It doesn’t matter if a mine has gold in it. If it closed because a supernatural force killed everyone that went into it, perhaps you don’t need to reopen it. Well, there wouldn’t be a movie if this didn’t happen and The Strangeness, shot on 16mm with real stop-motion animation, is the result.
You can say that this movie drags — and it does — but it also has a monster that eats people and dissolves them with acidic spit and then pukes them up. It leaves behind messy corpses that are crawling with maggots, so you know, don’t eat during this.
Director Melanie Anne Phillips — who used the name David Michael Hillman — wrote this with Chris Huntley, who plays one of the trapped people in the mine and also did the special effects.
The beginning of the movie was shot without permission at a real mine called The Red Rover. About a month after, real-life miners hired to see if the mine was worth reopening entered and went further in than the film crew had. They all died. Not from being devoured and thrown up by a monster that looks like a woman’s secret garden filled with tentacles and slime, mind you, but from poison gas exposure. The rest of the movie was shot in Phillips’ grandparents’ garage using tin foil painted black for the walls of the mine.
You can watch this on YouTube.