Entertainment
Insane, Unrated Sci-Fi Thriller Leaves You Stranded And Afraid
By Robert Scucci
| Published

As a cardio junkie who eats an embarrassing amount of pizza throughout the week, I try to squeeze in a good workout every single day. During the winter months I hit the treadmill or exercise bike for about an hour. When it gets warmer, I love a good jog for some old fashioned Vitamin D. The difference between my fitness choices and the ones depicted in 2022’s Brightwood is that I can stop whenever I want because I’m not trapped in a time loop with a mysterious hooded figure following me around and trying to kill me.
For good measure, I also try not to get my steps in near creepy lakes with hidden access paths. I like blasting music in my earbuds, and I don’t want to find myself in a remote area, where a menacing voice in the distance is telling me to run away, which I would absolutely not hear.
A Low-Budget High-Stakes Time Loop Thriller

Though its financials are not widely reported, Brightwood was produced for an estimated $14,000, and it shows. Fortunately, its story is so simple and effectively told that it probably could have been shot for even less, though I am no accountant. The film has only two primary characters, Jen (Dana Berger) and Dan (Max Woertendyke), along with a couple of stand-ins who briefly appear when more bodies are needed.
Brightwood follows a married couple whose relationship is clearly strained, with an inciting incident the night before setting everything in motion. Jen is fed up with Dan after he gets drunk at a work party and flirts with his coworkers. She channels her rage into dragging him on a long run while he is violently hungover, not holding back when she tells him how unhappy she is and how they have been together for a “stupid amount of time.”

Dan comes across as the complacent, mildly incompetent husband who has taken his marriage for granted. That was my initial read, at least. But the longer Brightwood sits with them, the murkier it becomes. Jen looks perpetually furious, her scowl capable of freezing you in place. It is hard to tell whether she has always been this way, forcing Dan to retreat into himself and his drinking, or if his emotional laziness slowly turned her into a stone cold scorpion woman. If I had to guess, they are both contributing equally to their shared misery but are too afraid to admit it.
It already seems obvious their nearly decade-long union is on the brink, but then their world tilts sideways when they realize they cannot leave the hiking trail they are running on. The path out disappears, and there is no clear way home. Worse, a mysterious hooded man keeps crossing their path. He never gets too close, but when they hear him in the distance, the only word they can make out is “run.”
Devising A Solid Exit Plan

As time passes in Brightwood, Jen and Dan begin questioning how long they have actually been stuck on the trail. Clues pile up. After Jen drops her earbuds, they begin noticing duplicate pairs, then triplicate pairs, and eventually entire piles of them, suggesting they have been trapped in this loop far longer than they realize.
When they finally catch a glimpse of the hooded man, he bears a striking resemblance to Dan. This doppelganger Dan kills Jen, sending the real Dan sprinting off in terror, only to reconnect with another version of Jen who has no idea what just happened.

Jen’s solo experiences mirror Dan’s. She witnesses Dan being killed multiple times and even kills one of him herself in a fit of rage. When they reunite, there is no clear way to determine which version of each we are watching. There is no visual shorthand to guide you, which means there could be dozens of Jens and Dans wandering the trail, encountering the hooded figure, getting killed, and being dragged off to some undisclosed location.
Next Time, Just Use The Treadmill
Brightwood accomplishes a surprising amount with very limited resources. Its lack of flashy effects or obvious visual cues makes the experience disorienting in the best way. The only consistent sign that something supernatural may be happening is a piercing ringing in their ears that sounds like high frequency feedback or a dog whistle. They just keep running, occasionally spotting their equally confused duplicates doing the same thing on a slightly different timeline.

A lean, tense psychological sci fi thriller, Brightwood belongs in the same conversation as Coherence (2013), Primer (2004), and Empathy, Inc. (2018), all of which prove you do not need a massive budget to create something deeply unnerving. A strong concept, committed performances, and a willingness to let the audience sit in confusion can go a long way.

