Camera Roll
Camera Roll is a found footage horror film told through still video clips, revealing a man being watched over time. Tension builds to a chilling climax, leaving viewers with silence and unanswered que…

Camera Roll
Camera Roll is a found footage horror film told through still video clips, revealing a man being watched over time. Tension builds to a chilling climax, leaving viewers with silence and unanswered questions. Camera Roll is a chilling found footage horror film told entirely through a sequence of still, cinematic video clips pulled from a camera's internal memory. There are no interviews, no dialogue, and no handheld chaos-only eerily composed, motionless shots that quietly piece together a story far more sinister than it first appears. At first, the clips seem innocent: scenic parks, quiet hallways, a distant figure at a bus stop. But patterns emerge. A recurring subject, Elijah Adkins, begins to appear in nearly every frame-reading at a café, walking home from school, unlocking his apartment door. Elijah never acknowledges the camera. He doesn't know it's there. As the clips continue, the angles get closer. Bolder. The camera starts appearing inside Elijah's building. Then his hallway. Then his room. Subtle changes in lighting, time of day, and location suggest this footage spans weeks, maybe months-meticulously recorded without Elijah's knowledge. The tension crescendos in the final moments: an empty chair in Elijah's living room. A bathroom mirror. A front door, slowly creaking open. The last clip is the only one not still-it shows Elijah sleeping. Then waking. Then looking directly into the lens in total confusion... and terror. The screen cuts to black. No answers. Just silence. The footage never leaves the camera. The viewer is left with one haunting realization: the man behind the lens was always watching-and Elijah Adkins never made it out alive. —Allison Monroe

Camera Roll
Adventure,Horror,Mystery
Film Details
Camera Roll is a found footage horror film told through still video clips, revealing a man being watched over time. Tension builds to a chilling climax, leaving viewers with silence and unanswered questions. Camera Roll is a chilling found footage horror film told entirely through a sequence of still, cinematic video clips pulled from a camera's internal memory.
There are no interviews, no dialogue, and no handheld chaos-only eerily composed, motionless shots that quietly piece together a story far more sinister than it first appears. At first, the clips seem innocent: scenic parks, quiet hallways, a distant figure at a bus stop. But patterns emerge.
A recurring subject, Elijah Adkins, begins to appear in nearly every frame-reading at a café, walking home from school, unlocking his apartment door. Elijah never acknowledges the camera. He doesn't know it's there.
As the clips continue, the angles get closer. Bolder. The camera starts appearing inside Elijah's building.
Then his hallway. Then his room. Subtle changes in lighting, time of day, and location suggest this footage spans weeks, maybe months-meticulously recorded without Elijah's knowledge.
The tension crescendos in the final moments: an empty chair in Elijah's living room. A bathroom mirror. A front door, slowly creaking open.
The last clip is the only one not still-it shows Elijah sleeping. Then waking. Then looking directly into the lens in total confusion...
and terror. The screen cuts to black. No answers.
Just silence. The footage never leaves the camera. The viewer is left with one haunting realization: the man behind the lens was always watching-and Elijah Adkins never made it out alive.
—Allison Monroe.