Start Obsessing Over Scream Queen Inde Navarrette Now
The breakout star of viral horror flick Obsession, Inde Navarrette might just be Hollywood’s new queen of horror.
By Carlos Keng,
There’s a specific type of actress Hollywood is always looking for: someone recognisable enough that audiences feel they’ve seen her before, but not so famous that she arrives with too much baggage. Right now, Inde Navarrette fits that bill perfectly.
The 25-year-old American, born Danielle Fabiola Navarrette, is suddenly everywhere because of the viral horror flick Obsession, where she plays Nikki — the object of a young man’s fixation, whose life slowly slips from romantic fantasy into something far more unstable and unsettling.
Made on a shoestring budget of US$750K, the film has become something of a monster, grossing well over US$200 million at writing time.
In it, Navarrette’s performance relies less on spectacle and more on emotional precision: the sense that something is slightly off even in the quieter moments. In a film built on escalation, she becomes the grounding force that makes the descent feel plausible.
And for a lot of viewers, she’s become the reason the film sticks.
Wait, where have I seen her before?
Long before horror fans started talking about her performance in Obsession, she was navigating the teen-drama pipeline that has launched countless young actors before her. A recurring role on 13 Reasons Why gave her early visibility, while four seasons on Superman & Lois proved she could hold her own in a series with an intensely devoted fan base.
The difference now is that she’s no longer playing someone else’s daughter, classmate, or love interest; she’s occupying the centre of the frame.
Horror Has a Habit of Minting New Stars
The genre has a long history of turning promising young actors into genuine stars. Think Anya Taylor-Joy in The Witch, or Mia Goth in Pearl. Horror asks actors to go bigger emotionally while still convincing audiences every reaction is real.

In Obsession, Navarrette gets exactly that opportunity. Playing Nikki requires her to move between romance, vulnerability, fear, and something much darker. It’s the sort of role that immediately changes how people see an actor’s range.
There has even been chatter from critics and audience alike that Navarrette’s performance was Oscar-worthy. Given that horror as a genre has only very recently begun to be embraced at the Oscars, who’s to say she won’t be nominated next year?
But before all of this, there was Twitch
Naturally, the sudden surge of attention has sent fans down the inevitable rabbit hole of her digital footprint, resurfacing a past life that feels almost comically at odds with her current status as a cinematic figure of terror. Before Obsession, Navarrette was on Twitch under her own name, grinding through the likes of Call of Duty and The Last of Us (very fitting).
Clips from those streams have started circulating again, pulling in hundreds of thousands of views on TikTok, where comments now read like a mix of disbelief and requests for a comeback stream.
What’s she doing next?
She’s attached to Invertigo, a thriller from Matthias Hoene (Cockneys vs Zombies), where a group of teenagers break into an amusement park and end up stranded on a malfunctioning rollercoaster hundreds of feet in the air.
Yes, it’s very much giving Final Destination 3, but since filming is still ongoing, it’s hard to say where the film will go. At this point, it’s hard not to notice a pattern; like we said, Navarrette seems keen on staking her name firmly in the horror genre. Which either means she’s being deliberately positioned there… or she’s just found a lane that suits her. Either way, it’s working.