Watch Me Sleep
WATCH ME SLEEP has a core reason for existing, which is a premise that does most of the heavy lifting on its own. A man installs a camera inside his mother’s coffin after she’s buried so he can keep watching her. That idea doesn’t need much embellishment. It’s invasive in a way that immediately puts the viewer on edge, and it carries enough emotional and psychological weight to sustain a full film if handled with precision. The issue isn’t the concept. It’s the follow-through.