Dark Feed (2013) is a low-budget horror film that leans heavily into atmosphere, psychological tension, and classic genre paranoia. It taps into the familiar fear of abandoned institutions, using isolation and history to create an unsettling viewing experience.

The story follows a film crew that relocates to a deserted psychiatric hospital to shoot a horror movie. What initially feels like a practical and creative decision quickly turns ominous as the building’s disturbing past begins to surface.

As production continues, the boundary between fiction and reality starts to blur. Strange occurrences, mounting fear, and deteriorating mental states suggest that the location itself may be influencing the cast and crew in dangerous ways.

The film relies more on mood and suggestion than explicit scares. Dark corridors, decaying rooms, and lingering silence build tension steadily, reinforcing the psychological aspect of horror rather than relying on constant shock.