She has unwittingly become the next victim as the mysterious driver stalks her suburban home later that stormy night while Erik, Rachel, and she defend themselves.
It's a solid stalk and chase slasher film mixing "Death Proof" and "The Hitcher" and director Pavia delivers a strong genre entry suitable for a lazy Friday night and some beers.
"[3] Matt Donato of We Got This Covered was more lukewarm indicating that although "Makenzie Vega asserts herself as a future genre star," "filmmaker Mark Pavia dilutes an original idea with stale, musty slasher generics that have been dominating too many of my reviews lately.
A select few moments shine – mostly involving gnarly gore effects – but the sum of this creepy driver's rampage is nothing but a bland home invasion/slasher wannabe told through a weak, timid voice.
"[4] Jake Dee of The Joblo Network rates the film a 5 out of 10 citing lack of originality and "over-trampled" "Halloween-like tropes" as drawbacks while redemption comes in the slick pacing and ever increasing gore and violence culminating in its avoidance of a pat Hollywood ending which "make the movie a bit better than perhaps it should be.