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The Saviors Review: A Paranoid Thriller with Sharp Ideas and Shaky Follow-Through

Scott Clark by Scott Clark
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The Saviors turns a backyard rental into a national anxiety chamber, which is one way to make Airbnb feel even less relaxing. Kevin Hamedani’s paranoid dark comedy-thriller follows Sean and Kim Harrison, a divorcing suburban couple whose marriage is limping toward its paperwork phase. They need money, so they rent their guest house to Amir and Jahan, Middle Eastern siblings whose quiet manner and odd behavior soon send Sean into a spiral.

The setup is clean, almost deceptively so. Sean notices unexplained lights, strange equipment, packages, evasive answers, and possible links to an upcoming presidential visit. Kim, the steadier half of the pair, initially treats his suspicion as another symptom of a man with too much weed, too much free time, and too little self-awareness. Then the clues begin to pile up.

Hamedani places the film between suburban satire, post-9/11 paranoia, and old-fashioned surveillance thriller. The result is lively, uneasy, and occasionally too blunt for its own good.

Marriage as a Surveillance Operation

The smartest narrative move in The Saviors is the way it lets a collapsing marriage find fresh oxygen through suspicion. Sean is unemployed, emotionally stalled, and sleeping in the basement. Kim is ready to move on. Their house needs repairs, their relationship needs a miracle, and Amir and Jahan become the terrible little spark that gives both of them something to do.

The Saviors Review

The film tracks Sean’s paranoia through a steady chain of suspicious details: Jahan’s silence, her apparent responses to sound, missing personal items, odd electrical devices, late-night movements, strange noises, and a security map connected to the President’s local visit. Each clue nudges the story away from domestic realism and toward a thriller built from blinds, windows, cameras, and bad assumptions.

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What works best is the strange intimacy of the investigation. Sean and Kim become amateur spies, and their shared fear starts to function like couples therapy conducted by two people who should never be given night-vision equipment. Their rekindled chemistry carries a funny, faintly embarrassing charge. Nothing says romance like deciding your tenants might be assassins.

The weakness is repetition. Once the film sets its mechanism in motion, it circles several of the same emotional beats before reaching its reveal. Sean suspects. Kim resists. Kim notices something. The suspicion grows. The structure remains readable, but not always elastic. By the time the ending shifts the ground beneath the story, the surprise lands with force, then passes too quickly to reshape the characters in a deeper way.

The Liberal Panic Button

The film’s sharpest idea sits in Sean’s self-image. He sees himself as decent, progressive, and clearly separate from his conspiracy-soaked parents. He is certain he is not the problem, which is often the first clue that a character is about to become exactly that. His suspicion of Amir and Jahan grows from a place he keeps trying to describe as reason, but the film understands how fear borrows the language of caution.

Kim’s role gives this dynamic a useful complication. She calls out Sean’s insulated worldview early on, and Danielle Deadwyler plays those moments with grounded impatience. Yet the script moves her into the investigation too quickly.

Her shift makes thematic sense, since prejudice can spread through intimacy and panic, but the character needed sharper interior conflict. Her Blackness could have given the film a richer perspective on suspicion, surveillance, and racial performance in polite suburbia. Instead, the movie gestures toward that tension, then hurries back to the plot machinery.

Still, The Saviors has bite when it connects private dissatisfaction to public aggression. Sean and Kim are stuck, bored, broke, and humiliated by their own failure. Believing in a threat gives them purpose. Their “heroism” starts to look less like moral duty and closer to emotional displacement with a corkboard.

The unnamed President is a smart choice. He becomes an emblem of American fear culture rather than a fixed partisan target. Protests, militarism, immigration panic, and media-fed dread surround the story like background radiation.

Yet the satire weakens because Amir and Jahan really do behave strangely. The film wants to examine projection, then keeps handing Sean evidence. That tension can be fun, but it blunts the critique.

A Cast Fighting the Static

Adam Scott is ideally cast as Sean, bringing nervous affability to a man who wants to appear reasonable while behaving like a neighborhood watch committee after three espressos. Scott understands the comedy of denial. He makes Sean funny without softening the ugliness of his assumptions.

