Azura Skye stars as a real estate agent who is given an odd assignment which involves selling an old and possibly haunted factory to an up and coming millennial celebrity and her entourage. Skye is no stranger to the horror genre and she approaches the lean material with a graceful sense of commitment, keeping the focus on the story at hand rather than her character's initial plight. She is supported by Cayleb Long who portrays a construction expert who becomes enamored with the unusual elements of the factory. As with Skye, Long does an excellent job in keeping with the theme, but it is his understated display of academic curiosity that steals the focus. The rest of the cast is an expected mismatch of victims, but how they meet their various ends is one of the film's strongest advantages. Golan Ramras's script is surprisingly abrupt with its killings and conservative with the violence, contrasting other small projects who attempt to mask shoestring budgets with buckets of blood.