Cut to black. Title card:
The final shot is devastating. Gia Paige is alone in the apartment after he leaves for work. She picks up her phone to call a friend. She stares at the screen. She puts it down. She looks directly into the camera lens—breaking the fourth wall—with an expression that says, “No one would believe me anyway.” PureTaboo - Gia Paige - Is Everything Ok
When the male gaze turns into a restraining order—a look at PureTaboo’s most unsettling domestic thriller. We talk a lot about "elevated horror" in mainstream cinema. Think Hereditary or The Invisible Man —films that use genre tropes to explore real-world trauma. But over on the adult side of the streaming world, PureTaboo has quietly become the A24 of psychological dread. Cut to black
Gia Paige plays a young woman who has just moved in with her boyfriend (played by Seth Gamble). On the surface, it’s domestic bliss. But the camera (literally, the production’s POV) starts to linger on the cracks. He checks her phone when she showers. He questions why she smiled at the barista. He shows up at her work "just to surprise her." She picks up her phone to call a friend
★★★★☆ (4/5) One star deducted because I genuinely felt like I needed a shower and a therapy session afterward. Which, I suppose, is the point.
