
There’s a specific cinematic tightrope that few filmmakers can walk without falling into outright parody: the line between absurdity and sincerity. Sam Raimi has spent his career dancing along it, and Send Help might be his most controlled balancing act yet. A survival horror thriller that somehow doubles as a workplace satire, it pushes humour, dread, and psychological warfare to breaking point — then calmly steps back before it snaps.
At first glance, the setup sounds almost sitcom-simple. Linda Liddle (Rachel McAdams) is a brilliant financial strategist trapped in the corporate equivalent of quicksand: invisible in meetings, talked over by colleagues, and routinely robbed of credit for her work. Her newly promoted boss Bradley Preston (Dylan O’Brien) is the walking embodiment of boardroom confidence — charismatic, smug and catastrophically incompetent beneath the surface.
Then the plane crashes.
Stranded as the sole survivors on a remote island en route to Bangkok, the carefully constructed hierarchy of the office evaporates instantly. Titles don’t start fires. Confidence doesn’t clean wounds. And motivational leadership seminars are useless when dehydration is trying to kill you.
This is where Send Help reveals its true premise: not survival against nature, but survival against personality.
Bradley is helpless. Linda — a devoted survival reality show enthusiast who once tried to get onto Survivor — is not. She builds shelter, sources food, and keeps him alive. The power dynamic flips with ruthless efficiency. The man who controlled her livelihood now depends on her basic competence to keep breathing.
The brilliance of the film is that it never turns this reversal into a lecture. Instead, it becomes dark comedy. Bradley keeps trying to reclaim authority through corporate language—delegating, framing, and strategising —while Linda simply solves problems. Watching his leadership vocabulary collapse in real time becomes one of the year’s funniest running gags.
McAdams delivers a career-highlight performance. Linda isn’t a heroic archetype; she’s painfully awkward, socially misaligned, and occasionally a bit frightening once she realises she doesn’t need permission anymore. McAdams shifts between vulnerability, irritation, and barely contained mania within single scenes. It’s uncomfortable and hilarious, often simultaneously.
O’Brien, meanwhile, commits fearlessly to unlikeability. Bradley is not secretly noble. He’s not misunderstood. He’s a man whose identity was built entirely on an environment that rewarded confidence over ability. As the island strips that away, O’Brien lets the character unravel layer by layer — from smug authority to bargaining desperation to something almost childlike. It’s a risky performance that pays off spectacularly.
Writers Mark Swift and Damian Shannon craft dialogue that sounds like people actually talking rather than characters delivering exposition. Arguments escalate naturally, humour comes from behaviour rather than punchlines, and tension builds from personality clashes rather than plot contrivances. The screenplay’s smartest move is restraint: it trusts the situation to carry the message.
And yes, there is a message — but the film wisely never states it aloud. Strip away artificial hierarchies, and competence becomes obvious. Confidence without skill is just noise. The corporate “alpha” mentality doesn’t survive contact with reality.
Once the story settles onto the island, Raimi unleashes his signature visual language. The jungle isn’t a backdrop — it’s an antagonist. Rain becomes oppressive. Trees loom like witnesses. Shadows swallow characters whole. His frantic POV camera sweeps, familiar to fans of The Evil Dead, inject bursts of manic energy into scenes that might otherwise feel static.
Importantly, the horror never descends into gore-for-gore’s sake. The film is frightening without being trashy, heightened without losing believability. Raimi orchestrates chaos with precision: every moment that threatens to tip into ridiculousness pulls back just in time.
The pacing does take patience early on. The corporate setup lingers longer than expected, but in retrospect, it’s essential groundwork. By the time Linda undergoes her psychological shift—embracing capability rather than seeking approval—the second half lands with real impact. What follows is tense, funny, and increasingly unsettling as dependence turns into resentment and survival becomes psychological warfare.
What makes Send Help stand out isn’t simply that it blends genres — it’s that it understands why those genres work. The comedy comes from character truth. The horror comes from loss of control. The drama comes from identity collapse. Each element feeds the others rather than competing for attention.
Most importantly, it feels designed for a cinema audience. The atmosphere builds collectively; the laughs grow louder as discomfort increases; the tension becomes communal. Watching it alone on streaming would flatten its rhythm. This is a film that benefits from shared reactions — gasps, groans, and nervous laughter echoing across a theatre.
By the time the credits roll, Send Help has transformed from a survival thriller into something sharper: a story about status, competence, and who we become when the structures that define us disappear.
Funny, unnerving, and sneakily insightful, it’s Raimi operating with mischievous confidence — proving once again he can push right up to the edge of chaos without ever falling off.
Verdict: 4/5
A wildly entertaining genre mash-up elevated by fearless performances and razor-sharp direction — awkward, tense and wickedly funny in equal measure.