The Juniors y La Fórmula Imperial
Jacob's got problems-deep, mental ones. Desperate for relief, he volunteers for a radical treatment to escape his tortured mind. But instead of peace, he finds himself trapped in a house with a tunnel…
The Juniors y La Fórmula Imperial
Jacob's got problems-deep, mental ones. Desperate for relief, he volunteers for a radical treatment to escape his tortured mind. But instead of peace, he finds himself trapped in a house with a tunnel to his subconscious. What begins as a path to healing becomes a harrowing descent where memory fractures, time distorts, and reality bends. A first-of-its-kind cinematic experience, Soul to Squeeze begins in a boxy 4:3 aspect ratio and ever so slowly widens to a full 2.35:1 by the final frame-mirroring Jacob's expanding perception as he risks everything for redemption. Soul to Squeeze is a mind-bending descent into the human psyche-raw, immersive, and unrelenting. The film follows Jacob, a young man plagued by invisible wounds. The world outside may call them mental health issues, but to Jacob, they feel more like an infection-slowly, violently eating away at his ability to feel, function, and make sense of his own thoughts. With nowhere left to go and no faith in traditional methods, he signs up for a radical new treatment that promises salvation through confrontation. The treatment site is a seemingly ordinary house tucked into the woods. Jacob enters alone, monitored from afar, under the impression that he's about to undergo a controlled psychological reset. But once inside, the structure begins to change-its walls shifting, its rooms rearranging, and its very logic bending in response to his internal world. At the center of it all: a tunnel that winds deep beneath the foundation. It's not a place that exists in any conventional sense. It's a gateway to Jacob's subconscious, a physical threshold that leads inward rather than down. Inside this space, time dilates. Memories slip out of order. Linear thought collapses. Jacob begins encountering beings that are neither hallucinations nor other people-they are aspects of his own psyche made manifest. These figures function like archetypes: some guiding, some threatening, all purposeful. In the tradition of Alice in Wonderland or The Wizard of Oz, Jacob moves through an inner landscape , each new presence, forces him to confront the major forgotten truth. The house isn't haunted. He is.
The Juniors y La Fórmula Imperial
Comedy,Fantasy,Sci-Fi
Film Details
Jacob's got problems-deep, mental ones. Desperate for relief, he volunteers for a radical treatment to escape his tortured mind. But instead of peace, he finds himself trapped in a house with a tunnel to his subconscious.
What begins as a path to healing becomes a harrowing descent where memory fractures, time distorts, and reality bends. A first-of-its-kind cinematic experience, Soul to Squeeze begins in a boxy 4:3 aspect ratio and ever so slowly widens to a full 2.35:1 by the final frame-mirroring Jacob's expanding perception as he risks everything for redemption. Soul to Squeeze is a mind-bending descent into the human psyche-raw, immersive, and unrelenting.
The film follows Jacob, a young man plagued by invisible wounds. The world outside may call them mental health issues, but to Jacob, they feel more like an infection-slowly, violently eating away at his ability to feel, function, and make sense of his own thoughts. With nowhere left to go and no faith in traditional methods, he signs up for a radical new treatment that promises salvation through confrontation.
The treatment site is a seemingly ordinary house tucked into the woods. Jacob enters alone, monitored from afar, under the impression that he's about to undergo a controlled psychological reset. But once inside, the structure begins to change-its walls shifting, its rooms rearranging, and its very logic bending in response to his internal world.
At the center of it all: a tunnel that winds deep beneath the foundation. It's not a place that exists in any conventional sense. It's a gateway to Jacob's subconscious, a physical threshold that leads inward rather than down.
Inside this space, time dilates. Memories slip out of order. Linear thought collapses.
Jacob begins encountering beings that are neither hallucinations nor other people-they are aspects of his own psyche made manifest. These figures function like archetypes: some guiding, some threatening, all purposeful. In the tradition of Alice in Wonderland or The Wizard of Oz, Jacob moves through an inner landscape , each new presence, forces him to confront the major forgotten truth.
The house isn't haunted. He is..