For horror fans, ‘Send Help’ feels like a homecoming. While Sam Raimi has spent years directing big movies and producing projects behind the scenes, this is his first real return to horror in theatres since ‘Drag Me to Hell’ came out in 2009. Almost twenty years later, the filmmaker still has his skill. Send Help combines suspense, dark humour, and survival drama in a way that quickly brings back the energy and style that made Raimi a unique voice in the genre.
The story focuses on two coworkers, Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien, who are stranded on a remote island after a disaster. What started as a struggle to survive some becomes more complicated as old annoyances, personal secrets, and personality clashes surface. Sounds like a simple story, right?
Well, when you have Sam Raimi as the film director, he knows how to handle it, creating a thrilling suspense, laughs, and so many awkward moments. Yet the film is still fun to watch, offering the kind of big-screen horror experience that keeps viewers munching popcorn.
If you’ve ever sat through a flight and thought, “What’s the worst that could happen?” well, ‘Send Help’ has a few ideas up its sleeve. What begins as an ordinary business trip quickly turns into a nightmare when a violent storm sends a company plane spiralling towards disaster. What follows is messy, chaotic, and exactly the kind of opening Sam Raimi fans will appreciate. Once the dust settles—or, in this case, the waves—only Linda and Bradley are left standing, though Bradley is barely so.
They end up washed up on an island that looks like paradise from far away, but surviving is not as easy as finding coconuts and waiting to be saved. Food runs low, injuries add up, and every day brings more worry that no one knows they are there. Raimi creates a lot of tension from their situation, yet he still finds space for dark humour, making you feel almost guilty for laughing, but that is what makes his work stand out.
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The film focuses on how these two survivors cope, bringing together two very different lifestyles they are used to. Linda has spent years dreaming about adventure, watching survival shows, and gaining outdoor skills that suddenly become very useful. Bradley comes with fancy shoes, a country-club lifestyle, and no clue how to survive in the wild. After his injuries and feeling helpless, he has to trust Linda to keep him alive, which is the last thing his pride wants.
That’s where the film starts having real fun. As days stretch into weeks, the island brings out their polished selves and exposes who they really are. Frustrations, insecurities, and personal baggage rise to the surface, turning every conversation into a potential powder keg. McAdams and O’Brien bounce off each other beautifully, making it impossible to predict where the relationship is headed next. One minute you’re rooting for them to make it home together, the next you’re wondering whether one of them is going to lose their mind first.

Once the shock of the crash wears off, ‘Send Help’ settles into a survival story—but not the kind you might expect. The island presents plenty of obstacles on its own, from injuries and hunger to the uncertainty of being rescued, which is only half the struggle; the real struggle comes from the people stranded there. Linda and Bradley aren’t natural allies. They’re co-workers with very different outlooks on life, and being trapped together only magnifies those differences.
The film is really engaging because of how the balance between them changes. At first, Linda seems to have everything under control, being clever, practical, and much more at ease in the wilderness than Bradley. But as the days go by and feelings begin to flare up, their relationship becomes less predictable. Small arguments turn into big fights, and surviving feels more like a mental battle than a physical one
At times, it feels like the world’s worst couples therapy session ever—just with fewer therapists and more dangerous situations. Besides that, both actors perform these scenes beautifully. McAdams and O’Brien have great chemistry that keeps the story going even in its quieter parts, and both actors make their characters feel imperfect, annoying, and surprisingly easy to relate to. Just when the film seems ready to calm down, it adds another challenge, making sure neither the characters nor the audience gets comfortable.

‘Send Help’ feels like Sam Raimi returning to the playground he built. Only a few filmmakers are as comfortable blending horror and comedy, and even fewer can switch between the two as easily as Raimi does here. It has defined Raimi’s career for decades, and he hasn’t lost his touch.
Let’s not forget to give credit to the writers, Damian Shannon and Mark Swift, who deliver a script that feels like several genres colliding in the best way. Survival drama, workplace comedy, horror, and even a touch of relationship drama all find a place here. It’s the sort of concept that could easily become a mess, but the film somehow keeps its footing even when it veers into unexpected twists.
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The visual effects can be a little rough, particularly when the film relies on CGI, giving it a scrappy energy that fits perfectly with Raimi’s style. But the question isn’t how to survive on a deserted island—it’s whether you’d survive being stranded with someone you can barely tolerate. And what better way than Raimi pushing characters in uncomfortable situations in darker, bloodier, and far more chaotic ways as the story unfolds.
The third act throws subtlety overboard and embraces pure mayhem, including one sequence guaranteed to make every male audience member instinctively cross their legs. Through it all, McAdams and O’Brien remain fully committed, with McAdams perhaps summing up the experience best when she joked, “It’s a rite of passage to have Sam Raimi throw blood in your face.”

‘Send Help’ is the kind of movie that shows why Sam Raimi became such a loved horror filmmaker. It’s tense, funny, strange, and sometimes really gross, often all in the same scene. Not every effect works perfectly, and the film sometimes goes into wonderfully exaggerated moments, but that’s part of the fun.
Strangely, even with all the blood, injuries, and emotional breakdowns, the film might make you dream about a tropical vacation. Of course, you’ll probably want one with room service and good Wi-Fi. Thanks to strong performances from Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien, the dark humour, and several moments that made my audience groan, laugh, and cover their eyes all at once. One scene will likely make every man in the theatre shift uncomfortably in his seat. By the end, Raimi has given fans exactly what they wanted: a wildly fun survival thriller that shows he still has his playful style.
IMDb: 6.7 | Tomatometer: 92 | Popcornmeter: 86% | Average: 81.6
★★★★☆










































