HELLAH HORRAH: THE MYTHOLOGICAL HORROR ORACLE Descent: The Blackening
Directed by Tim Story
Tarot Cards: The Tower + The Fool
The Blackening is what happens when horror finally admits the joke has always been on us — and then hands Black folks the mic.
This film doesn’t ask, “What if Black people did the dumb horror thing?”
It asks, “What if we already know the rules and still have to play?”
That’s the brilliance.
The cabin-in-the-woods setup is familiar, tired, dusty — and immediately flipped. Because the characters aren’t naïve. They’re genre-literate. They know the tropes. They know the stats. They know the history. The horror isn’t ignorance — it’s structural inevitability.
Every joke lands because it’s true.
Every laugh is a release valve.
Every gag is also a critique.
This is Black humor as survival technology.
And the games? Whew. Trivia as violence. Knowledge tests as death traps. That’s not random — that’s America. Prove your Blackness. Perform your identity correctly. Answer fast or bleed. The film understands how often Black people are asked to explain themselves under pressure and calls it what it is: absurd, cruel, rigged.
Now let’s pull the cards.
The Tower
This is the genre collapsing in real time. The Tower is sudden destruction — not just of bodies, but of assumptions. The Blackening blows up the lie that horror is neutral. It tears down the structure that says whiteness is default and Blackness is deviation. The walls fall. The rules crack. And in the rubble? Clarity.
The Tower says: this was never stable.
The Fool
But here’s the twist — The Fool isn’t ignorance. The Fool is freedom. It’s the refusal to carry inherited fear without questioning it. The Fool survives by adaptability, by humor, by movement. The characters don’t win because they’re pure or perfect — they win because they stay nimble. They laugh. They pivot. They keep going.
That’s the radical move.
Black humor horror isn’t about denial.
It’s about agility.
Myth-wise, this is Anansi energy.
Anansi is a trickster figure from West African (Akan) folklore, known as the god of stories, wisdom, knowledge, cunning, and trickery, often appearing as a spider who uses his wit to outsmart more powerful beings.
This is Br’er Rabbit logic.
Br'er Rabbit is a trickster folk hero from African-American folklore, famously adapted by Disney in the animated segments of Song of the South (1946) and the 2006 film The Adventures of Brer Rabbit. He is known for using his wit to outsmart his adversaries, Br'er Fox and Br'er Bear, and is a central figure in the Uncle Remus stories. The character is a beloved but controversial figure due to the problematic nature of Song of the South.
This is trickster tradition in a slasher mask.
The Fool steps into danger knowing the world is ridiculous — and uses that knowledge as armor.
Final Hellah oracle:
Sometimes the scariest thing isn’t death —
it’s being trapped in someone else’s idea of you.
Break the house.
Laugh at the test.
Refuse the script.
Survival doesn’t always look serious.
Sometimes it looks like getting the joke and living anyway.
— Hellah 🖤