Not a bad thriller, although the plot does not shine with novelty. I remember a similar picture, but I will not spoil; you will see everything for yourself.
After the death of her husband, Camille and her son Martin moved closer to her younger sister Eva - there is housing and work for her (she is a nurse). Martin, extremely withdrawn and almost mute after the tragedy, has communication problems. One day he talks about his new school friend Jeff, they communicate on the Internet, and the mother again hears his son’s laugh, sees his smile. Camille's happy about her son's change. I think she saw Jeff. Thinks it was him, a fat guy with curly hair. A new friend even invites Martin to a birthday party with an overnight stay. Only the day after school, Martin can't be found, and a student named Jeff isn't at school. . .
The film is watched in one breath, although the secondary nature of the plot is felt in the second half of the viewing every minute. I think that if the actors of the first tier were involved, the scores would be higher, and so, in my opinion, 6.5 out of 10. It’s a pity that my favorites, Naomi Watts, Diana Kruger, etc. are acting in frankly failed films.
However, the director manages to repeatedly deceive the viewer, as it was intended, so even with little-known actors to watch was interesting. Who is Jeff and does he exist? What's going on with the boy? Where is his mother and his family?
Camille doesn't even believe her own family. . .
This is a thriller, not a drama. A medium film suitable for a single evening viewing.