Fantasy has always been a ripe genre combination for horror, one that’s netted such iconic films as Guillermo del Toro’sPan’s Labyrinthand Robert Eggers’The Witch. However, let’s not forget the sweeping horror crusade emerging from Europe in recent memory, with films likeThe VourdalakandYou Won’t Be Alonestill leaving us quivering in our seats from their unique haunting narratives. Another bright — or, more fittingly, dark — example that’s arrived in the last decade isDraug, a Swedish horror film that follows a search party’s descent into an eldritch, shadowy territory rampant with pagan worship and whispers of the mythical “draugr.”

Released in 2018,Draugis both a nightmarish glimpse into Swedish history and a prime example ofhorror built around Nordic mythology, the legends of which are best remembered through depictions of the Vikings as its violent adherents (whose ferocity only serves to make their monsters that much more terrifying).

A still from Draug (2018)

Though the film garnered modest success on the festival circuit, it has failed to make a broad impression in the U.S. and is today only found on select streaming services. Considering its sheer, transcendent horror — shared with several otherterrifying fantasy films—I believe it’s time we change that by givingDraugthe attention it truly deserves.

Draug Is A Genuinely Scary Movie Within The Dark Fantasy Realm

The Film’s Ancient Subject Matter Is The Stuff Of Nightmares

Set in 11th-century Sweden at the end of the Viking Age,Draugfollows a doomed rescue party as they venture into the northernmost parts of Odmarden in search of a missing missionary, encountering evidence of several ominous rites and ritualson their less-than-merry way.

Among the party members is a young woman named Nanna (Elna Karlsson), for whom the rescue mission is a sort of homecoming as her birthplace lies within the cold pagan territory. Her presence on the trip proves to be a curse for the rescuers, since before long,the party finds themselves relentlessly stalked by a chilling, ancient evil.

01562454_poster_w780.jpg

From start to finish,Draug’s ambiance is unrelenting, leaving viewers with a brooding auditory sense of foreboding only exacerbated by the film’s stark, disturbing visuals.

What separatesDraugfrom its recent horror contemporaries is its commitment to true, unnerving terror — a feat not accomplished through popcorn-hurling jumpscares, mind you, but rather through a fervent and calculated construction of cinematic atmosphere. From start to finish,Draug’s ambiance is unrelenting, leaving viewers with a brooding auditory sense of foreboding only exacerbated by the film’s stark, disturbing visuals.

ou know something bad’s about to happen, and you may’t look away — that is the rare, grotesque terror thatDraugepitomizesthroughout its brief hour-and-28-minute runtime, in which every lone second makes your skin want to utterly crawl.

How Draug Differs From Most Dark Fantasy Movies

The Draugr Isn’t The Film’s Greatest Force Of Evil

Unlike most horror fantasies, which pit their characters against a singular (and sometimes varied) villainous force,Draugpresents a far blacker primordial landscape in which malevolence is the presiding order of a world without light — only darkness and fleeting reprieve from the darkness.

In this sense,the titular draugr of the film is not some masked phantom or a twisted abomination of nature,but nature itself, set on a territorial hunt for its powerless, intrusive prey. It is a much broader and more thematic threat that the main characters navigate and one that is far more terrifying.

Because of this unique narrative darkness, there was truly no better place forDraugto take inspiration from than Norse mythology’s most terrifying monsters and spirits, of which a quick search on Wikipedia’s underbelly can leave you fretful and quivering. All kidding aside,Draugis a film far more deserving of recognition and acclaim than its limited theatrical release allowed seven years ago.

Despite this, this underrated Swedish gem persists as a dark and unholy beacon of terror in the modern horror landscape, and with a little luck, it’ll soon be a film far more appreciated.

Draug

Cast

Draug, set in 11th-century Sweden, follows a rescue mission into dense northern forests to find a missing missionary. Led by Nanna on her maiden voyage, the team encounters ancient and malevolent forces in the wilderness, intertwining myth and history in their perilous journey.