Last week, I went to the Alamo Drafthouse in Lower Manhattan to see Send Help, a 2026 comedy thriller directed by Sam Raimi and co-written by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift. The film stars Rachel McAdams as Linda Liddle, a meek but hard-working office drone who has been awaiting a promotion to vice president at her corporate job. Unfortunately, the president died, leaving his arrogant son Bradley (Dylan O'Brien) in his place, and he is immediately disgusted by Linda's nerdy looks and the specks of her tuna fish sandwich on her face, and wants to make his frat buddy, who has only worked at the company six months, vice president. He plans to have Linda transferred out to a dead-end position at a satellite office in Bangkok to get rid of her.
Linda lives at home alone with her cockatoo, has tons of books about wilderness survival, and films an audition video to be on the next season of Survivor. She stands up to Bradley at work, about him taking back her promotion, and he invites her on a business trip with him and his other slimeball bro executives to Bangkok to finalize a corporate merger. On the way there, a storm causes the engine to fail and the plane comes apart, crashing by a remote island in the Gulf of Thailand. Linda and Bradley are the only survivors, and with Linda's survival knowledge, she immediately knows to collect rainwater, build shelter, tend to Bradley's injured leg, and hunt for food. When Bradley is recovering, he reverts to treating her like a subordinate, despite that they are now stranded on an island and are no longer in an office environment. Linda tests Bradley's attitude by leaving him alone for two days, and when he nearly dies of thirst, she gives him water and takes control.
The film focuses on a power struggle between Linda and Bradley, as Linda, thrilled at being the one in charge and with control, avoids any potential rescue by search teams because she doesn't want to go back to office life with Bradley back in his CEO position humiliating her. Bradley resents that he is now dependent on Linda, and will try to outsmart her, but keep failing at it because he doesn't have any real-world survival skills from growing up rich and privileged.
The movie is really funny, both due to McAdams' gleeful performance as a woman getting revenge on her boss, who just may be more twisted than he realizes, and O'Brien's performance as a smarmy jerk who is reduced to being a sniveling whiner when bested. The movie has blood and gore moments, like when Linda kills a wild boar, blood spraying in her face as she stabs it, or when she vomits after eating poisonous food, her yellow puke looking like creamed corn.
I really enjoyed this movie, mostly for McAdams, and for liking the thriller and comedy combination, the homages to Cast Away, Misery, and Swept Away, and the silliness of it all.
















