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Stardate 04.24.2026.A: Is 2026's 'Mamochka' Haunted By History, Possessed By Evil, Or Mired In Mediocrity? You Get To Decide.

4/24/2026

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(NOTE: The following review will contain minor spoilers necessary solely for the discussion of plot and/or characters.  If you’re the type of reader who prefers a review entirely spoiler-free, then I’d encourage you to skip down to the last few paragraphs for the final assessment.  If, however, you’re accepting of a few modest hints at ‘things to come,’ then read on …)
 
From the film’s IMDB.com page citation:
“A psychological horror about a Nazi-era heirloom doll that drives a suburban dad crazy.”
 
Arguably, the trickiest element to producing any Horror film – big budget or small – is knowing precisely when to ‘play your hand.’
 
If the story’s chief antagonist is some specter or ghost, then the director and screenwriter likely need to figure out just when and how are the best ways to reveal its legendary backstory, the whole reason for its supernatural existence.  If the story’s baddie is some hungry, dream-inspired demon, then a great deal of thought goes in to the thing’s interactions with the cast and how to properly ratchet up the existential dread everyone feels when they come together.  If the story’s villain – or moral source of villainy – is some monster, then the creative crew will likely have undergone some debate about when and how much of the vile hobgoblin do we show: is it a protracted reveal after several players have fallen victim to its skullduggery, or do we go all-in within the first reel?
 
A good portion of this debate gets settled only when all involved know precisely the central foundation of wickedness is … and therein lies the problem with Mamochka (2026), an indie thriller written and directed by Vilan Trub.  I’ve just finished watched it on Blu-ray – a good presentation, especially considering there likely wasn’t a great deal of money invested in it – and I’m more than a bit befuddled.  Though I’m led to believe that this old doll was the singular heavy causing these characters’ dismay, the closing scene strongly suggests another culprit … one that could have one or two or maybe even three identities … and a strong argument could be made for the fact that even another person or other might also have heavily contributed to these dire predicaments that ultimately deliver us to no destination.
 
Young Derek Gajewski (played by Joshua Danskin) is a troubled child who kinda/sorta sees monsters where no one else does.  Naturally, his parents – Mark (Alexander Kollar) and Jane (Maya Murphy) – chalk it up to a boy’s overactive imagination as would probably any adult couple.  But when mommy and daddy are away one evening and the li’l sprite finds himself alone with a comely babysitter Sarah (Saidie Stone), Derek produces a – ahem – Dopp kit full of syringes, chooses one from the assortment, and administers a shot to the young woman.  Though we’re never shown exactly what happens or provided any sufficient explanation, whatever Sarah endured forces her to leave the house and child unattended, despondently spending the night in a nearby city park.
 
At this point, Mark and Jane don’t know what to make of their son’s behavior (mind you: neither do we in the audience!); and the narrative is suddenly hijacked to deal with Jane’s foul-mouthed tirades against her recently deceased mother.  Her only inheritance is an old doll with a porcelain skull and a thick head of hair.  Thinking that it could perhaps be worth some money as an antique, Mark opens dialogue with a conveniently nearby ‘doll doctor,’ Mr. Ralph Finkelstein (Andrew Steiner).  Ralph explains that he believes that the oversized figure was, in fact, manufactured by Nazis; and he asserts that luscious head of hair it sprouts possibly came from the head of a Jewish victim of the concentration camps.  This development sparks the father’s sudden fascination with 1930’s and 1940’s German history.
 
Given that Trub’s tale invested this much in what looks like a creepy doll centerpiece, I suspect a great many folks watching will be happy to know what this carnival attraction finally is; however, now Mamochka twists again, with Mark waking up and waking up and waking up again and again and again seemingly in some time loop wherein viewers are left questioning how much of what’s been shown is real versus the product of the middle-aged video editor’s dreams.  His sanity cracks – as would anyone’s – and he’s now creating people out of thin air – a curious stranger (Dino Castelli) delivers a letter that’s never opened and seemingly forgotten – and he directs the resulting frustration on his wife and his drinking buddy Gary (David Beckles Jr.) in what by all accounts looks to be a grim finale.
 
Well …
 
It’s at this point that – ahem – ol’ foul-mouthed Jane wakes up on a bright sunny morning seemingly with no memory of her husband or anything else we, the viewers, have just watched.  The flick closes with her taking young Derek for a car ride, and the woman notices that – albeit briefly – the boy has the face of the mysterious mail-delivering stranger.
 
Huh.
 
Of course, I could attempt to decipher what all of this was meant to mean, but methinks what Trub and his cast and crew have constructed is little more than a convenient ‘mindfuck’ they intended to be the talk of the town (or the film festival circuit).  Somewhere, there’s an audience for this stuff – the kind that has ample time on their hands for just watching films and then gathering at the bar to make of them what they will – and that’s perfectly fine.  But out here?  In reality?  What remains is ninety-minute train ride with little scenery and no bankable conclusion.  The picture is filled with the usual suspect of Horror tropes – many of them put to good use – along with some muddling dialogue between actors and actresses who make the best of gibberish intended to be somehow reverential if not minor related.  But given the fact that Mamochka lacks a central cohesive thread – a throughline that exists every step of the way – I’ve fundamentally no way to reach any rational assessment as to what happened much less what I’m supposed to make of it.
 
Confusing and dull, this Mamochka should’ve stayed left in the box at the store.
 
Mamochka (2026) was produced by Trub Film Co.  DVD distribution (for this particular release) has been coordinated by the fine folks at Allied Vaugh.  As to the technical specifications?  While I’m no trained video expert, I can still assure readers that the provided sights and sounds are very good considering that you go in entirely aware that it’s an independent movie.  Sets are plain.  Effects work is minor.  What visual trickery there is modestly but effectively supports the narrative.  Lastly, if you’re looking for special features?  The disc boasts a few deleted scenes along with trailers for other productions available from the production company.
 
Alas … this one remains Hard To Recommend.
 
As an indie thriller, Mamochka showed a bit of promise here and there; but, sadly, it just doesn’t deliver with any single workable premise.  In fact, what there is boils down almost to a kinda/sorta “Choose Your Own Adventure” yarn when it comes to figuring out precisely what all the fuss was about.  My bugaboo with smaller and more intimate chillers – which this one is – is that it still has to both establish understood rules and then play by them: this one doesn’t, instead leading viewers down whatever rabbit hole seemed like the best idea at the time.  Disappointing.
 
In the interests of fairness, I’m pleased to disclose that the fine folks at Trub Film Co. (via the distributor Allied Vaughn) provided me with a complimentary Blu-ray of Mamochka (2026) by request for the expressed purpose of completing this review.  Their contribution to me in no way, shape, or form influenced my opinion of it.

​-- EZ
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