Alice and Jack are lucky to be living in the idealized community of Victory, the experimental company town housing the men who work for the top-secret Victory Project and their families. But when cracks in their idyllic life begin to appear, exposing flashes of something much more sinister lurking beneath the attractive façade, Alice can’t help questioning exactly what they’re doing in Victory, and why.
This movie contains 54 potentially triggering events.
**SPOILER** verbal and physical domestic violence occur. Mostly just intense shouting, but near the end of the movie, Alice and Jack engage in a lethal physical confrontation.
alice is restrained to the bed in the real world, and has things on her eyes to keep them open. she is also restrained whilst getting electro shock therapy
[SPOILERS]
There are sex scenes between characters that seem consentual at that time of the story. However, the true nature of that relationship is later shown to the viewer and to one of the characters, changing the context of the previous scenes.
A character falls off a roof after cutting her own throat with a knife. It is not shown in the moment, but her body is seen hitting the ground in a flashback later in the movie.
Not mutilation, but eyes are held open. A light shines over them but not a painfully bright one. The way they are held open looks painful but inflicted on the skin around the eyes, the eyeballs are not damaged
As someone who is very sensitive to jumpscares, the ones in this movie were not terrible, you can pretty well anticipate when there are coming and they are not super loud or all of a sudden. Most of them take place in the first half of the movie.
I'm extremely emetophobic and there are NO vomit scenes. ZERO. I don't know why the two people who clicked "yes" did so. There's a lot of gasping for air throughout the movie, but no gagging and no vomit.
You don't see the glass breaking (or bones), but she is being squished, so it's possible to be interpreted one way or another. It sounded a bit more like bones than class to me, but visually it doesn't look like her bones are breaking. I just told myself it was the glass and was fine.
A character is taken to a location to receive abusive treatment for what is diagnosed as a mental health condition. She is shown receiving treatment but it doesn't linger on her living there.
A couple eating scenes that aren’t bad. The main one happens when Alice is rubbing seasoning onto a raw steak. Happens once at the beginning and once at the end.
More frequent in the second half than the first half of the movie. Some of them are very intense -- (Spoiler?) for example, Alice falls to the floor gasping for air due to a flashback.
Alice is pushed up against a window as the wall behind her closes in. It is as she is cleaning the big window for the second time. You can tell when it is about to happen. The whole scene lasts about a minute and is quite anxiety inducing, glass can be heard cracking. It is revealed immediately that the wall closing in was a hallucination/dream.
A character is seen dying by suicide and it is an important plot of the movie. The act is fully shown on screen and it is a subject that is brought up several times later by the other characters. The corpse also appears in a couple of frames.
A character looks directly at the camera a couple times through the movie.
[SPOILER]
However, the audience is not directly acknowledged due to the nature of the story.
There are 2-3 scenes of oral sex between two characters (man giving to woman). There's no nudity, but you can see a pair of panties being taken off and explicit audio and body movements. The scenes should last 2-3 minutes overall. There's also voyeurism in one of them.
Neither happy nor sad in my opinion. **SPOILERS** The main character is able to escape, but her husband dies. (But does he?) No definitive conclusion is explained for the other inhabitants of the town, either. Very thought-provoking ending.