
The Trek 2026
"The land is old, the land is ours"
Meekaaeel Adam's *The Trek (2026)* plunges audiences into a harrowing 1846 journey across the Kalahari Desert, where a group of settlers faces unrelenting starvation, paranoia, and unraveling sanity under the watchful gaze of two ancient desert spirits.
Director: Meekaaeel Adam
Cast







Frequently Asked Questions
What is The Trek (2026) about?
*The Trek* follows a desperate group of 1846 settlers crossing the Kalahari Desert, where starvation and fear breed suspicion and madness. As tensions rise, two malevolent desert spirits intensify the settlers' torment, turning their journey into a fight for survival against both the land and its unseen guardians.
Who directed The Trek?
South African filmmaker Meekaaeel Adam takes the director's chair, bringing a fresh perspective to the horror-western genre.
Who stars in The Trek?
The film features Morné Visser, Rob van Vuuren, Maurice Carpede, Trix Vivier, and Leah Lindeque in key roles.
Is The Trek (2026) worth watching?
With its unique blend of horror and western themes, *The Trek* promises a tense and atmospheric experience. While IMDb ratings aren't available yet, its intriguing premise and genre mashup make it a compelling pick for fans of both thrilling adventures and unsettling supernatural tales.
How long is The Trek?
The film runs for 105 minutes.
About The Trek (2026) — A Horror-Western Journey into the Kalahari's Dark Heart
Meekaaeel Adam's *The Trek (2026)* plunges audiences into a harrowing 1846 journey across the Kalahari Desert, where a group of settlers faces unrelenting starvation, paranoia, and unraveling sanity under the watchful gaze of two ancient desert spirits.
This chilling horror-western hybrid blends the eerie isolation of frontier survival with supernatural dread, as the settlers' fragile humanity frays against the merciless landscape. With claws tightening around morale and trust collapsing at every turn, *The Trek* delivers a haunting meditation on survival, faith, and the demons that lurk within—and beyond—the horizon.