‎'Drop' review: When AirDrop becomes deadly in a tense, stylish tech thriller starring Meghann Fahy

Sometimes, cinematic inspiration strikes from the strangest digital encounters. For Drop, the spark came when Olivia Sui—partner to executive producer Sam Lerner—began receiving bizarre Shrek memes via Apple’s AirDrop. That bizarre quirk was reimagined by director Christopher Landon into a darkly comic, high-stakes tech thriller that transforms harmless file-sharing into a sinister game of survival.
‎'Drop.'
‎Universal Pictures
‎At the center of the film is Violet (Meghann Fahy), a single mother hesitant to rejoin the dating world. With gentle encouragement from her sister, she agrees to one night out, entrusting her young son’s bedtime to a babysitter. Her date, Henry (played with affable charm by Brandon Sklenar), seems promising. But just as their dinner begins in a sleek, high-rise restaurant, Violet’s phone buzzes with AirDrop messages. First odd, then alarming, and soon overtly threatening.
‎This tightly wound thriller uses modern technology as its crucible. The AirDrop feature, with its 50-foot transmission range, smartly confines the suspect pool to everyone in the restaurant. It becomes a microcosm of suspicion, where every glance and gesture hints at possible danger. From the awkward loner scrolling through his phone to the overly friendly waiter, every character becomes a potential source of menace.
‎Landon’s direction elevates the premise far above pulp. Through carefully staged lighting, saturated color grading, and precise cinematography, he transforms a posh restaurant into a pressure cooker of digital dread. The final sequence in particular showcases his visual command, with tension boiling over into an explosively stylized climax.
Universal Pictures
‎Though the film’s ending doesn’t fully capitalize on its suspenseful buildup, Drop succeeds in its exploration of modern anxieties. Our dependence on phones—devices we clutch for comfort—becomes a vulnerability. As Violet navigates escalating threats, the tools she once relied on betray her, while the restaurant’s posh interior turns into a gilded cage monitored by ever-present cameras.
‎Fahy, best known for her sharp performance in The White Lotus, grounds the chaos with a nuanced portrayal. She balances fear, wit, and resilience with remarkable restraint, even as the story veers into digital absurdity. While Landon and co-writers Jillian Jacobs and Chris Roach embrace the film’s wild narrative possibilities, it’s Fahy who injects emotional authenticity.

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