'You’ll Never Find Me' Review — Shudder Horror Is All Bark and No Bite
Shudder's You'll Never Find Me follows two people who are becoming increasingly suspicious of each other. Read on for our review.
What sounds scarier to you? You live alone in a secluded mobile home in an isolated trailer park. In the middle of the night, as a storm that could end the world rages outside, you hear a knock at the door. The person continues to bang and you know that they will not go quietly. Should you let this stranger into your home? Can they be trusted? Or are they some deranged psychopath ready to kill you? Or, is it more threatening to be alone, caught outside in a raging storm, with no coat or shoes? You are at the mercy of a stranger and you bang on their door, begging them to let you in before you die of hypothermia. Can you trust this person to give you shelter, a ride, or the use of a phone? Or are they some deranged psychopath ready to kill you? This dichotomy of circumstances and perspective is at the center of Shudder’s horror chamber piece You’ll Never Find Me by the directing duo of Indianna Bell and Josiah Allen from a script by Bell.
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