
Sam Raimi
Director


Two colleagues become stranded on a deserted island, the only survivors of a plane crash. On the island, they must overcome past grievances and work together to survive, but ultimately, it's a battle of wills and wits to make it out alive.

Sam Raimi
Director

Zainab Azizi
Producer

Damien Drew
Supervising Art Director

Bill Pope
Director of Photography

Jennifer Cornwell
Unit Production Manager

Piyaporn Indageha
Line Producer

Nicholas Simon
Co-Producer

Ian Gracie
Production Design

Rachel McAdams
Linda Liddle

Dylan O'Brien
Bradley Preston

Edyll Ismail
Zuri

Dennis Haysbert
Franklin

Xavier Samuel
Donovan

Chris Pang
Chase

Thaneth Warakulnukroh
Boat Captain

Emma Raimi
River

Kristy Best
Polly Perera

Francesca Waters
Barbara

Olivia Sawyer
Applicant

Brad Flett
Trainer

Nana Miya
Flight Attendant

Anuwat Pornladawong
Caretaker #1

Benjawan Teawsomboonkit
Caretaker #2

Aaron Shore
Office Bro

Bruce Campbell
Bradley's Father (Uncredited)
Chris Sawin
1/30/2026
Gushing with frenetic humor, two magnificently cutthroat performances, and some well-placed grimy moments of gore, Send Help blows snot, spurts blood, and gauges eyes the only way Sam Raimi knows how. Full review: https://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/ent/horror/send-help-review.html
JPV852
1/25/2026
Pretty fun dark comedy-horror that features two solid performances from Rachel McAdams and Dylan O'Brien. Some decent enough gore and a whole a good way to spend two hours. Not sure I'll revisit even on home video but still entertaining, nevertheless. **3.5/5**
Manuel São Bento
2/3/2026
Full review: https://movieswetextedabout.com/send-help-movie-review-rachel-mcadams-anchors-sam-raimis-return-to-his-visceral-roots/ Rating: B "Send Help asserts itself as a triumph of controlled chaos and a compelling return of Sam Raimi to an original story, balancing visceral horror with effective social satire. The technical mastery of his direction, allied with Danny Elfman‘s dynamic score and, primarily, the explosive chemistry between Rachel McAdams (MVP) and Dylan O’Brien, elevates the material far beyond simple genre cinema. It’s a movie that dissects the incompetence of power with a sadistic smile, reminding us that when social conventions collapse, true human nature reveals itself in the bloodiest and most honest way possible."