You'll Never Find Me (film)
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''You'll Never Find Me'' is a 2023
psychological horror film In films and television series, psychological horror creates tension through exploiting the shared psychological and emotional vulnerabilities of the human psyche, differing from traditional horrors, where the source of the fear are material th ...
directed by Indianna Bell and Josiah Allen in their directorial debut from a screenplay by Bell.


Plot

An older man named Patrick listens to the radio alone in his trailer late at night. A flashback of a woman outside his car on a rainy day plays out, accompanied by the same music on the radio, the song "Sleepwalk". He stares at a vial containing a clear solution and puts it away. A storm approaches. Soon after there is a knock at his door, which he opens after some hesitation to find a young woman, soaking from the rain, seeking a ride to town. He invites her in, offering her a towel and tea, but she says she will not be staying long after he tells her his car is not working. She requests a phone call, but he ignores the request and instead gives her dry clothes. She says she came from the beach, which he finds questionable since they are some distance away. He hands her coins for a payphone, claiming not to have a mobile phone, and offers directions to it with the warning that she will not be able to reach it alone since it sits outside a gate which is locked at this time of night. She reluctantly agrees to stay to wait for her clothes to dry. As the two converse the woman finds a collection of objects belonging to women, including a locket containing hair. Asking where she is staying, the woman gives conflicting answers, causing Patrick to become suspicious. He offers her a shower to warm up, during which the woman notices dirt and blood going down the drain. Patrick heats up a can of soup and offers her a jumper, claiming it was from his old girlfriend when the woman asks if he was married. He tells her that he doesn't sleep much anymore due to his age and how "his thoughts are leaking into his life". As he makes this statement he cleans the pan he heated the soup in, it begins to resemble blood. The woman asks how she was able to get in if the gates were locked, which Patrick is also curious about. A sudden knock on the door occurs, but Patrick finds no one there. He explains that children in the trailer park enjoy taunting him by knocking on the door and running away. A power cut then occurs and they both go to check the fuse box. The woman uses a torch to light up the way and briefly sees blood on a hammer. She notices what appears to be bleeding scratch marks on his back and offers to get him something from the medicine cabinet to treat it, where she finds her earring in a pillbox among many others. The woman gets alarmingly suspicious and demands to leave immediately. Patrick calmly tells her the door is not locked. She decides to stay in the house, and they play a game of
Bullshit ''Bullshit'' (also ''bullshite'' or ''bullcrap'') is a common English expletive which may be shortened to the euphemism ''bull'' or the initialism B.S. In British English, "bollocks" is a comparable expletive. It is mostly a slang term and a ...
, as the storm is still raging on. Patrick admits to telling her a lie, which fits with the theme of the card game: he was married, having met his wife at a gas station when she had asked him to buy her a packet of chips, and telling the woman that his wife died of an overdose. While drinking, the woman finds lipstick on her glass, once again raising her suspicions. After a storm burst, Patrick heads outside. The woman hears a phone vibrating, which she finds in the previously unexplored back room, belonging to a dead woman under a sheet on the bed. The woman tries to escape through the roof, hitting a skylight with the same previously seen hammer, which suddenly is once again covered in blood. She is caught by Patrick, who ties her up and drugs her with the vial containing GHB solution, passing out as she tries to fight him off. Patrick tells her about the first girl he killed, describing how she came to him in a storm at the beach asking for a ride, and how she had a memorable tattoo on her ribs. After the woman passes out he realizes she has that same tattoo, and has all along been the same woman. Terrified, he descends into a nightmarish scene in which he is confronted by all the women he has killed in the past, and hears the police relentlessly knocking on his door. He is suddenly pulled into darkness, in which he hears the sound of his father on a ventilator, referencing a story he told the woman earlier about his childhood. He emerges from the darkness covered in blood and distraught, and the woman forces him to empty the vial of GHB into the bottle of whiskey and drink it, as the other murdered girls cheer him on, leading him to overdose. Patrick opens his eyes, revealing that there was no storm and that he was
hallucinating A hallucination is a perception in the absence of an external stimulus that has the compelling sense of reality. They are distinguishable from several related phenomena, such as dreaming (REM sleep), which does not involve wakefulness; pseud ...
everything, including the woman. Hearing knocking at the door he opens it to find children running away, having played a prank. He then reaches into his pocket revealing an empty vial of GHB. He laughs incredulously as he understands that in his delirium, he drank the solution, and goes back indoors. We cut to the outside of the trailer where we hear him collapse and die.


