The House of Leaves Movies That Aren’t House of Leaves
After Mark “Markiplier” Fischbach’s indie sci-fi horror movie Iron Lung made waves at the box office, the popular YouTuber’s fans began discussing the possibility of him adapting Mark Z. Danielewski’s famously “unfilmable” novel, House of Leaves.
For the uninitiated, House of Leaves follows photojournalist Will Navidson and his family after they move into a new house with an unsettling anomaly. The house’s interior can expand into a dark, shifting labyrinth far larger than the house’s physical dimensions allow. As Navidson and others explore and film the house’s endless corridors, a recluse called Zampanò documents the events, but when Zampanò dies, a drifter named Johnny Truant discovers his manuscript and tries editing it, only to find himself spiraling into madness as the boundaries between the house, Navidson’s film, and reality begin to collapse.
It’s not the first time an emerging horror director has been linked with a potential adaptation of the bestselling book, nor will it likely be the last. Readers have yearned to see Danielewski’s complex story on the big screen since its 2000 publication, but there are already plenty of movies that offer similar vibes for anyone who can’t wait for the real thing.
Dave Made a Maze
The first thing to note about Dave Made a Maze is that it’s a horror comedy (among other things) which House of Leaves definitely isn’t. Yet they both focus on a similar core concept: a space that shouldn’t exist and behaves as if it has its own rules. They also feature fairly humdrum domestic settings that become gateways to impossible labyrinths filled with shifting corridors.
Dave (Nick Thune) creates his maze from cardboard, but like the House of Leaves house, it’s still one that can trap those who enter it and turn their exploration into a psychological and occasionally fatal trial. At one point, a film crew also enters the labyrinth, which blurs the line between observer and participant in both stories.
Though Dave Made a Maze is much more playful than House of Leaves, with appearances by Hal Hartley fave James Urbaniak and professional wrestler John Hennigan as a minotaur, it certainly contains enough core themes of Danielewski’s story to keep anyone enchanted by them happy.
Cube
Cube came out three years before House of Leaves was even published. The indie horror’s surreal setup finds a group of people waking up in a place that, at first, seems to have endless identical rooms, until one of them discovers that some of them contain deadly traps. As a result, the environment suddenly becomes both a psychological and physical threat. It unsettles the group’s perspective of space and security in much the same way that House of Leaves does, leading to paranoia and plenty of existential questions as the unwilling participants of the movie’s gauntlet desperately try to find a way out.
The deadly-maze concept at the heart of Cube should leave House of Leaves fans satisfied with its similar pieces of the story’s puzzle. There’s also a sequel, a prequel, and a Japanese remake to explore if Cube ends up being your bag.
Vivarium
Imogen Poots and Jesse Eisenberg star in Vivarium as a couple who travel to the suburbs to view a housing development but get trapped there with seemingly no way out. All the houses are identical, but number 9 becomes their reluctant home as they are forced by their captors to raise a creepy child against their wishes.
The movie explores themes of parenthood and aging in an unforgiving, unknowable domestic setting almost as strange as the one in House of Leaves, but the movie refrains from layering on any typical genre tropes, leaning into the existential dread of the couple’s bleak situation instead.
You Should Have Left
You Should Have Left is the most House of Leaves movie on this list. So much so that if you Google “House of Leaves movie” right now, it’ll be the first actual result you’ll see. However, it is also the worst movie on this list, so approach with caution.
Kevin Bacon stars as a retired banker who books a family holiday in Wales, but the vacation home they’ve chosen turns out to be extremely strange. Time isn’t flowing as it should, and there’s an anomaly in the angles between the walls and the floors; the house is larger on the inside than on the outside. Try as they might, they can’t escape the house once they’ve settled in, and Theo seems to be trapped there. If all this sounds a bit familiar, you might naturally imagine that German writer Daniel Kehlmann, on whose novella this movie is based, may have picked up House of Leaves at some point.
Synedoche, New York
If your favorite part of House of Leaves is how it layers stories and forces you to question the reliability of their narrators, then Synedoche, New York is the one for you. Featuring an incredible performance by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman and directed by notable surrealist Charlie Kaufman (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) the movie follows a theater director called Caden Cotard (Hoffman) who creates a huge replica of New York inside a warehouse, but whose commitment to the project’s realism starts to blur the lines between fantasy and reality.
The labyrinthine stage soon expands beyond Caden’s control, and it’s not long before it starts to mirror the way his own life and relationships are unraveling. Like House of Leaves, the environment becomes an extension of human consciousness, reflecting the impossibility of fully understanding or containing your own existence.
Skinamarink
Kyle Edward Ball’s Skinamarink divided audiences back in 2022. Ostensibly following two kids who wake up one night to find their father missing, the movie spends about 100 minutes exploring what happens when their home’s objects, doors, and windows start vanishing as well. However, the movie’s slow, experimental nature is the root of the problem for some viewers, even as it delights others.
House of Leaves fans who yearn to be hypnotized by both a malleable sense of time and spaces that don’t make sense could still find Skinamarink just the ticket, but they should also be aware going in that the movie isn’t structured in a way that can ever be truly understood, blending analog horror with a pervasive, unsettling nightmare logic that you can’t help but respect.
Coherence
After a comet passes Earth, strange occurrences develop on the night of a dinner party. What starts out as a fun evening quickly deteriorates into confusion and panic as the revelers begin to encounter multiple versions of themselves and the party house. Realities are blurring, and it becomes increasingly difficult to know who to trust during overlapping timelines and events.
Coherence is definitely a fascinating sci-fi that takes full advantage of its minimal cast and single location on a low budget, but its greatest asset is its rewatchability: it becomes a puzzle, full of twists that demand further investigation. Consequently, it 100% deserves inclusion on this list.
Inland Empire
We might be preaching to the choir on this one, as a Venn diagram of House of Leaves enjoyers and David Lynch fans should pretty much be a circle, but we’d be remiss if we didn’t include Inland Empire in our recommendations.
It’s not always the first Lynch film that people turn to because it’s more impenetrable than some of his other works, but the story’s fractured narrative will constantly have you questioning which layer of reality you’re in, and that’s very much in the House of Leaves stable. You’ll feel just about as lost watching Inland Empire as you do reading Danielewski’s dense tome, especially when the film dissolves into a stream of consciousness that asks the audience to make up their own minds about what is real and what is myth.













































































































































































