Reviews
‘Send Help’ Review – Sam Raimi Is Back In Fine Splatstick Form In Survival Thriller Comedy
Few directors have as much fun splattering their cast with as much goop and viscera as possible as director Sam Raimi. One can practically picture the amused filmmaker guffawing behind the camera in pure amusement as leads Rachel McAdams (Doctor Strange) and Dylan O’Brien (The Maze Runner) receive a few blood or vomit canons to the face in Send Help, a deliciously fun survival thriller that nestles perfectly in Raimi’s splatstick oeuvre. And it’s every bit as infectious as it sounds.
Rachel McAdams stars as Linda Liddle, a high-strung, socially awkward mess of an employee who’s skipped over for the job she was promised when her company’s president passes, leaving his legacy to spoiled son Bradley (O’Brien). It’s a predicament that leads to terror, not unlike Drag Me To Hell‘s Christine, when Bradley attempts to stave off an HR problem by inviting Linda along to help close a major deal in Thailand. Just as the entire private jet discovers and heckles Linda’s obsession with the show “Survivor,” catastrophe strikes, leaving her and her rotten new boss stranded on an island. Work grievances complicate their survival as frustrations lead to violence.
It’s a splatstick battle of wills and wit, as the power balance shifts once the meek Linda realizes she’s exactly where she always wanted to be and her egotistical new CEO must now rely on her for survival.

Rachel McAdams as Linda Liddle in 20th Century Studios’ SEND HELP. Photo by Brook Rushton. © 2025 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
Sam Raimi’s filmography is filled with schmucks who worm their way into your hearts despite their flaws, and Send Help is no exception. Linda is the latest, leaving McAdams with the tricky task of earning audience allegiance despite the character’s almost grotesque introduction as Linda makes awkward attempts to connect, even as hygiene comes into question. The good news is that Bradley and his chosen cohorts, at least compared to the timid Linda, are arrogant jerks whose handling of Linda’s missteps sets them up for Raimi’s brand of comedic office karma.
Though it might be a bit of a tough sell to buy McAdams as such a peculiar, frumpy woman, at least at first, Send Help quickly becomes a showcase of her talents as she fully commits to every bit of insanity that Raimi, working from a screenplay by Damian Shannon & Mark Swift (Freddy vs. Jason), throws at her. More than just embracing the splatstick mania, taking and dishing out violence with gusto, McAdams injects affecting vulnerability with effortless ease, disarming both the audience and her trapped boss. O’Brien also keeps you guessing, wondering if his moments of humanity are to be trusted or if he’s slowly learning the error of his ways.
Send Help hinges on the push and pull, give and take between two people who ultimately don’t trust each other yet need each other to survive. Of course, there’s a lot more than meets the eye that gets revealed piecemeal, creating further shifts in trust and allegiances. Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien’s emotional range adds genuine pathos that not only keeps you guessing, but prevents either character from crashing into caricature territory. It’s what grounds Send Help when the Sam Raimi-style insanity cranks up the dial.

(L-R) Dylan O’brien as Bradley Preston in 20th Century Studios’ SEND HELP. Photo by Brook Rushton. © 2025 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
While Send Help leans more into survival thrills with a pitch-black comedic streak, Raimi’s horror roots are on full display. A constant barrage of blood, vomit, and bodily fluids aside, expect a trademark nightmare sequence with a ghastly scare. Eagled-eyed viewers will also connect Linda to The Evil Dead‘s Linda, noting her eyeglass holder necklace resembling a magnifying glass pendant gifted by Ash.
There is a reliance on CG in parts that’s noticeable; it’s up to McAdams to sell the primal nerve of fighting against a ferocious boar that looks more spunky cartoon than dangerous. She at least succeeds there, with support from excessive bloodshed. Danny Elfman’s score is oddly muted, upstaged thoroughly by Blondie’s “One Way or Another,” and the climactic showdown feels a little restrained considering the built-up tension and brewing hostilities.
Still, they don’t make thrillers like this very often these days. A relatively self-contained, original thriller showcasing two formidable performances guided by Sam Raimi’s deft hand as a director and splatstick entertainer. Send Help is full of vibrant personality, packed with all of Raimi’s signatures. It might be a bit more grounded and not nearly as full throttle as previous works, but it’s still a welcome return for the filmmaker, designed to entertain and deliver a little bit of catharsis for work frustrations. It’s a raucous, goopy good time at the movies.
Send Help crash lands in theaters on January 30.

