Horror fans who enjoy the suspense of "Unseen" can thank the Linden Hills Co-op, Walker Art Center and Perpich School of the Arts.
That's where director Yoko Okumura, whose "Unseen" debuts Tuesday on-demand (it'll stream on MGM Plus this May), cut her moviemaking teeth — with a VHS camera given to her by her grandmother. She hauled it everywhere, including the co-op, where mom Yuko ran the sushi counter.
"I was the girl who brought the camera to school or Lake Harriet or the co-op, running around interviewing people," said the 35-year-old Okumura.
Okumura, whose father Shohaku was head monk at the Minnesota Zen Meditation Center, attended the City of Lakes Waldorf School, with weekend classes in Japanese at Minneapolis College of Art and Design. The arts were encouraged at Waldorf, where Okumura documented theatrical productions, but moviemaking was not.
"I was a bit of a rebel and definitely a pop culture lover," said Okumura, who attended high school at Perpich School of the Arts. "I was always taking City Pages and snipping out movie showtimes and posters and making collages. The impetus of me asking my parents to get the internet in our house was me wanting to look up old 'X Files' episodes, being a fangirl."
All of that paid off in "Unseen," in which a nearly blind woman named Emily escapes from her abusive lover in a remote cabin but can't see well enough to return to civilization. For help, she randomly dials Sam, a clerk in a convenience store several states away, and asks her to be her "eyes." While Emily uses her phone to show Sam where she is, the latter tries to describe what she sees and guide Emily to help.

Although "Unseen" is bypassing theaters, it's a big deal — it's from Blumhouse, the studio that brought us this year's smash "M3gan" as well as the recent "Halloween" sequels. Okumura, who had directed episodes of "The Bold Type" and "Good Trouble" for TV, said a combination of elements made "Unseen" the ideal feature debut.
"When I was consuming TV I loved, it was those late-night shows on Fox, 'Stargate SG-1' or 'X-Files.' The nerdy stuff," said Okumura, who started figuring out how to make "Unseen" personal when she read the script.