there are seasons, as different flowers bloom at different times of year and sometimes it’s almost chilly enough to need a sweater, but for the most part the changes are subtle in that southernmost part of California. Months can pass without a person ever feeling it. You can spend years living a fairly pleasant, uneventful life, only to look up one day and have absolutely no idea how long you’ve been there because you have very few anchor points with which to mark the passage of time.
I felt a sense of deep recognition when I watched The Endless, which was filmed and takes place in eastern San Diego County, near the unincorporated town of Descanso, about forty miles east of the city. East County has its own unique character (she says, diplomatically), but it still felt so familiar. Justin Benson, the film’s writer, co-director, and co-star, was born and raised in San Diego and knows the area well.
Which means he knows, too, that this is the perfect setting for cosmic horror.
The vibe is a bit uncanny—outwardly pleasant but still unsettling. Most people are chill and easygoing and trying to find their passion. You’ll definitely meet people with fervent spiritual beliefs that make absolutely no sense no matter how earnestly they try to explain. Nobody can remember how long they’ve lived there. You’re never more than two degrees of separation from a tweaker with too many guns. There is always a man with a beard asking you to try his home-brewed Hefeweizen. Somebody you know is in a cult.
And time most certainly does not pass normally.
The Endless was born out of Resolution (2012), the first film Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead made together. They were both fairly new to the film industry, and Benson was on the verge of giving it up and going to medical school instead when they decided to make a small, self-financed indie film together. Resolution is about a man named Mike (Peter Cilella) who receives a worrying video from his addict friend Chris (Vinny Curran), who has been squatting in a house in the woods. Mike heads out to East County to either convince Chris to go to rehab or force him to detox. Over the course of the week they spend together, some very strange things start happening that make it clear that some mysterious entity or force is toying with them for unknown reasons.
During that week, Mike has a brief meeting with some members of a local religious group that sounds an awful lot like a UFO cult. (The wealthy San Diego suburb of Rancho Sante Fe was the site of the Heaven’s Gate mass suicide in 1997.) Two of the cult members in Resolution are played by Benson and Moorhead, but at the time of filming those were only supposed to be quick cameo roles. If they had intended to develop the characters, they later said in interviews, they would have given them names besides Justin and Aaron.
I watched Resolution after I watched The Endless, and I think it works just fine that way, although it does cast a grim pall over the entire thing. Resolution is a very good movie, one that offers an unflinching look at friendship, addiction, bad choices, and the grinding depression of being stuck in old habits that you don’t see any reason to break out of. It’s at turns funny and shocking, with a host of delightfully weird red herrings, and the lead actors are great. It’s a fantastic example of what filmmakers can do with the industry equivalent of loose change and the willingness to commit to a disturbing idea.
Resolution ends with the characters of Mike and Chris thinking they understand the weird, frightening things going on around them. And they do, to an extent, although they don’t have the full picture, because Benson and Moorhead hadn’t yet developed the full picture. Resolution was a very small film from unknown filmmakers, but it did premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival, which earned them just enough of a reputation to make their second film, Spring (2014), which the internet tells me is tangentially connected, as is their later film Synchronic (2019). But I haven’t seen either of those so I’m not sure how they fit in.
The Endless introduces us to brothers Justin (played by Benson) and Aaron (played by Moorhead), who have left the cult they were proselytizing for in Resolution to live a rather dreary life in Los Angeles. Justin, the older brother, got them away from the cult’s Camp Arcadia nearly ten years ago; there was a brief flurry of press because he told Aaron and various authorities that the people at Camp Arcadia were planning a mass suicide in the manner of Heaven’s Gate.
Now adults, the brothers receive a video tape in the mail with a recording of cult member Anna (Callie Hernandez) talking about the group’s coming “ascension.” Aaron wants to go back to see if the group has finally carried out their planned suicide. He remembers their time at the camp a lot more fondly than Justin does, especially in comparison to how hard their lives are now. Justin agrees that they can return for a single night, just to see if anybody is still alive, and they head south on the 5 (with an obligatory mention of “the boobs” that won’t be a landmark much longer) and into rural eastern San Diego County.
What they find is that Camp Arcadia is pretty much just the way they left it. Anna is still there, as are de facto leader Hal (Tate Ellington), brewmaster Tim (Lew Temple), newcomer Lizzy (Kira Powell), amateur magician Shane (Shane Brady), and silent Smiling Dave (David Lawson Jr., one of the producers who funded the film). Everybody is friendly and welcoming and healthy—so healthy, in fact, that Justin swears they haven’t aged at all in ten years.
