Sam Raimi supports as producer this project which paralyzes the viewer with fear.
If you still didn't know what to watch for your Halloween evening Netflix and Chill, the streaming platform and the father from Evil Deadhas something new in store for you. While waiting to be able to find him, one day perhaps, behind the camera, Sam Raimi, continues to serve as producer on numerous independent horror films. After Don't Breathe: House of Darkness by Fede Alvarez, a new ban is the title of this new film: Don't Move.
The initial premise is as follows: a young woman finds herself paralyzed by a strong poison injected by a man in the wilderness. He only has twenty minutes left before complete paralysis…
Kelsey Asbille (Yellowstone) plays Iris, a young mother still affected by a tragedy in her family. During a hike, still weakened, she lets herself be approached by a young man played by Finn WittrockRyan Murphy's favorite and which can be found in many seasons from American Horror Story. A walking psychopath, he administers the paralyzing agent, and this is how the nightmare begins:
“From the first minute, your motor skills will start to disappear. After ten minutes, your legs will start to tingle. After fifteen minutes, your legs will give out completely. At eighteen minutes, your breathing will be slower. And just before until everything stops, this will be your voice.”
She trembles, crawls, looks for help, but even though a representative of the order is by her side, she is unable to say anything. What could be more frightening than finding yourself in such a situation where no way out seems possible – except death?
Don't Move promises to be a horror film survivala race against time in real time, but so much more, as Sam Raimi attests to Tudum :
“Reading the script itself was like turning page after page without stopping. It's an emotional experience, especially for a suspense film.”
Directed by Brian Netto and Adam Schindler, Don't Move will be available October 25 on Netflix.
Bruce Campbell and Sam Raimi want to release Evil Dead films more regularlyBruce Campbell and Sam Raimi want to release Evil Dead films more regularly