Synopsis
When a 10-year-old boy goes missing, lead investigator Greg Harper struggles to balance the pressure of the investigation and troubles with his wife, Jackie. Facing a recent affair, great strain is put on the family that slowly gnaws away at Jackie's grip on reality. But after a malicious presence manifests itself in their home and puts their son, Connor, in mortal danger, the cold, hard truth about evil in the Harper household is finally uncovered.
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Cast
- Helen HuntJackie Harper
- Jon TenneyGreg Harper
- Owen TeagueAlec Travers
- Judah LewisConnor Harper
- Libe BarerMindy
- Gregory Alan WilliamsDetective Spitzky
- Erika AlexanderLieutenant Davis
- Sam TrammellTodd
- Jeremy GladenTommy Braun
- Allison KingOfficer Grace Caleb
- 79
The Verge
For people who specifically prize meticulous story-craft and the ability to dodge broad genre clichés, I See You is a rare gift. - 75
Slant Magazine
The film’s tone is extremely eerie, with creeping camera movements, striking imagery, abrupt edits, and a delicately sinister score. - 75
Movie Nation
Taut, smart and satisfying, I See You is the sleeper of the month, and should put Graye on the radar as a screenwriter to watch. And it should remind Hollywood that if smart cookie Helen Hunt sees something in it, this is a project worth filming. - 70
Variety
An eerie suspense exercise that starts out looking like a supernatural tale — one of several viewer presumptions this cleverly engineered narrative eventually pulls the rug out from under. - 70
Los Angeles Times
It’s rare to see a horror film so devoted to intricate plot mechanics and so concerned with driving to a satisfying payoff. - 70
The Hollywood Reporter
A twist-heavy crime thriller spiced with horror and noir elements, I See You is such a finely crafted exercise in slow-burn suspense that its loopy plot contortions only seem absurd in retrospect. - 38
RogerEbert.com
As loud and in-your-face as these developments are presented, they're amount to a shabby collection of Blumhouse-lite scenes that would be a parody if it weren’t so dull. - 25
Observer
Helen Hunt is a good actress with an Oscar on her mantle and practically no ability to choose a decent movie script based on quality or entertainment value. She’s been absent from the screen far too long, so it’s a pleasure to welcome her back, but not in a labored, amateurish charade as bad as I See You.