Poster of the film Echo Valley

Echo Valley

Thriller Drama English


Kate lives a secluded life—until her troubled daughter shows up, frightened and covered in someone else's blood. As Kate unravels the shocking truth, she learns just how far a mother will go to try to save her child.

Cast:Julianne Moore, Sydney Sweeney, Domhnall Gleeson, Kyle MacLachlan, Fiona Shaw, Edmund Donovan, Rebecca Creskoff, Audrey Grace Marshall, Stella Chivee, Albert Jones, Katya Campbell
Director:Michael Pearce
Writer:Brad Ingelsby
Editor:Maya Maffioli
Camera:Benjamin Kračun

Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Echo Valley

Sydney Sweeney is squandered in Hollywood’s dopey Drishyam dupe that can only be saved by Ajay Devgn

Fox in morning light

Rohan Naahar | Independent Film Critic

Fri, June 13 2025

If Ajay Devgn were to show up in the new Apple thriller to help out Sydney Sweeney and Julianne Moore, you wouldn't bat an eyelid.

The central thrust of the Drishyam movies relies on one basic truth: Ajay Devgn’s character will do just about anything to protect his family. Not only does he cover up a murder, he also concocts an intricate scheme to keep the cops off his scent. The Drishyam movies don’t realise this, but the protagonist is actually a psychopath in the guise of a protective family man. In the second movie, he even allows his teenage daughter to be manhandled by the police in order to keep up the charade. The Drishyam franchise holds some sort of record for having inspired the most remakes. And although it isn’t an official adaptation, the new Apple movie Echo Valley follows the exact same beats. It would’ve been one of the rare examples of Hollywood ripping off an Indian project had Drishyam itself not been a rip-off of a Japanese novel.

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Image of scene from the film Echo Valley

Julianne Moore, Sydney Sweeney's Strong Performances Salvage Uneven Thriller

Fox in morning light

Sonal Pandya | Times Now

Fri, June 13 2025

Director Michael Pearce's drama about the depth of a mother's love is convoluted throughout but sticks the landing.

At the heart of Echo Valley is the mother-daughter relationship between Julianne Moore’s Kate and Sydney Sweeney’s Claire that gets strained beyond belief. Writer Brad Ingelsby and director Michael Pearce throw the impossible at them, and viewers watch the chaos unfold. At times, the feature stretches incredulity. However, the one-hour and 45-minute film is saved by its clever and twisty ending that manages to tie up everything nearly into place. To say Kate (Moore) is having a hard time is an understatement. She is barely able to keep the farm where she boards horses afloat and needs to borrow money from her ex-husband Richard (Kyle MacLachlan). On top of that, she is grieving the loss of her wife, who died in an accident. Her daughter Claire (Sweeney), who struggles with drug addiction, adds to her worries. When Claire shows up at her door one night covered in someone else’s blood, Kate decides to get into action. However, the mother’s love for her child is tested when Claire’s dealer, Jackie Lyman (Domhnall Gleeson), pushes her to the limits.

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