“Baba Yaga: House of Shadows” (2026) is a dark fantasy horror film that reimagines the legendary witch of Slavic folklore in a hauntingly modern context. The story begins with a young woman named Anya, a folklore researcher who travels deep into the Carpathian Mountains to uncover the origins of the Baba Yaga myth. Drawn by her grandmother’s mysterious disappearance decades earlier, Anya’s journey is both personal and academic. She discovers a decrepit cabin standing alone in the forest, surrounded by ominous carvings and eerie whispers carried by the wind. Despite local warnings, she enters the house, unaware that she is awakening something ancient and vengeful.

Inside the House of Shadows, time seems to warp. Anya encounters haunting visions of her past and spectral figures trapped between life and death. The line between dream and reality begins to blur, as she learns that the house feeds on fear, using memories as a gateway to the soul. The forest around her becomes alive with supernatural forces, and strange symbols appear carved into her skin. Anya realizes that the legend of Baba Yaga was never a mere story—it was a warning.
As Anya delves deeper, she uncovers the truth that her grandmother once made a pact with Baba Yaga to save their family during the war. That deal cursed their bloodline, binding them to the witch’s will. Now, Anya must choose whether to break the cycle by confronting the witch or surrender to the same darkness that consumed her ancestor. The witch herself is portrayed not as a simple monster but as a tragic, ancient being who punishes greed and betrayal. Her house, standing on skeletal legs, shifts and groans as though alive, guarding the threshold between worlds.

The film’s tone grows increasingly claustrophobic as Anya’s sanity unravels. The House of Shadows becomes a reflection of her fears and guilt, each room revealing a new psychological horror. She finds herself speaking to echoes of her grandmother, unsure if they are spirits or hallucinations. As the climax builds, Anya must face Baba Yaga in a chilling confrontation where survival means embracing her family’s hidden power.
The ending leaves audiences questioning what is real. When dawn breaks, the cabin has vanished, and Anya stands alone in the clearing, forever changed. “Baba Yaga: House of Shadows” is both a tale of ancestral guilt and feminine power, blending folklore, suspense, and emotional depth into a haunting cinematic experience that explores how legends never truly die—they evolve, waiting for the next soul to enter their domain.