Film Review: Unseen (2025)
Unseen (2025), directed by Marcus Ellison, is a psychological thriller that masterfully blends suspense, emotion, and mystery into a tightly woven narrative that keeps audiences questioning reality until the final frame.
The story centers around Clara Morgan (played by Naomi Scott), a blind pianist who begins to suspect that something sinister is unfolding around her after a series of disturbing events in her apartment. As Clara tries to piece together the truth using only sound, intuition, and fragmented memories, the film becomes an intense exploration of perception and isolation.
Naomi Scott delivers a compelling performance, capturing Clara’s vulnerability and determination with grace and subtlety. Her portrayal brings depth to a character who refuses to be defined by her disability. Supporting roles by Tom Felton as her enigmatic neighbor and Thandiwe Newton as a skeptical detective add rich layers to the unfolding mystery.
The direction is tight and atmospheric, with Ellison using sound as a narrative tool in ingenious ways. The sound design is, quite literally, the heartbeat of the film—immersive, disorienting, and chilling. The cinematography favors shadowy interiors and claustrophobic framing, reflecting Clara’s limited perception and amplifying the film’s tension.
Unseen is not just a thriller; it’s a meditation on how we interpret the world around us, and how much of what we “see” is shaped by fear, memory, and belief. It’s a slow burn, but one that pays off with a jaw-dropping twist that redefines everything that came before.
Rating: 8.5/10
A stylish and smart psychological thriller that proves sometimes the scariest things are the ones we never see coming.