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Driving home from her birthday party, Mary (SarahLydia Sophia) runs
over a teenaged boy (Alex Keever) - or thinks she has run over a boy, as
she can't find a body, there isn't a dent in the front of her car, and her
brother Joe (Paris Dylan), who has been in the car with her, didn't feel
any impact. However, this experience has traumatized Mary, she refuses to
drive from now on, has terrible nightmares, and ever so often thinks she
sees the boy she has run over in her peripheral view. Thing is, in her
nightmares she sometimes sees dead bodies at the exact location where they
were found, without prior knowledge about any of these deaths. Sure, she's
in treatment, but her doctor (Eric Roberts) is really more interested in
his golf handicap than in actually helping her, and just prescribes her a
crazy amount of medication that does little to cure her condition. And
that she loses her job, her parents (Roy Abramsohn, Maria Pinsent)
separate during all of this, and her mother just can't come to terms with
her being lesbian of course doesn't help at all, either. Then rather by
chance she stumbles upon Dr. Cyrus's (Dar Dixon) holistic clinic and
decides to give it a try. The good doctor might be a bit too bible-bound
for Mary, and his methods are weird for sure, but they really start to
help, as does his calm presence and his talents as a listener. Plus, since
she's out of job and low on money, he lets her pay her due by doing some
gardening for him. Soon Mary's nightmares subside, and when she sees the
boy she thinks she has run over, she tries to confront rather than run
away from him - unsuccessfully though. Then though she finds a photo of
the doctor's deceased son, and it's the very boy she has run over ... A
very unusual blend of character study, horror and supernatural mystery
that's all the more compelling for it, as writer/director Paris Dylan
makes a good job of rooting the film in reality, and going for a moody,
slowburn approach actually creates some really chilling scenes while some
great locations sure help creating great visuals. And a relatable ensemble
cast surrounding a strong performance by SarahLydia Sophia help make this
a quite enjoyable but also pretty memorable movie.
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