
House Guest 2013
"And you thought it was safe to lock your door..."
In *House Guest (2013)*, directed by Jake Jalbert, a quiet evening among friends spirals into paranoia when a bloodthirsty killer joins the gathering. The Murphy family home, usually a sanctuary, becomes a pressure cooker of tension as secrets unravel and trust erodes.
Director: Jake Jalbert
Cast



Frequently Asked Questions
What is House Guest (2013) about?
*House Guest* follows a family's harrowing night when an uninvited guest turns out to be a city-wide killer on the loose. As the group bonds over shared memories, paranoia sets in—who among them is the murderer? The thriller twists trust into terror, with survival hanging by a thread.
Who directed House Guest?
Jake Jalbert directed *House Guest (2013)*, blending psychological tension with visceral horror in this tightly paced thriller.
Who stars in House Guest?
The film features Alex Vincent, Maylin Morera, Brian Jalbert, Randall Speakman, and Jered Allen as the core cast navigating the deadly gathering.
Is House Guest (2013) worth watching?
While *House Guest* isn't rated on IMDb, its tight runtime and high-stakes premise make it a solid pick for thriller fans. If you enjoy home-invasion horrors with a cerebral edge, this 71-minute chiller delivers suspense without relying on cheap jump scares.
How long is House Guest?
*House Guest* runs for 71 minutes, a brisk runtime that heightens the tension without wasted moments.
🎥 Trailer
About House Guest (2013) — When Your Friend Might Be the Killer
In *House Guest (2013)*, directed by Jake Jalbert, a quiet evening among friends spirals into paranoia when a bloodthirsty killer joins the gathering. The Murphy family home, usually a sanctuary, becomes a pressure cooker of tension as secrets unravel and trust erodes. With Alex Vincent and Maylin Morera anchoring the cast, this thriller explores fractured bonds—a father and son's strained relationship, a sibling rivalry pushed to the brink—and the chilling realization that the danger might be closer than the door. Jalbert crafts a claustrophobic atmosphere where every creak of the floorboard feels like a death knell.
This 71-minute descent into madness blends horror with psychological unease, proving that the scariest threats aren't the ones announced on news bulletins, but the ones hiding in plain sight. As the body count rises and the walls close in, the line between guest and predator blurs, leaving audiences questioning who to trust—and whether survival is even possible when the monster is already inside.