‘Wilderness Tapes: Volume One’ is a Fine Story with a Familiar Formula: A Review

It might be formulaic, but the formula works.

Table of Contents

What is Wilderness Tapes: Volume One About?

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
Pete is not alone (this image is in the trailer, so I don’t really consider it a spoiler).

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One is a found footage movie that follows a man as he explores an old gold mine with a deadly history.

More than a decade ago, “Prospector” Pete Burke disappeared while making a YouTube video about an abandoned mine known as the “Warlock Mine.” After explaining the mine’s history including the occult practices of its former owner and a blasting accident that killed 75 miners, Pete enters the mine to see if he can find some gold for himself. However, the people who died in these dark tunnels do not rest quietly.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One was written and directed by Brandon Walker. Thomas Burke plays Pete, Nathan Church is credited as Shadow, and Eliot plays the Host of the movie.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One Review

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
Pete’s initial optimism turns into frustration, anger, and fear.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One is pretty much exactly what you’d expect, but that’s not a bad thing. It’s a straightforward found footage movie with a lot of footage of Pete talking to the camera, some ghostly happenings that increase towards the end, and a fittingly bleak finale. It’s a decently entertaining found footage movie for fans of the genre who enjoy the tropes found in these kinds of films.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
Early in the movie, while Pete is juts focused on making a video for YouTube, he’ll occasionally throw out some cheesy one-liners, just like an awkward, amateur YouTuber might.

The acting can feel somewhat stilted, but it’s also a movie about an amateur video-maker trying to be entertaining and charismatic while recording himself with a camcorder. It should feel stilted, at least up until the time when the fear of the situation takes over.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
There are more than just rocks in this old mine.

That said, Wilderness Tapes: Volume One isn’t particularly scary. But I’m not so sure that it’s supposed to be overly frightening. It feels more like a campfire ghost story, or an episode of The Twilight Zone. Like something that is supposed to intrigue you with some light spookiness, provide a simple story with a possible twist, and then end before it overstays its welcome. With a run time of about 51 minutes, I think the movie accomplishes those goals well.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
The Host welcomes us to volume one of Wilderness Tales.

One of the most fun aspects of the movie is that it sets itself up as the beginning of a series of movies that follow a similar format. Before the main story begins, we’re greeted by a nameless host who appears to be channeling Rod Serling as he introduces what we’re about to watch. The host tells us that recording devices are lost in the wilderness all the time, and they contain countless stories of fear and the unexplained. He’s been on a mission to collect these devices, and he plans to show us some of the footage he is now in possession of. Pete’s story is just one of many.

I hope there are more Wilderness Tapes movies in our future. This one is a quick and entertaining watch, and I’d love to see what they could do with an anthology series like this.

Rating & Recommendation

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One (2026)
Found Footage fans should give Wilderness Tales a chance.

Star Rating: 2.5 out of 5

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One doesn’t break any new ground in the supernatural found-footage genre, but the setting is good, and the story is simple and entertaining. Some of the execution is a little underwhelming in important moments, but it’s a nice start for a potentially interesting series.

Wilderness Tapes: Volume One is currently streaming on Found.You can watch with ads on FoundTV.com right now, or you can go ad-free with a subscription.

Further Reading

Meet The Author

Chris has a degree in film studies at Temple University’s campus in Tokyo, Japan. He is a renowned expert on horror cinema.