Mother Kristina and her daughter Penny are abducted on the night before Halloween, and held prisoner in the home of a madman. Desperate to free her daughter and herself, Kristina is forced to embrace violence and subterfuge in order to escape her demented captor. Bentman's script continues his trend of minimalism. The dialogue is lean and each scene serves as a stepping stone to the next, creating a fairly straightforward, but entertaining experience. Rachel Whittle's turn as Kristina is the centerpiece. Her ability to communicate the spectrum of trauma, coupled with her heartbreaking scenes with her estranged husband and teenage daughter are authentic and never forced. This is perhaps the best part of. Everyone struggles with the pitfalls of everyday life, and yet, beyond long supermarket lines and marital dysfunction, demons walk among us, waiting to strike.