Poster of the film Don't Move

Don't Move

Horror Thriller English


A grieving woman in a secluded forest encounters a killer who injects her with a paralytic drug. As her body shuts down, her fight for survival begins.

Cast:Kelsey Asbille, Finn Wittrock, Daniel Francis, Moray Treadwell, Dylan Beam, Kate Nichols, Skye Little Wing Dimova-Saw, Denis Kostadinov, Zainab Azizi,
Director:Adam Schindler, Brian Netto
Writer:T.J. Cimfel, David White
Editor:Josh Ethier
Camera:Zach Kuperstein

Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Don't Move

Sam Raimi’s high concept Netflix survival thriller isn’t as smart as it thinks

Fox in morning light

Rohan Naahar | Independent Film Critic

Sun, December 8 2024

The new Netflix survival thriller, produced by Sam Raimi, favours contrivances over cleverness.

A young woman grieving the death of her child treks to the cliffside spot where he died. She intends to jump herself. Played by Kelsey Asbille, the woman is approached by a mysterious stranger, played by Finn Wittrock. He recognises immediately that she’s one step away from falling to her death. The stranger doesn’t attempt to talk her down from the ledge, but he makes enough of an impression for her to reconsider. They walk back together to the parking lot, where things take a sudden turn. The man injects her with some kind of paralytic substance, revealing that he isn’t a good samaritan after all. Thus begins Don’t Move, a high-concept thriller that producer Sam Raimi probably thought was going to turn out like his knockout 2016 film Don’t Breathe. It didn’t. These movies have nothing in common beyond Raimi’s involvement, and that gentle nudge of a title. In terms of quality, they couldn’t be further apart from each other. Don’t Move appears to be so pleased with its premise — it’s a survival thriller featuring an immobile protagonist! — that it forgets it needs to sustain this early momentum. The movie succeeds in drawing your sympathies for its heroine, Iris, but struggles to put her in interesting scenarios after this pre-credits sequence.

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