A college-age brother and sister get more than they bargained for on their road trip home from spring break. When the bickering siblings witness a creepy truck driver tossing body bags into a sewer near an abandoned church, they investigate. Bad move! Opening a Pandora's Box of unspeakable evil, the pair must flee for their lives -- with a monstrous "shape" in hot pursuit.
This movie contains 41 potentially triggering events.
It could be argued that animal death is implied, (a home filled with cats is ransacked and a lot of yowling is heard.) but it's definitely not shown or explicitly hinted at.
There is never on-screen domestic abuse but while Darry and Trish (the two leads) are playing a game by making up words from car licence plates, at some point Trish starts mentioning how she had issues with her boyfriend and then the villain’s vehicle passes by them and then Darry read the licence which had the words “BEATNGU” (similar to the words “Beating You”) and Trish had a “how did you know” type of reaction until she noticed the licence plate.
There is a scene where something gets into a house with lots of cats. Yes, there is a lot of yowling and sounds from the cats, but when the doors are opened you see a multitude of cats escape from the house. It does not seem like any cats actually die.
No slurs but some homophobic undertones. The villain smells the male lead’s clothes and everyone is horrified. Here is also a scene where the villain is made to look like he is kissing a man’s severed head at one point
There are some situations with mildly sexual undertones or implications, emphasis on mild though. The monster smells the male lead character's clothes at one point, licks someones face (nonconsensual), and almost appears to "kiss" a dead man's decapitated head, but that's about it. no sex scenes or anything close to it