If you loved The Invisible Guest, try God's Crooked Lines
A bridge between a film you've already seen and one most people haven't. God's Crooked Lines has roughly 6.0× fewer votes than The Invisible Guest — it's a deeper cut, not a mainstream recommendation. Here's what they share, and what the second one does that the first one doesn't.
What they share
Both films are directed by Oriol Paulo, and they both carry the foreign gem, mindfuck mood tags, and they sit in Drama / Mystery / Thriller territory. If that's the register that drew you to The Invisible Guest, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What God's Crooked Lines is
The asylum’s fluorescent hum, 3 a.m. A woman murmurs numbers into a soap bar before swallowing it whole. Inside, Alice Gould trades her street clothes for another patient’s scrubs, feigning catatonia between coded whispers. A corpse’s final notes read like divine arithmetic.

