The Most Shocking Horror Movie of 2025 Was Born From a Deeply Personal Dread
Good Boy is a horror movie unlike any other. Moviegoers have experienced haunted house movies, but instead of focusing on screaming teens or fearless ghost investigators, the narrative unfolds through the eyes of a dog. (A Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever, to be precise.) In Good Boy, Indy the pup must protect his owner as supernatural forces close in on their remote cabin.
Originally slated for a limited release, this swift, 90-minute thriller got a wide release after its trailer went viral, with people flocking to search engines to find out if Indy survives. This article won't reveal the ending here, but if you're curious where the idea for Good Boy came from in the first place, the origin is explained.
The Conceptual Origin Behind the Film
Rookie director Ben Leonberg, who’s also the real-life owner of Indy, says he wanted to create this movie to explore the fears that every dog owner shares.
“I think it originates from a thought or maybe worry every dog owner has had, which is, ‘Why is my dog barking at nothing or staring at nothing?’” Leonberg states. “There's probably a perfectly valid reason for that, but the human imagination can't help but think the worst, think ghosts. I wanted to capitalize on that anxiety. Then, in the screenwriting and filming process, it was determining how to tell a story that really adheres to that perspective, where we're limited to everything the dog can even understand as a way to have this narrative unfold.”
Good Boy is experimental in the best way, hooking audiences immediately with a protagonist you inevitably care for and root for, excels at exposition, and makes use of offhand dialogue from other characters, especially since our protagonist can’t talk.
Developing the Dog's Viewpoint
Leonberg maintains that his dog isn’t giving a performance, but rather it's the creative skill of the film that gives life to each scene. Indy is one of the most innocent protagonists in film history, and that's not lost on its director.
“I think Indy, probably all dogs, all animals, are a sort of hack for pulling on an audience's heartstrings because they are innocent,” Leonberg observes. “They don't know they're in the movie. And there's a really interesting lesson just about performance, that he's not performing. I can't say that enough, he does not know he was in a movie, but through filmmaking, the sound design, the music, the shots, the lighting, you can somewhat communicate an emotion and a feeling on his — what are otherwise neutral expressions — and the audience will assign an acting quality onto him. I think that genuinely is how most of the movie works: the filmmaking is telling the audience how to feel, and then they're putting that emotion on. He's listening to us just make silly noises on set. And the audience says, Wow, I'm scared. So the dog must be scared. He's not. He's just trying to figure out what his mom and dad are doing.”
Right down to the breed of dog, everything was carefully planned to fuel audience reactions.
“I think we relate to a dog like Indy,” Leonberg notes, gesturing to the pet sitting behind him. “He's not very big, he's only 19 inches high. The camera operates 19 inches off the ground, which was challenging in filmmaking. But I don't know if you would want a big Cujo St Bernard; that would be such a daunting adversary for the supernatural.”
Indy is a bit small when it comes to beasts that might fight the supernatural.
“How could he possibly succeed? That's really good for a story,” Leonberg remarks. “Also stinking cute.”
Good Boy is in theaters now.