The next generation of Hollywood directors may have started on YouTube.
A Weekend That Got Hollywood’s Attention
A horror movie made for $750,000 isn’t supposed to be packing theaters three weeks after release. I actually tried to see Obsession twice before finally getting a ticket on my third attempt, and even then the theater was full for a 9 p.m. Sunday showing. People were reacting to every twist, laughing at the jokes, and audibly groaning when things went wrong. It felt less like discovering a tiny independent horror movie and more like showing up late to a phenomenon that everyone else had already found. The box office numbers suggest the same thing.
Directed by YouTuber Curry Barker, Obsession has spent three straight weekends doing the opposite of what movies are supposed to do at the box office. After opening to roughly $17 million, it climbed to nearly $24 million in weekend two and then grew again in weekend three, eventually passing $100 million domestically. For Sporcle fans, the movie also contains a fun little Easter egg. Before the horror kicks in, the main characters are at their weekly trivia night, trying to finally beat a rival team they’ve been competing against for years.
At the same time, another YouTube creator was making headlines. Kane Parsons’ Backrooms debuted at number one, giving creator-made horror films the top two spots at the North American box office. Together, Backrooms and Obsession finished ahead of Disney’s The Mandalorian and Grogu. That would have sounded unlikely just a few years ago. Now it feels like a sign that Hollywood is finding its next generation of filmmakers in unexpected places.
From YouTube Channels to Movie Theaters
For most of movie history, there was a fairly standard route to becoming a filmmaker. You studied the craft, worked your way through the industry, made independent projects, attended festivals, and hoped someone noticed. Today’s creators can take a very different path.
Platforms like YouTube allow filmmakers to build audiences long before they ever pitch a movie to a studio. They can experiment with storytelling, develop visual styles, learn editing and production, and gain millions of followers while doing it. By the time they make a feature film, they may already have years of experience holding an audience’s attention. That’s exactly what happened with Curry Barker and Kane Parsons. Long before either director landed a theatrical release, they had already spent years learning how to tell stories online. Their success suggests that YouTube may be becoming an unexpected training ground for future filmmakers.

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Think you know your horror movies? See if you can identify these films from their famous taglines.
Why Horror Keeps Winning
It’s probably not a coincidence that these breakout projects are horror movies.
Horror has always been one of the most accessible genres for emerging filmmakers. Great horror often depends more on atmosphere, suspense, and creativity than expensive visual effects or massive production budgets. A compelling idea can go a long way. Movie history is filled with examples. The Blair Witch Project, Paranormal Activity, and Saw all became major successes despite relatively modest budgets. Horror rewards originality, and audiences are often willing to take a chance on an unfamiliar filmmaker if the premise is intriguing enough. That makes the genre an ideal proving ground for new talent. Today, that talent increasingly comes from online platforms rather than traditional Hollywood pipelines.
More Than One Surprise Hit
It would be easy to dismiss Obsession and Backrooms as a coincidence. After all, horror has always produced surprise hits. But that’s not the only thing connecting these films. Both were directed by creators who built audiences online before making the jump to theatrical filmmaking. Both arrived with fan communities that already knew their work. And both managed to attract younger moviegoers at a time when Hollywood has spent years wondering how to bring those audiences back to theaters.
That doesn’t mean every successful YouTube creator can become a successful filmmaker. It also doesn’t mean traditional Hollywood is going anywhere. What it does suggest is that the path into the movie business may be changing. Studios once discovered new talent through film schools, festivals, and independent films. Increasingly, they may be finding it on YouTube.
Are We Watching Hollywood Change?
Every generation of filmmakers brings new influences with it. The directors who transformed Hollywood in the 1970s grew up on classic movies and television. Today’s creator-filmmakers grew up on YouTube, internet culture, gaming videos, social media, and digital editing software. Their creative education looked very different, and that difference is beginning to show up on movie screens.
That doesn’t automatically make them better filmmakers. But it does make them different, and audiences seem interested in what they’re creating. Hollywood isn’t abandoning franchises anytime soon. Blockbusters will remain a major part of the industry, and one successful year won’t rewrite the entire business. Still, it feels significant that two low-budget horror films from YouTube creators became the biggest story in entertainment for a weekend. Whether this turns into a lasting trend or just a memorable moment, one thing is clear: the line between internet creator and Hollywood filmmaker has never been thinner.
A Five Question Quiz on the Matter
The Final Frame
Hollywood has always been shaped by new technology and new voices. Right now, some of those voices happen to be coming from YouTube. Whether this is the beginning of a larger trend or simply a remarkable moment, Obsession and Backrooms have shown that the path to Hollywood looks a little different than it used to.
That is your Daily Brain for today.
Ready for more? Play more horror movie quizzes on Sporcle.
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