

Your flatmate's weird. Your stalker's outside. Guess which one's worse.
A woman with a stalker outside and a difficult flatmate at home learns she's afraid of the wrong people.
Acting
Murray's escalating dread is physically exhausting—in a good way.
Direction
Brack weaponizes 10 minutes like a feature-length nightmare.

Director
Renée Brack
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The film inverts stalker tropes by making the visible threat a decoy, weaponizing audience expectations trained by decades of 'stranger danger' horror.
Released amid rising discourse on 'nice guy' entitlement and coercive control legislation, it captures a specific cultural anxiety about intimate male violence.