Another thing that hasn’t changed is how eccentric the camp is. Not in a sinister way, not at first; I love that the movie understands how important it is to make life in the camp seem appealing, at least on the surface. Camp Arcadia doesn’t look like a creepy cult. It looks like a very SoCal kind of commune.
But it is a commune organized around a single powerful principle. It’s just that their center isn’t a charismatic leader who claims to be on first-name basis with God, as in so many American cults. It’s… something else. Something that nobody claims to fully understand.
And, okay, maybe everybody’s a little forceful in their woo-woo acceptance of this mysterious god-like being in the woods, but they welcome the brothers back warmly. Sure, their nighttime tug-of-war game with this unseen entity in the inky darkness might be a bit unsettling, but they seem to be having fun. And yeah, they are pretty isolated, but they’ve got beer and something like weed and plenty of food, and everybody gets to do whatever arts and crafts they want, so is it really that bad? Don’t think about why there are two moons in the sky. It’s a weird weather thing. It’s fine.
One person who isn’t taken in is new arrival Jennifer (Emily Montague), who has come to the area looking for her missing husband and is frustrated at how little help she’s received. Justin also remains wary; he knows something unnaturally strange is going on and demands answers that Hal refuses to provide. But we can see Aaron getting drawn back in. The brothers fight over Aaron’s desire to stay, and the camp members eventually ask Justin to leave, in part because they’re mad that he told the world they were a self-castrating UFO death cult.
Which, to be clear, they aren’t.
Well, there’s no castration and no UFOs. The death thing is more complicated.
In the woods, Justin meets a guy with the most excellent name of Shitty Carl (James Jordan). Or, to be more precise, he finds Shitty Carl’s very dead body hanging in a shack, then he meets a very alive Shitty Carl moments later, and he finally learns exactly what’s going on.
Shitty Carl tells him there is something in the woods—a monster, a god, an entity, whatever—that has trapped people in time-loop bubbles. Some of those bubbles have a very long loop; the one encompassing Camp Arcadia resets every ten years. Some are much shorter; Shitty Carl’s loop is three hours. Our friends Mike and Chris from Resolution have been repeating the same week over and over again for an unknown amount of time—long enough that Mike’s wife, the aforementioned Jennifer, has come looking for him. Later on, while searching for Justin, Aaron will come across a rustic tent in which a man in old-timey clothes is caught in a violent five-second loop and presumably has been for a century or longer. There are references to other loops as well: We never find out what sort of loop has caught the French researchers mentioned in Resolution and referenced obliquely in The Endless, although Benson and Moorhead said they had planned to include their fate but had to cut it from the second film.
The geographical rules of this situation are not entirely clear, but it also doesn’t matter, because the one rule is that the once people are caught, the entity can generally do what it wants to fuck them up. And it has been doing so for a long, long time. After the brothers reunite, they come across various statues and artifacts that suggest there have been people interacting with and worshipping the entity for centuries.
The horror of this reveal is the kind that hits over and over again. It gets worse the more you think about it. The twin premises of time loops and a powerful entity trapping people in isolation for mysterious reasons are common in sci fi and horror, and there are all manner of metaphors and allegories that can be tied to them. A lot of Resolution is about the painful cycles of addiction and depression, but The Endless takes it in a different direction.
The people in these bubbles know they are caught in time loops. They know something has trapped them for its own reasons. None of them can see this entity, but it interacts with them using various media, like videos, tape recordings, and photographs, which they all interpret in different ways. That’s also how it lures new people in. The brothers return to Camp Arcadia after receiving a videotape that Anne never sent, just as Mike went to check on his friend after receiving an email Chris never sent. The entity did all of that. (We can conclude it has access to a post office and also an email account. It probably still uses Facebook.)
The man in the five-second loop is obviously existing in unending misery, but he never gets a chance to do more than warn Aaron away. Shitty Carl thinks the entity just wants to torture him and hopes that at some point he’ll find a way to die that ends the loop. Mike and Chris still seem to believe the conclusion they came to at the end of Resolution, which is that the entity is using them for entertainment, and the loop will end if they provide it with the right kind of story. All of them warn Justin to get his brother and leave before Camp Arcadia’s ten-year loop resets. They warn him not to play the entity’s game, not to go along with it, not to submit to what it wants.
That’s not what the people at Camp Arcadia do. They welcome newcomers with open arms—even when they really probably shouldn’t. They took in the brothers after their mother died in a car crash, which is not what you are supposed to do when you find two injured kids by the side of the road. They welcomed Lizzy, a troubled young woman who wandered away from a mental health facility. They welcome Jennifer, even though they probably know why Mike disappeared and definitely know she has a kid outside the bubble waiting for her to come home. Hal refuses to explain what’s happening to Justin, even when Justin specifically asks, because he wants the brothers to decide to stay long enough to be trapped.
