

Movie spotlight
Lucid
Winter and summer, day and night, life and dreams. Lucid is all about duality. Anxious and awkward in real life, Everett decides to make a change. After coming across studies in the art of Lucid dreaming, Everett hopes to improve his inept social skills. Will having full control of his dreams help him feel complete? Find out in the second feature-length film imagined by Nate Ross & Daniel Walker: Lucid.
Insights
Plot Summary
A young woman named Sarah grapples with a disturbing past and a fragmented sense of self. As she tries to navigate her present, she finds herself drawn into a world of vivid dreams and unsettling realities. The film explores themes of memory, identity, and the search for truth.
Critical Reception
Lucid received a mixed to positive reception, with critics often praising its atmospheric tension and strong central performance, while some found the narrative occasionally convoluted. Audiences were drawn to its psychological depth.
What Reviewers Say
Praised for its unsettling atmosphere and visual style.
Noted for a compelling lead performance that anchors the film's psychological themes.
Some critics found the plot progression to be ambiguous or difficult to follow.
Google audience: Audience reviews are not widely available or aggregated for this title on Google.
Fun Fact
The film's intimate setting and focus on internal struggle were key elements in building its tense, claustrophobic atmosphere.
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