You'll Never Find Me (film)

He hands her coins for a payphone, claiming not to have a mobile phone, and offers directions to it with the warning that she will not be able to reach it alone since it sits outside a gate which is locked at this time of night.

She notices what appears to be bleeding scratch marks on his back and offers to get him something from the medicine cabinet to treat it, where she finds her earring in a pillbox among many others.

Terrified, he descends into a nightmarish scene in which he is confronted by all the women he has killed in the past, and hears the police relentlessly knocking on his door.

He is suddenly pulled into darkness, in which he hears the sound of his father on a ventilator, referencing a story he told the woman earlier about his childhood.

He emerges from the darkness covered in blood and distraught, and the woman forces him to empty the vial of GHB into the bottle of whiskey and drink it, as the other murdered girls cheer him on, leading him to overdose.

[3] Shudder acquired the distribution rights for the film in North America, Ireland and the United Kingdom following its premiere at the 2023 Tribeca Festival.

The website's consensus reads: "Visually and sonically distinctive, You'll Never Find Me heightens its spooky atmosphere and claustrophobic setting with a story that'll keep viewers guessing.

"[1] Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting gave it a score of 3.5/5 skulls, writing, "You'll Never Find Me... is a somber tale set on a dark and stormy night.

But the filmmakers instead reclaim the quintessential setup to blend grim, contemporary horror with a classic haunted house aesthetic, resulting in a claustrophobic, oft-unsettling chamber piece.

"[8] Screen Rant's Mae Abdulbaki said the film was "an intimate story, one that is carried by an intense ongoing exchange between two characters that will rattle your nerves and keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end", and gave it 4/5 stars.

"[10] CityMag's Daniel Tune wrote, "Like many a low-budget thriller, the film's runtime is largely devoted to the low-simmering tension that grows out of this strange scenario, as the two loners, capably played by Brendan Rock and Jordan Cowan, gradually reveal their initially ambiguous motivations, guiding us towards a chaotic, kaleidoscopic climax.