It stars Liam Hughes, Joe Daly, Daisy Ridley, Mark Forester Evans, Le Gresley, Nathalie Pownall, Catherine Ruddick, Ellie Selwood and Derek Jones.
The appearance of a mysterious woman who may actually be death incarnate only makes things worse for him as he is forced to face what he has created, while staying alive long enough to rewrite the ending before it's too late.
[1] Hearn had been teaching film at Andover College, and conceived the project as a hands-on training exercise for his students, influenced by Brian De Palma's Home Movies.
Some gave the benefit of the doubt because it was purposefully a student film, but some state their gripes about its late release for just capitalizing into Daisy Ridley's fame, similar to Sylvester Stallone for The Party at Kitty and Stud's when Rocky was a big hit at the time.
IGN's Tom Jorgensen gave it a 2 stars out of 10, stating that "its story is incomprehensible, it isn't scary at all, and the acting is wall-to-wall bad" and cites that the film "is damn near unwatchable.