Reviews
‘The Bay’ Review: Real Sharks and Practical Effects Can’t Overcome Familiar Waters
It’s a day of the month ending in Y, and that means it’s time for another killer shark film. Why? Because they’re inexpensive to make, play into an easy fear, and keep finding audiences willing to give them a spin. The Bay is the latest entry in the shark attack subgenre, and while it’s noticeably better than last month’s Chum, it still struggles to barely stay afloat.
Emma (Francesca Eastwood) and Lani (Dani Oliveros) are best friends who’ve traveled to Thailand for a destination wedding, and a chance encounter at the buffet table leads to an unexpected adventure. Mandal (Alexander Wraith) is a friendly, knowledgeable transplant who connects with nature and makes a living by offering boat tours through the area’s scenic waterways. The trips culminate with the opportunity for tourists to witness a shark feeding with local tiger sharks. The tourists aren’t meant to be the food, obviously, but sometimes accidents happen.
The Bay checks off most of the subgenre’s expected beats – an attractive location, an iffy ensemble of characters, a series of poor choices – but it does a few things differently along the way. For one thing, while we see plenty of sharks in the build-up, the first attack doesn’t happen until past the film’s midpoint. Writer/director Phil Volken fills the time leading up to that attack with engaging enough character beats, some genuine suspense, and an abundance of dialogue about how sharks aren’t typically a threat to people – or threats like people. “Sharks hunt,” says Mandal, “humans kill.”
It’s a bit of foreshadowing, perhaps, but it’s also the film’s presiding theme. Sharks don’t want to hurt or kill humans, but “mistakes happen.” Mandal offers up numerous eco-friendly spiels about the role sharks play in the environment, how overhunting could lead to disaster, and how humans are the ones invading their territory. “Don’t act like prey,” and you won’t be bitten, eaten, digested, and shat out by a shark. Pretty simple, if you think about it.

Trouble starts when they toss a chunk of meat into the water attached to a chain and a large female tiger shark gets caught up in it. Mandal’s sidekick, a local man named Ruhan (Ta’imua), panics and starts stabbing at the thrashing creature. He has a history of being bitten by a shark and is clearly frightened, and as the situation worsens, he becomes a far more active threat to the others’ safety than the actual sharks. That character type is pretty common in these films, but it’s a curious choice to make the film’s sole indigenous member of the ensemble the morally weak link.
To be clear, Ta’imua is playing a local but isn’t actually Thai. He is, however, Hawaiian, and The Bay was filmed off Oahu, meaning he’s the only indigenous representation on both counts. The other three characters, all Americans, are brave and willing to risk their own safety for the group, leaving only Ruhan to put a face to the cruel, selfish humans mentioned earlier in the film. It’s certainly a choice!
His performance is somewhat stifled by the desire to make him seem menacing, but it’s passable. The others are equally okay as performers, but it’s only Oliveros’ Dani who stands apart as a spirited individual worthy of viewer fist pumps. Cinematographer Helge Gerull delivers some attractive landscape shots destined to make you consider a Hawaiian vacation, and composer Gad Emile Zeitune finds some effective aural backdrops for the film’s teasingly emotional moments.
Then there’s the sharks. A major drag on the subgenre these days is the use of cheap CG effects (including the abysmal use of A.I. in Chum), but The Bay sidesteps that problem for the most part. There are real sharks here, lots of them, but they appear to be solely present via stock footage edited into the film. Some CG is used here and there, too, with shots being comped together to tighten the proximity between humans and sharks. Most effective, arguably, are the practical effects used to create fins cutting through the water near the characters.

There’s a sense of grounded reality to the shark kills, and while they’re less showy, they’re weightier as a result. Wounded bodies drift away, and the moment where shark nibbles turn into ferocious feasting feels more inevitable and affecting than sudden or scary. The sole exception to the general quality of those kills is the film’s final shark encounter, which doubles down on the poor choices by pairing a silly CG beat with some poorly matched stock footage.
Pretty much every shark attack movie lives or dies on its presentation of the sharks themselves. There are exceptions, of course, with Steven Spielberg’s Jaws being chief among them – everything about that film, from the writing and acting to the directing and editing, helps make it a masterpiece despite the mechanical shark looking goofy as hell outside of the water – but The Bay isn’t Jaws. It’s not even Jaws: The Revenge. Its live sharks are mildly effective, though, and give it a subdued realism that will likely appeal to viewers averse to CG intrusions. Will that be enough to win them over, though?
“When you enter the ocean, you enter the food chain… and not necessarily at the top,” says an opening onscreen quote from Jacques Cousteau, and something similar could be said for shark attack movies in general. When you make one of these movies, you enter a well-trodden and densely populated subgenre… and you’re all but guaranteed to not be at or even near the top. The Bay is closer to the ocean floor than the water’s surface, and while that still puts it above the bulk of the genre, it’s probably not enough of a reason to step foot in these waters.
The Bay opens in theaters and on demand on July 17, 2026.


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