On some of the best movie detailing platforms, it has been tagged as a Psychological Horror movie, which it surely isn't. In fact, there is nothing too psychological about it. Linda Liddle does not suffer from extreme personality disorientation. She is not 'split,' and neither is she born with the will to kill or hunt down living beings. She just gives in to her dark side when she is marooned on an island with her arrogant boss. I still believe this is director Sam Raimi's most mediocre outing, considering it is 2026, and he must be a seasoned Hollywood director by now. People isolated in Robinson Crusoe-type situations make chopsticks and weave plates out of vegetation? And to make this worse, you had Rachel McAdams be that person - has the director even seen Rachel's body of work, and on that account, her body? To make it highly difficult to believe in the first 10 minutes, she is presented as a passive, submissive, but brilliant worker on the office floor.
After another 15 minutes, she seems like trained by the Navy SEALS in the backyards of the White House to survive. She transforms into an outdoor lifestyle survival expert so suddenly that you need to revisit the earlier scenes - what did you miss? When did that transformation happen? She weaves a handbag, a cross-body bag, makes tables, creates a nice Hawaii-inspired hut, and forages in the rainforest like she was raised by Amazonians. And this was done by a lady who, until 20 minutes back, was supposed to be the undemanding office geek! Is this the work of the same Sam Raimi who gave us the massively lovable and still adorable Spider-Man in 2002? Watch SEND HELP on Jio Hotstar India with consideration that the bloopers are Bollywood level, the performances are good, and the only thing that you will remember about the movie is the landscape - the island location would be Googled by now, and I am assuming that in another 2 weeks, a billionaire helipad would be constructed there in real - the natural scenery is actually that good!
Hell, no!
Literally, no! There is nothing dramatically psychological in this movie.
Absolutely not.