Cast

* Brendan Rock as Patrick * Jordan Cowan as The Visitor * Elena Carapetis as Smoking Woman * Angela Korng as Dead Woman * Alina Truong, Aurelie Sowerbutts, Aileen Castro, Cheyenne Joy, Chloe Robinson, Jarminder Kang, Jasmine Garcia, Kelly Woodhall and Kirsty Johnson as The Women * Finn Watson and Luca Trimboli as Caravan Park Kids


Production

Filming took place in
Adelaide Adelaide ( , ; ) is the list of Australian capital cities, capital and most populous city of South Australia, as well as the list of cities in Australia by population, fifth-most populous city in Australia. The name "Adelaide" may refer to ei ...
.


Release

In April 2023, Blue Finch Films acquired the distribution rights for the film outside Australia and New Zealand. Umbrella Entertainment holds the distribution rights in Australia and New Zealand. Shudder acquired the distribution rights for the film in North America, Ireland and the United Kingdom following its premiere at the 2023
Tribeca Festival The Tribeca Festival is an annual film festival organized by Tribeca Enterprises. It takes place each spring in New York City, showcasing a diverse selection of film, episodic, talks, music, games, art, and immersive programming. The festival ...
. Shudder released the film on 22 March 2024.


Reception

Brian Tallerico of ''
RogerEbert.com ''RogerEbert.com'' is an American film review website that archives reviews written by film critic Roger Ebert for the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' and also shares other critics' reviews and essays. The website, underwritten by the ''Chicago Sun-Times ...
'' said the film "subverts the traditional paranoia of a thriller wherein a lost soul knocks on the wrong door... Bell and Allen expertly modulate the tension until the film explodes in a surreal, unexpected final act. It's a smart, well-made little thriller." Meagan Navarro of
Bloody Disgusting Bloody Disgusting is an American independent multi-media company, which began as a horror genre-focused news website specializing in information services that covered various horror media. The company expanded into other media including podcast ...
gave it a score of 3.5/5 skulls, writing, "''You'll Never Find Me...'' is a somber tale set on a dark and stormy night. But the filmmakers instead reclaim the quintessential setup to blend grim, contemporary horror with a classic haunted house aesthetic, resulting in a claustrophobic, oft-unsettling chamber piece." ''
Screen Rant ''Screen Rant'' is an entertainment website that offers news in the fields of television, films, video games, and comic books. It is owned by Valnet, parent of publications including Comic Book Resources, Collider, MovieWeb and XDA Developers. ...
'' Mae Abdulbaki said the film was "an intimate story, one that is carried by an intense ongoing exchange between two characters that will rattle your nerves and keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end", and gave it 4/5 stars.
United Press International United Press International (UPI) is an American international news agency whose newswires, photo, news film, and audio services provided news material to thousands of newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations for most of the 20th ce ...
's Fred Topel said the film "gets the most out of two characters in a single location. It's a scenario many minimalist horror films have accomplished and this film joins the pantheon." ''
CityMag Solstice Media is an Australian publisher based in Adelaide, South Australia. Established in 2004, it was known for publishing the weekly tabloid newspaper ''The Independent Weekly''. Solstice publishes ''InDaily'', which was initially the onli ...
'''s Daniel Tune wrote, "Like many a low-budget thriller, the film's runtime is largely devoted to the low-simmering tension that grows out of this strange scenario, as the two loners, capably played by Brendan Rock and Jordan Cowan, gradually reveal their initially ambiguous motivations, guiding us towards a chaotic, kaleidoscopic climax."


References


External links

* {{IMDb title, id=tt22023218 2023 films 2020s Australian films 2023 horror films Australian horror thriller films Films shot in Adelaide