
The power and water remain running, but the live television stations broadcast only test signals.

As they discuss the possible reasons why the city has become empty, Jenai repeatedly attempts to contact her family in America to no avail. They spot a running car, and, not being able to locate the owner, appropriate it. They continue having trouble locating other people once they leave: the streets are empty, the stores have no staff, and nobody answers their calls. They are frustrated to find that their lodging is not serving breakfast, then confused when they find no staff. Hours later, Riley wakes Jenai to get breakfast. Looking out the window to admire the view, she sees strange flashes of the Northern Lights in the distance. After retiring for the night, Jenai seems to wake up in the middle of the night and has trouble falling back asleep. Jenai reveals that her father is a preacher, though she says his church was not as pretty. They visit an old church, and a priest tells them some of its history, calling the pre-Christian times simpler. When Jenai questions why he prefers it over a modern digital camera, Riley says he prefers to capture the imperfections of the moment rather than have a computer chip auto-correct all the errors.

Riley has taken his father's Rolleiflex camera and plenty of film. It premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival and was released theatrically in the United States on March 24, 2017.Īmerican tourists Jenai and Riley arrive in Iceland and visit several landmarks. It stars Maika Monroe and Matt O'Leary as two American tourists in Iceland who find everyone else on the island has mysteriously vanished. Is a 2017 science fiction drama film written and directed by Geoffrey Orthwein and Andrew Sullivan.
