Imposters Director and Cast Unpack the Toxic Relationship at the Heart of the Film
Appearances can often be deceiving. This goes double in a movie like Imposters. On the surface, it’s a horror film about a very literal bodyswap. But it’s also an interrogation of the false identities we often wear in real life, and how desperate we can become to believe the lies we tell ourselves about who we are.
Written and directed by Caleb Phillips, Imposters stars Jessica Rothe (Happy Death Day) and Charlie Barnett (Russian Doll) as a married couple forced to contend with any parent’s worst nightmare when their baby mysteriously disappears during his birthday party. And although the child is found relatively quickly — with a little unexpected help from a local town weirdo — tensions between the couple rise as Paul starts to suspect the son Marie brought back may not be the same as the one they lost.
What follows is a genre-bending film that wrestles with ideas of parenthood and commitment, all while serving up a series of genuinely surprising twists. Though the premise of Imposters revolves around the truth of what happened to Marie and Paul’s son, the heart of its story is the marriage at its center, which appears to have been struggling well before his disappearance.
“I think there’s something horrifying in seeing people faced with the same choice repeatedly,” Phillips says. “As an audience member, the first thing I notice is patterns and cycles, and seeing these people make the same choice when presented with the same path is pretty upsetting to me. I don’t think I have a toxic love story in my life, because this [film] comes mostly from my parents, and trying to figure out why they stay together. That’s what I was processing while I was writing it — trying to make something cool and genre, but also [determining] what it’s about [at its core]? And at that moment, it was about my parents.”
In the film, Marie, like many other women, seems to have subsumed much of her identity into her roles as a wife and mother, whether or not the relationship she’s fighting for is actually good for anyone involved in it.
“For myself and for Marie, I think that she really is who she is, and who she believes herself to be, is completely wrapped up in her husband and her kid,” Rothe says. “So the moment that either of those things go away, she’s completely lost her sense of self, and I think that that’s something that’s so incredibly relatable. Even though the things that she does and the ways that she goes about getting what she wants sometimes are maybe not the most sane, or [what] we all think that we would do, it comes from such a deep place of need and and desperation.”
According to Phillips, it’s much the same for Marie’s husband Paul, who’s struggling to determine the sort of man (and husband and father) he’s supposed to be.
“When your identity gets challenged – an entity you might not even know that you’ve held for so long — it can get really ugly,” Phillips says. “Sometimes I’m surprised at what I realize I identify as, like filmmaker, brother, son, and when that gets threatened, or I feel like I’m not living up to the identity in my head, I can feel these dark emotions come up.”
In Imposters, Paul is attempting to live up to an ideal he was already struggling to meet before his child went missing.
“I think there’s a whole sort of martyr complex to that character,” he says. “It’s something I’ve seen in a lot of men, both of a certain generation and at my same age range — there’s this proclivity to suffer. You’re not really sure what they’re suffering for, but the act of suffering somehow makes them noble. But what if it’s not what’s good for you or for other people? It’s fascinating.”
For Rothe, part of the horror genre’s appeal is that it offers a space to get into the ugly, less socially acceptable sides of her character’s psyche.
“I just love the opportunity to get into the muck with a character, whether that’s physically or emotionally,” Rothe says. “Those kinds of really deep, dark, visceral feelings that it’s not acceptable, necessarily, to portray or wear on your sleeve as humans walking around in the world. It’s such as a gift as an actor. Acting is truly my therapy. What I’m trying to say is like, give me all the situations where I can scream and cry and be covered in blood and just go balls to the wall. And I think that that’s something that horror really provides, and especially the kind of scripts that Caleb writes, or the Happy Death Day films, they’re just characters who, because of the situations they’re in, [have] a spectrum of emotion that’s much wider and more visceral.”
Imposters premiered March 15 at the 2026 SXSW Film & TV Festival.






































































































































































