They don’t warn people away from getting caught in their ten-year loop. They welcome them instead, because they believe their situation is sacred. They welcome a chance at apparently eternal life, a chance to live over and over again, perfecting whatever pursuits they choose. The process of dying gruesomely at the end of each loop is a cherished ritual for them.
Or so they say. Their earnest acceptance is not entirely convincing. Hal is still trying to understand the entity enough to change things, and Tim, who appears to have been around the longest, directly tells Aaron he shouldn’t stay if he doesn’t want to. The members of Camp Arcadia give the impression that they aren’t so much fervent believers in their own message, but rather that they are desperately trying to believe because they don’t have any other choice.
So they invent meaning for their suffering. This is cosmic horror in the sense that the entity’s motives are fundamentally unknowable; there is never confirmation about what the entity wants or why. The meta-explanation of the entity wanting stories or entertainment—like it’s a director forcing people to act out versions of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games over and over again—is a decent one, but that doesn’t explain the man in the tent, or even Shitty Carl, who never have a chance for narrative or change. They only have suffering.
Camp Arcadia’s situation may not be as immediately horrifying, but their slow-burn time loop is insidious in its own way. They spend ten years living in peaceful isolation, building up to a brutal death they have decided to call ascension, trying to learn more, trying to perfect their skills and lives, every time hoping the outcome will be different. They think there is a trick. They think there is a way to do it right. They have to believe that, even though absolutely nothing in their experience has suggested this to be the case. What’s the alternative? It’s not like they can decide to leave.
At the end of the film, Justin and Aaron escape the time loop because they listened to what Shitty Carl and Mike and Chris told them: Get out before it resets, and don’t submit to the entity’s game. It’s strongly implied (and has been confirmed by the directors) that Jennifer also escapes, as she never bought into the camp’s ideology and is seen riding away before the loop resets.
But the members of Camp Arcadia do not. We see them after the loop resets, whole and healthy again. They all look a little resigned, a little tired. They’ve got another ten years to try it all over again.
The Endless is sometimes funny, sometimes spooky, sometimes disorienting, but there is also a relaxed, naturalistic, and rather melancholy feel over the whole film. There’s a short documentary available about the making of the film, which provides a good look at how it all came together. My main takeaway is that it was, from start to finish, a thoroughly collaborative process.
Benson and Moorhead conceived, wrote, produced, directed, and starred in the film, but they are very clear about the fact that the other people in the production had a great deal of say along the way. They talk about developing the characters with actors, even a character like Tim, who says basically ten words in the entire movie. They refer to sound mixer Yahel Dooley as their “third director” and discuss how he was involved from the earliest stages to craft the film’s sound design. They rave about how composer Jimmy LaValle would eagerly go off on his own musical whims when making the score based on their vague and not always helpful requests. Moorhead did the visual effects with the help of one of the camera operators who decided to learn just because she wanted to; the limited effects are mostly straightforward scene compositing (i.e., filming two real things then combining them) with a few digital images and a few miniatures thrown in. The production designer Ariel Vida and her team of artists were living on set at the camp as they were filming. That is: actually on set, as their workshop took up half of a cabin that was transformed into all of the interior scenes for different days of filming.
The whole production was small, close-knit, and cooperative, which is what happens when filmmakers don’t have a lot of money to work with, but do have a group of talented people invested in a creative project.
Recently Benson and Moorhead have been at work directing episodes of television for the Marvel juggernaut. The movie business is tough and times are uncertain, so I certainly don’t fault anybody from getting those Disney dollars while they can, but I also hope they someday come back to this niche of micro-budget sci fi horror. It’s immensely satisfying when high-concept films with small-scale productions find that perfect match between the right story and the right way to tell the story. Both Resolution and The Endless have achieved that. They’re strange and unsettling stories, built around big concepts but almost uncomfortably intimate in how closely they examine their characters, like we’re stumbling into the scene while strange and terrible things happen to people who have found themselves in a bizarre situation.
That’s an experience that comes along with a lot of indie and arthouse film, but it’s less common for high-concept sci fi. The stakes are personal, the tone naturalistic, and in place of flashy spectacle there is instead an appealing, almost voyeuristic urge to stick around and watch how it will turn out.
What do you think of The Endless and/or Resolution? Do you agree with my brand-new, just-devised theory that they are secretly documentaries about the cosmic time loop that encompasses all of San Diego County?
Next week: One night in the woods, three astronomers hear a strange signal from outer space, but Jodie Foster is nowhere to be found. Jodie Foster probably has socks that cost more than the entire budget of Cosmos (2019). Find it online.[end-mark]
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