Hungry Widow -2024- Uncut Neonx Originals Short... Instant
The short also feels like a direct response to the sanitized grief depicted in prestige dramas. There is no catharsis here. Only digestion. Hungry Widow is not for everyone. Its pacing is deliberately funereal. Its body horror is not shocking but intimate —which, for many, is worse. Yet for those who seek out Uncut NeonX’s brand of challenging, sensory-first horror, this short is essential viewing. It understands that sometimes the most frightening thing about loss is not the absence of the loved one, but the desperate, hungry wish to make them part of you again—no matter what form they take.
What follows is not a creature feature but a —a slow, tactile study of a woman ingesting the physical memory of her husband, bite by bitter bite. The fungus spreads up the walls, across the mattress, and eventually, into Iris herself. Uncut NeonX’s Signature: Sensory Assault The “Uncut” label here is not mere branding. Where other shorts might cut away, Hungry Widow lingers. The film’s most infamous sequence—a seven-minute unbroken shot of Iris chewing a fibrous, mushroom-like mass extracted from the dead man’s sweater—plays less like horror and more like a ritual. Sound designer Marco Velez amplifies every wet crack, every reluctant swallow. The squelch of hyphae breaking between teeth is mixed to the front, uncomfortably intimate. Hungry Widow -2024- Uncut NeonX Originals Short...
The screenplay, co-written by Holt and folklorist , draws on European “widow’s mushrooms” folklore (specifically the Estonian leseseen myth, where a dead husband’s spirit manifests as a fungus the widow must consume to free his soul—or be consumed herself). But the film complicates the myth. Iris doesn’t want to be freed. She wants to be filled. The short also feels like a direct response
In the final three minutes, Iris stops eating the fungus. She lies down on the now-fully-colonized marital bed, opens her mouth, and the camera holds as a single, pale fruiting body emerges from her throat—slowly, organically, as if blooming. The film cuts to black not on a scream, but on a soft, almost sexual exhalation. Hungry Widow is not for everyone
By the 20-minute mark, Iris’s body begins to change. Not in a conventional body-horror transformation (no bursting tentacles or additional limbs), but in a : black veins creep up her neck; her tears, when they come, are viscous and amber. She coughs spores into her palm and smiles. This is not infection but communion. The Controversial Final Frame Spoilers ahead for the uncut version (a cleaner, 15-minute edit exists for mainstream horror fests, but the full NeonX cut is the definitive version).
The final shot: a wide angle of the house from the outside, months later. The roof has caved in. From the rubble, a dense cluster of bioluminescent mushrooms pulses, forming two vague shapes—side by side, like bodies in a bed.