[6] Downhill skier Sophie Scott has her Olympic dreams dashed when she is diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease causing blindness.
Although her friend Cam offers to help her train for the Paralympics by working as her seeing guide, she refuses and gives up on her skiing dreams.
Sophie answers an ad for a cat sitter placed by Debra, a rich woman in upstate New York leaving for a vacation after just divorcing her husband.
She calls 911 and reports the break-in, but the 911 operator tells her it will be a long response time due to the house's remote location.
After running out of ammunition in her gun, she is caught by Rico and almost dies as he strangles her but gains the upper hand and bludgeons him to death.
The website's consensus reads: "A home invasion thriller with a nifty twist, See for Me is further elevated by Skyler Davenport's magnetic lead performance.
[9] Jude Dry of IndieWire gave the film a grade of B+, calling it "a tightly-wound thriller propelled by enough turns that you won't want to miss a beat", and said that Davenport "anchors the action with their instinctual performance, playing Sophie with a pointed ferocity that is clearly masking deep pain.
"[11] Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Aside from the quirky and exciting gaming angle, 'See for Me' is a pretty straightforward suspense film - but a well-crafted one.
Club gave the film a grade of C+, writing, "Before long, anyone who's seen far too many thrillers will begin composing a mental list of missed opportunities... See For Me could be the home-invasion movie with the blind cat-sitter and the ski chase scene.
Jeanette Catsoulis of The New York Times wrote, "while [the film] offers the novelty of a disabled character who is rather less than morally upstanding, this uninvolving thriller is as lacking in tension as credibility.