Horror comes in all shapes and sizes. Some elements come and go, while others stick around and are constantly with us. On that note, Kenichi Ugana‘s latest film, The Curse, gives us frights that not only go bump in the night, they follow us around in broad daylight. Similar to how there are no safe zones in films like The Babadook and It Follows (which also raised eyebrows and pulses at Fantastic Fest), a curse is not something that subscribes to any rules other than this: unrelenting pursuit and peril that usually ends in tears. So, if you have a taste for something with long hair, tall shadows and sticks…