Writer-director Brian Duffield’s gripping thriller No One Will Save You opens on a shot that could be the introduction to a fairy tale, with a quaint, isolated house surrounded by trees. The almost entirely dialogue-free No One Will Save You then unfolds a bit like a fairy tale, albeit one featuring terrifying alien invaders. It’s ethereal and haunting as much as it’s tense and violent. The main character, Brynn Adams (Kaitlyn Dever), isn’t a princess, but she’s a young woman living alone in the forest who spends her time making clothes and assembling an idyllic model town.Duffield plays with the image of that serene existence in No One Will Save You’s opening scenes, as Brynn packages a dress she’s made, puts on a pretty outfit, practices her friendly smile in the mirror, and heads into the nearest town to mail her latest creation to the customer who purchased it online. There’s a sense of dread to Brynn’s trip into town even before the aliens arrive. No one speaks to her, and after mailing her package, she sits alone next to her mother’s grave. As she’s leaving the cemetery, she ducks behind a car to hide from an older couple walking in the parking lot.Duffield and Dever convey the basic details of Brynn’s situation without relying on any spoken exchanges, although some specifics remain vague even by the end of the movie. Back at home, Brynn writes a letter to her best friend Maude, in which she expresses enduring regret for something that happened 10 years earlier. She goes to bed, and before she has a chance to head back into town the next day and make another attempt at human connection, there’s an alien invasion.RELATED: Hulu’s No One Will Save You Gets Creepy Trailer Ahead of Huluween SeasonRELATED: REVIEW: Elevator Game Features a Frightening Villain Inside a Disappointing Horror Flick
Writer-director Brian Duffield’s gripping thriller No One Will Save You opens on a shot that could be the introduction to a fairy tale, with a quaint, isolated house surrounded by trees. The almost entirely dialogue-free No One Will Save You then unfolds a bit like a fairy tale, albeit one featuring terrifying alien invaders. It’s ethereal and haunting as much as it’s tense and violent. The main character, Brynn Adams (Kaitlyn Dever), isn’t a princess, but she’s a young woman living alone in the forest who spends her time making clothes and assembling an idyllic model town.
Duffield plays with the image of that serene existence in No One Will Save You‘s opening scenes, as Brynn packages a dress she’s made, puts on a pretty outfit, practices her friendly smile in the mirror, and heads into the nearest town to mail her latest creation to the customer who purchased it online. There’s a sense of dread to Brynn’s trip into town even before the aliens arrive. No one speaks to her, and after mailing her package, she sits alone next to her mother’s grave. As she’s leaving the cemetery, she ducks behind a car to hide from an older couple walking in the parking lot.
Duffield and Dever convey the basic details of Brynn’s situation without relying on any spoken exchanges, although some specifics remain vague even by the end of the movie. Back at home, Brynn writes a letter to her best friend Maude, in which she expresses enduring regret for something that happened 10 years earlier. She goes to bed, and before she has a chance to head back into town the next day and make another attempt at human connection, there’s an alien invasion.
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