IMDb 0 2025 HD

I See You Lyla

I See You Lyla

2025
Horror
6 min
0 IMDB

When Lyla spends the night at her best friend Cecilia’s house, what begins as a casual catch-up quickly turns unsettling. Strange noises and subtle disturbances unsettle Lyla, though…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Alex Hasler / Dylan Harrigan
Starring
Rosey Byrne / Alex Hasler / Hannah Baker

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

unsettling atmospheric slow burn tense psychological minimalist frustrating predictable masterful dull relatable claustrophobic

Reviews

A
Anya Sharma
Feb 27, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

As a chamber piece of psychological tension, I See You Lyla is intermittently effective. The central performances anchor the film, with Byrne’s palpable fear convincingly contrasted against Baker’s blasé demeanour. The film successfully creates several moments of genuine,…

D
David Park
Feb 27, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

Unnervingly brilliant, I See You Lyla is a testament to the power of suggestion. This is horror crafted in the negative space, in what is heard and half-glimpsed. Rosey Byrne delivers a career-high in quiet anxiety, making us…

C
Clarissa Jones
Feb 27, 2026
2.5 / 5
2.5

There’s a promising kernel of an idea here, but I See You Lyla never quite transcends its familiar trappings. The setup is effective—the friend who doesn’t believe you is a timeless horror trope—and the performances are committed. Yet,…

M
Marcus Chen
Feb 27, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

A masterclass in atmospheric dread, I See You Lyla proves that the most potent horrors are those felt, not seen. The confined setting becomes a character in itself, every creak and shadow meticulously weaponised by the assured, if…

E
Eleanor Rigby
Feb 27, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

I See You Lyla is a competent exercise in slow-burn, domestic unease. The premise is razor-sharp: a simple sleepover curdling into a nightmare of subtlety. Rosey Byrne excels as Lyla, her every flinch and sidelong glance selling the…

FAQs

Based solely on the provided context, 'I See You Lyla' appears to be an excellent candidate for viewers who prefer psychological chills to visceral horror. The scare tactics described are auditory and atmospheric—'strange noises,' 'subtle disturbances,' and a pervasive sense of observation. There is no mention of graphic violence or gore. The terror is implied and felt through the protagonist's growing paranoia. This suggests a film that unsettles the mind more than it shocks the senses, though final confirmation would require a full content review.