Categories: Film ReviewsReviews

Film Review: Amy Seimetz’s ‘She Dies Tomorrow’ is a hypnotic and timely tale

Published by
Share
Courtesy of NEON

It sometimes feels as if we are all swirling through a never-ending nightmare these days, as the COVID-19 pandemic has touched nearly every aspect of human existence.  Writer/director Amy Seimetz’s chillingly timely new film, She Dies Tomorrow, unknowingly taps into that shared existential dread with precision.  While not as can’t-look-away bizarre as last year’s indie horror hit Midsommar, She Dies Tomorrow is a movie baked in similar mind-bending madness.  

Kate Lyn Sheil plays Amy, a young woman who has just bought her first house.  There’s not much else we know about her, except that, when we meet her, she seems to be distracted or depressed, responding in the negative when her friend on the phone asks if she’s alright.  When her friend, Jane, played by Jane Adams, arrives, Amy plainly and definitely tells her that she knows she’s going to die the next day.  Jane blames Amy’s state of mind on the fact that she’s been drinking and refuses to indulge what she perceives to be another of Amy’s needy games.  However, once Jane gets home, she herself becomes overwhelmed with the same certainty that she will also die the next day.  As it turns out, this sense of impending death is contagious, as anyone who has it will infect everyone they come in contact with.  

The premise is simple and brilliantly surreal.  We are all well-versed in the behavior of viruses, and Seimetz crafts a wickedly simple but mind-burrowing concept of what would happen if a belief were a virus, if paranoia was as contagious as a common cold—or, COVID-19.  Just as Amy and Jane are infected with this certainty of their own impending mortality, they spread it to everyone else they come in contact with, including Jane’s brother (Chris Messina) and sister-in-law (Katie Aselton), friends and even the doctor she goes to see to check on her assumed health failure.  Everyone, in turn, becomes swallowed up in their own sense of their own rapidly-approaching demise, each responding in a different way.  

In She Dies Tomorrow, Seimetz has created a black hole of dread which expands exponentially.  How long would it take for this nihilistic virus to spread to every human on the planet?  What was the source?  Will everyone truly die tomorrow?  If so, how? The audience is sucked in almost as quickly and definitively as the characters, as we are given no answers, only clues that we may interpret to our will.  Cinematographer Jay Keitel and composer Mondo Boys join Seimetz in creating a psychological undertow of shadows, light and sound, illustrating what it just might look and sound like if the world were ending—or if it only felt that way.  

To that end, there is a sprinkling of absurdist humor in the horror, as each character reacts differently to their newfound paranoia.  Adams and Messina, in particular, find notes in their performances that betray a wholesale commitment to their fates, adding a clever layer of skepticism for the audience that tempers the darkness, if only slightly.  In a clever twist on the “characters confessing the truth on a plane that they think is about to crash” trope, the characters here react and reflect on their existences and soon-to-be lack of one with myriad behaviors, Seimetz injecting dark comedy in some unexpected places.  

Sheil is the emotional center of the film, and her hypnotic acquiescence to her believed fate sets the tone and atmosphere for this quietly absorbing film.  Running a just-right 84 minutes, She Dies Tomorrow takes its time painting the picture, but never lingers too long in its own depth.  Seimetz, whose previous film, 2012’s Sun Don’t Shine, which also starred Sheil and was also a mysterious horror-infused drama, seems to have found her voice in spinning tales of dread and dark cynicism.  She couldn’t have found a more perfect time to hone her craft.

Neon’s She Dies Tomorrow is currently out in select theaters and drive-ins and will be available on VOD Friday, August 7.

Catherine Springer

Catherine is a shameless child of the ‘80s who discovered her passion for movies when she was 12 and has never looked back. As the daughter of an American diplomat, she spent the first 18 years of her life as an international nomad, but, when it came time to choose a college and set down roots, there was no other option than Los Angeles, a true industry town where movies touch and flavor everything. She wouldn’t be anywhere else. The only thing she loves as much as watching movies is writing about them, and her reviews have been seen in the Glendale News-Press, Magill’s Cinema Annual and on Prodigy. 15 years ago, she started her own her own movie blog, CathsFilmForum.com, which has been her pride and joy. And, although she loves sports, there is no better season than Oscar season. She owes everything to Tootsie for lighting the flame and to Premiere Magazine for keeping it lit.

Recent Posts

AwardsWatch Podcast Ep. 230 – ‘The Fall Guy’ Review and Our Favorite Movies About Making Movies

On episode 230 of The AwardsWatch Podcast, Executive Editor Ryan McQuade is joined by AwardsWatch… Read More

May 6, 2024

My Jedi Journey: Inside the 24-hour ‘Star Wars’ Skywalker Saga May the 4th Marathon

The air is polluted with flat Diet Coke, bottled farts, and broken dreams. There’s dedication… Read More

May 6, 2024

American Film Institute (AFI) Announces 2024 Cinematography Intensive for Women

Rachel Morrison (Mudbound), the first woman ever nominated for an Oscar for Best Cinematography Today, the American… Read More

May 3, 2024

2024 Emmys: Predictions in Drama, Comedy and Limited Series; Lead and Supporting Acting for Each

It’s a fascinating year for the Emmys this year, as the previous ceremony will have… Read More

May 3, 2024

This website uses cookies.