the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150
Saturday, July 11, 2026
31.1 C
Kuala Lumpur
the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150

Send Help review: Sam Raimi returns to horror with twisted island thriller

State Election

Johor State Election 2026

11 July 2026 Johor, Malaysia
Learn more

Workplace rivalry spirals into psychological horror in Send Help

SAM Raimi’s Send Help is an unhinged, deeply uncomfortable and often darkly funny return to form for the seasoned director.

The film follows a corporate employee and her bully of a boss who survive a plane crash, finding themselves stranded on a remote island where survival slowly gives way to something far more twisted.

McAdams underwent survival training ahead of filming to prepare for the physical demands of the role. in Send Help
McAdams underwent survival training ahead of filming to prepare for the physical demands of the role.

It is the kind of movie that dares you to choose a side, only to make you regret doing so minutes later.

Stranded, but never safe

This is one of those films where you genuinely do not know who you are supposed to root for, or if you are meant to root for anyone at all. Raimi sets you up early to feel sympathy for Linda Liddle (Rachel McAdams), only to slowly rot that sympathy away. What starts as discomfort turns into disgust, then straight-up horror. By the end, it feels wrong to be on anyone’s side, which feels entirely intentional.

On the surface, Bradley Preston (Dylan O’Brien) is easy to hate. O’Brien plays him as the stereotypical terrible boss – arrogant, dismissive and selfish. He gets humbled quickly once survival becomes the priority, but his terribleness never really leaves. Even when he is physically vulnerable, his instincts are still ugly. It is hard to call him a victim because so much of what happens is driven by his own choices.

Send Help review: Sam Raimi returns to horror with twisted island thriller
O’Brien performs several of his own physically demanding scenes, including extended sequences shot under harsh weather conditions.

Linda is where the film really gets uncomfortable. She is not outwardly cruel in the way Bradley is. Instead, she is manipulative, controlling and quietly dangerous. That, somehow, makes her even worse. Her character has the most nuance in the film because Raimi lets the audience discover her darkness in stages. Watching her flip the power dynamic, making Bradley dependent on her survival skills, is chilling. She knows he would die without her, and she revels in it.

Raimi being Raimi

Raimi’s style is unmistakable here. If Sam Raimi had to make Cast Away (2001), this is exactly what it would look like. He cannot resist injecting his flavour of zombie horror into a survival story, and for fans of The Evil Dead franchise, that is part of the fun. The exaggerated gore, the bodily fluids, the over-the-top discomfort all feel like cousins to his earlier work.

There are moments that are terrifying, moments that are funny, and moments that are funny because they are horrifying. Raimi has always loved making audiences squirm – the puke and blood in this movie are absolutely overdone on purpose.

The jump scares feel forced at times, but they also feel playful. Raimi has never been subtle about his love for genre tricks, and Send Help treats horror like a toy box. His distinct cinematography plays a huge role too. The wipes and transitions keep scenes from feeling static, constantly reminding you that you are in Raimi’s hands.

There are also clear nods for long-time fans. Frequent collaborator Bruce Campbell shows up in cameo form, which feels less like fan service and more like Raimi planting his flag. It is a reminder that this is the same filmmaker who once turned a cabin in the woods into pure chaos.

Relationship built to collapse

The relationship between Bradley and Linda is the real engine of the film. It shifts constantly. First, it is boss and employee, with Bradley taking Linda for granted. Then it becomes a survival partnership, where Linda’s skills in shelter-building, collecting water, foraging and hunting keep them alive. There is even a stretch where they feel like friends, with hints of something more. That is what makes the eventual collapse so brutal.

Send Help review: Sam Raimi returns to horror with twisted island thriller
The dynamic between Bradley and Linda drives the film, with trust and control constantly in flux. – ALL PICS FROM IMDB

When Linda’s manipulativeness fully surfaces, it is shocking not because it comes out of nowhere but because you have watched it slowly build.

The violence between them is genuinely hard to watch. Raimi does not shy away from showing how far human beings can go when stripped of social rules. The clash between Bradley and Linda is savage, physical and deeply personal. It is not stylised hero-versus-villain violence. It is ugly and mean.

Even the more predictable elements still work. Certain reveals are easy to see coming, but that does not blunt their impact. What matters is not surprise, but how those moments push the characters into even darker territory.

No heroes, only survivors

By the end, Send Help makes one thing clear. Everyone in this movie is a terrible person. Survival does not make them better. It just gives them permission to be honest about who they are.

Raimi turns a deserted island into a psychological pressure cooker, and watching it explode is horrifying and impossible to look away from.

READ MORE:

The Rip Review – Stars stuck in a flat, bloated crime thriller

Movie review: No Mercy for Chris Pratt

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple digs deeper

Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 turns horror into farce

Wake Up Dead Man takes Knives Out to church

STAY AHEAD OF THE CURVE

Join our community for instant updates and exclusive content.

Join Telegram Channel

Related


spot_img

Latest News

CUHK achieves top 20 global ranking in QS World University Rankings 2027

The Chinese University of Hong Kong has entered the global top 20 in the QS World University Rankings 2027 for the first time. The achievement reflects strong gains in research, internationalisation and academic reputation, reinforcing CUHK’s position as a leading global research university.

HKDL’s immersive interactive experiences win guests’ hearts Lucky Nugget Spin at Grizzly Gulch surpasses...

Hong Kong Disneyland Resort continues enhancing guest experiences through immersive retail, interactive storytelling and collectible merchandise. The popular Chip 'n' Dale Lucky Nugget Spin has attracted over 30,000 participants, while new Pixar and Marvel experiences are set to expand the park’s entertainment offerings.

Most Viewed

spot_img
WC26

World Cup 2026

Updates, Fixtures, Results & Standings