The story follows Tim (Dave Franco) and Millie (Alison Brie) who decide to move to the country together. Alarm bells start to ring in any film when a couple decides to move to the countryside, even if you haven’t seen the trailers. There are of course the early cues to the narrative that is coming, when she says “everyone finds it cute were matching” you can guess it’ll be a horror that dissects the allegorical features in the nature of relationships.
Along with the narrative, the script does also feel very route one. Describing having a Spice Girls album as having “spice on vinyl” really grinded the most with me. It creates a gap between us and them that has to be avoided to have the emotional connection needed in any horror film that when things start going wrong your on their side. Instead your not, and at that you really don’t care what happens to them. It reminded me a lot of the film Men (Garland, 2022) where the body horror increased in intensity throughout the film. However, Men succeeded better because it created intrigue through and balanced the line between overplaying the situation their in and keeping it close to reality.
Of course what you want for a thriller is something that entertains you for the 90 minutes (hopefully no longer) that it was on screen. This film did manage to do that, but I’m sure I wont remember it for long. With it being more of a body horror, when the jump scares came they worked well as you weren’t really expecting them. The visuals are done very well, but this is to be expected from a director coming from a visual effect artist background and making their feature length film debut. It created a good spectacle for those watching, but at the same time struggled with the main foundations of narrative.