As of this writing, you can stream Brightwood for free on Tubi.
Entertainment
Snag a pair of Bose QuietComfort Ultra headphones for $50 off
SAVE $50: As of May 6, get the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones (2nd Gen) for $399 at Amazon, down from their usual price of $449. That’s a discount of 11%.
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If you want to experience your favorite music to the fullest, you need headphones that are up to the task. Bose can typically be counted on to provide that kind of quality, especially with its QuietComfort lineup. You can try its newest model for less right now for less thanks to this Amazon deal, which heavily discounts the cans so you don’t have to spend an arm and a leg on them.
As of May 6, get the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones (2nd Gen) for $399 at Amazon, down from their usual price of $449. That’s $50 off and a discount of 11%.
Though an incremental upgrade from the previous QuietComfort model, these have some new features you’ll want to try out. But mostly, these comfortable headphones are all about feeling great on your ears and sounding fantastic. They offer noise cancellation and spatialized audio so it sounds as though you’re right where the music is. The new Cinema Mode can help to spatialize and balance background and sound and sound effects when watching movies to help put you right into the film as well.
Beyond that they can be used to take calls with their built-in microphones. They’ll last a long time while you’re on the phone too, with 30 hours of play time when listening to songs, podcasts, or taking meetings.
Mashable Deals
Mashable Lead Shopping Reporter Bethany Allard took the headphones for a spin in her review and and called them a “well-rounded pair of headphones”, praising their blend of “comfort, noise cancellation, and sound”.
If you’re ready to pick up a new pair of headphones at a discount that’ll tick all the boxes for you, grab these before the discount disappears.
Entertainment
Score up to 64% off at EcoFlow and snag free solar panels with your purchase.
SAVE 64%: Between May 6 and May 17, you can score up to 64% off at EcoFlow and snag free solar panels with your purchase.
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I live in an apartment, so I don’t exactly have a “whole home” to back up. But if there’s one thing I hate, it’s losing power. There goes the AC, the internet, the food in the fridge — it’s a total nightmare. If you actually own a house and have been putting off buying a backup power system because it’s pricey, I have some good news.
The DJI Power 1000 Mini portable power station just launched — U.S. availability is pending
Right now, EcoFlow is running a Mother’s Day Sale through May 17 with discounts as high as 64%. They’re also throwing in free hardware to sweeten the deal: All single orders between $600 and $3,000 come with a free 45W solar panel, and orders over $3,000 come with two free 160W solar panels. If you’re looking for something more portable, their RAPID Power Banks are also up to 53% off right now.
Just keep an eye on the countdown clock — it’s for the Flash Sale items that have even better, limited-time price cuts. If you miss the flash window, the standard Mother’s Day and Home Improvement deals (including a $700 installation discount for larger systems) are still valid through mid-May.
Mashable Deals
Here are a few of the best deals I’ve spotted so far:
Entertainment
Maddies Secret trailer reveals John Early as youve never seen him before
Comedian John Early makes his feature directorial debut with Maddie’s Secret, an offbeat homage to melodrama that he wrote and headlines as its eponymous heroine.
As an aspiring food influencer, Maddie Ralph (Early) is passionate about her cuisine. And at first glance, she’s got a picture-perfect life: a loving husband (Eric Rahill), a devoted best friend (Kate Berlant), and a job at a culinary content studio called Gourmaybe. But as the title suggests, there’s a side to Maddie she can’t stomach sharing with her loved ones. And this secret could kill her.
Out of the movie’s premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival last fall, I cheered Maddie’s Secret, writing in my review for Mashable, “The film is silly and strange, but even amid campy bits, sincere. So, you’ll laugh at its parody elements, but may well be genuinely moved by Early’s commitment to this strange and splendid film.”
I also said “John Early is a better ingénue than Sydney Sweeney,” comparing Maddie’s Secret to another earnest (but less entertaining) TIFF offering, Christy. And I stand by it.
Maddie’s Secret opens in theaters in New York on June 19, and in Los Angeles on June 26.