Danielle Deadwyler gives Kim warmth, intelligence, and a tired clarity that keeps the film from floating too far into cartoon paranoia. Her chemistry with Scott is easy to believe, perhaps almost too easy for a couple supposedly near divorce. Their scenes together provide the film’s most effective comic rhythm, especially once fear becomes foreplay for the terminally nosy.

Theo Rossi and Nazanin Boniadi give the film its necessary gravity. Rossi plays Amir with guarded restraint, suggesting pain and purpose beneath every careful answer. Boniadi’s Jahan, quiet and watchful, turns silence into pressure. The script keeps them mysterious by design, but the performances prevent them from feeling like simple puzzle pieces.

Kate Berlant brings a welcome comic jolt as Cleo, Sean’s conspiratorial sister, giving the film a dose of familial absurdity that feels both ridiculous and recognizable. Greg Kinnear’s private investigator pushes harder into broad comedy, complete with wig-heavy eccentricity. He is amusing, though his scenes sometimes tilt the film toward sketch territory.

Hamedani’s direction finds strong textures in desaturated visions, suburban stillness, and a faint Twilight Zone chill. The music and cinematography support the sense of a normal home becoming a paranoid trap. The tonal mixture is lively, but uneven. The Saviors is tense, funny, politically alert, and messy, often in the same scene. Its best instincts are sharp. Its follow-through is shakier.

The Saviors is an American independent dark comedy science-fiction thriller film that celebrated its world premiere at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Film & TV Festival on March 13, 2026, screening in the Narrative Spotlight category. Directed and co-penned by Kevin Hamedani, the paranoid psychological narrative centers on a fractured suburban couple on the verge of divorce whose domestic tensions are violently interrupted by an apparent extraterrestrial encounter. As global sales agencies like Protagonist Pictures represent the buzzy independent feature following high-profile screenings at film markets such as Cannes, cinema enthusiasts can track its upcoming rollout schedule across international film festivals while the production secures wider theatrical and digital streaming platform distribution deals.

Where to Watch The Saviors (2026) Online

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Full Credits

  • Title: The Saviors

  • Distributor: Protagonist Pictures, CAA Media Finance, UTA Independent Film Group

  • Release date: March 13, 2026

  • Running time: 90 minutes

  • Director: Kevin Hamedani

  • Writers: Kevin Hamedani, Travis Betz

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Adam Scott, Naomi Scott, Nicholas Weinstock, Dan Gedman, Matt Smith, Divya D’Souza, Bradley Gallo, Michael Helfant, Danielle Deadwyler, Alyssa Roehrenbeck, Josh Sathre

  • Cast: Adam Scott, Danielle Deadwyler, Ron Perlman, Colleen Camp, Greg Kinnear, Theo Rossi, Daveed Diggs, Kate Berlant

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Jon Keng

  • Editors: Ben Baudhin, Tom McArdle, Kristen Young

  • Composer: Nick Shadel, Kyle O’Quin

The Review

The Saviors

6.5 Score

The Saviors is a sharp, uneven paranoid thriller with a strong premise, a committed cast, and enough dark comic bite to keep its suspicion machine running. Its best idea, a failing marriage revived by shared fear, is funny and nasty in the right ways. Yet the film repeats itself before a rushed final turn, and its satire sometimes gives paranoia too much evidence. A messy, smart, watchable swing.

PROS

  • Strong performances from Adam Scott and Danielle Deadwyler
  • Theo Rossi and Nazanin Boniadi add real tension
  • Clever marriage-as-surveillance setup
  • Timely satire about prejudice and fear
  • Effective suburban paranoia and visual mood

CONS

  • Pacing grows repetitive in the middle
  • Kim’s perspective feels underwritten
  • Final reveal is too compressed
  • Satire loses force when the tenants act too suspicious
  • Comic tone sometimes drifts into sketch territory

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Adam ScottColleen CampComedyDanielle DeadwylerDaveed DiggsFeaturedGreg KinnearHighway 10Kate BerlantKevin HamedaniRon PerlmanSci-FiThe SaviorsTheo RossiThriller
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