Welcome to the Horror… of Boredom
Ah, Reyvumun — the 2018 Maldivian horror film that proves evil isn’t found in ghosts, demons, or cursed objects, but in 90 minutes of cinematic mediocrity. Written, directed, and produced by Amjad Ibrahim (the Maldivian triple threat of “good intentions, bad execution, and even worse lighting”), Reyvumun attempts to be a supernatural thriller. What it delivers instead feels like a slow-moving domestic drama that occasionally remembers, “Oh right, we’re supposed to be scary!”
If you’ve ever thought, “What if The Conjuring had no budget, no tension, and everyone spoke like they were reading off cue cards?” — congratulations, you’ve already seen Reyvumun in spirit.
Love, Marriage, and Unwanted Specters
The film follows Yanish (Mohamed Manik), a man so bland he could camouflage inside a beige wall, and Shaheen (Najihaa Azoor), his perpetually wide-eyed fiancée who spends most of the film either screaming, crying, or gazing off into middle distance like she’s waiting for a better movie to start.
They’re in love. They want to get married. Unfortunately, Yanish is broke — which, to be fair, might explain his choice to star in Reyvumun. But don’t worry, he lands a job just in time to move into a new apartment where things immediately go bump in the night.
Except “bump” might be too generous. It’s more like shuffle awkwardly in the background.
There’s blood in the bathroom sink! A creepy reflection in the mirror! A woman with dead eyes who keeps showing up uninvited! It’s Hareera (Fauziyya Hassan), the movie’s resident ghost, who clearly attended the School of Generic Horror Tropes: slow walking, whispery voice, and no motivation beyond “I exist to look spooky.”
The Ghost With the Most… Confusion
Let’s talk about Hareera. She’s dead. She’s angry. She occasionally morphs into other people, like a dollar-store version of The Thing. But the movie never actually tells us why she’s doing this. Did someone wrong her? Was she murdered? Did she also watch this movie and die of boredom?
Her scenes appear at random, usually accompanied by ominous music that sounds like it was recorded on a Nokia phone. Sometimes she stalks Shaheen. Sometimes she haunts Yanish. Sometimes she just loiters around the apartment like she’s lost. By the halfway point, you start rooting for her — if only because she’s the only one doing anything remotely interesting.
Subplots That Should Have Stayed Dead
Meanwhile, there’s a parallel storyline involving Zufar (Ahmed Shaaz), Shaheen’s psychotic brother-in-law. He’s abusive, controlling, and spends most of his screen time yelling or glowering like a man who got lost on his way to a different movie. Zufar’s obsession with finding Shaheen is meant to add a human layer of menace — but mostly it just pads the runtime.
His wife Shahidha (Mariyam Shakeela) suffers nobly, because that’s what women do in this kind of film. She cries. She warns. She exists solely to make the audience wish they’d brought popcorn.
If the ghost subplot is confusing, the domestic abuse subplot is downright depressing — and not in the “meaningful social commentary” way. It’s as if the director thought, “You know what this haunted house movie needs? A side of family trauma!”
The Horror of Technical Choices
Now, let’s talk craft — or, in this case, the artistic equivalent of a flat tire.
The cinematography by Magesh K. Dev feels allergic to clarity. Every scene looks like it was filmed through a used tissue. The lighting swings wildly from “too dark to see” to “so bright you can spot the cameraman’s reflection.” The editing (by Deepak) is so jagged that even ghosts look confused about which scene they’re in.
Jump scares are replaced by what can only be described as “mild startles.” A door creaks. A window flaps. Someone gasps. The music blares like a foghorn. Then… nothing happens. Again and again. It’s horror by repetition — if you experience it long enough, you might indeed start to hallucinate.
Performances: Or, How to Act Like You Don’t Want to Be There
Mohamed Manik, as Yanish, spends the film looking mildly inconvenienced — like a man who just found out his Wi-Fi is down. His reaction to supernatural terror is the same as his reaction to breakfast cereal: slightly confused, vaguely sleepy, and 100% uninterested.
Najihaa Azoor’s Shaheen has more expressions, but unfortunately, they all involve the same wide-eyed stare of impending hysteria. It’s as if someone told her, “Imagine you’ve just realized you left the stove on,” and she carried that energy through the entire movie.
Even the ghost, Hareera, seems tired. There’s no menace in her movements, no emotion in her haunting — she drifts through the film like she’s checking off ghosting duties on a to-do list:
☑ Appear behind mirror
☑ Make creepy noise
☑ Vanish before anything interesting happens
Pacing: Death by Inactivity
If horror movies are rollercoasters, Reyvumun is the broken carousel next to it. The film drags its feet from scene to scene, promising terror but delivering tedium. The pacing is so sluggish that you could take a nap, wake up, and still find Yanish staring at the same spot, contemplating life choices.
The runtime may only be around 90 minutes, but it feels like a geological era. You start wondering if time itself has become haunted.
Sound Design: When a Cat Keyboard Meets an Exorcism
Every “scary” scene is accompanied by what sounds like a toddler’s first experiment with GarageBand. There’s the classic “BWAHHHH” noise every time someone turns around, random whispering that doesn’t sync with anyone’s mouth, and one particularly memorable moment when the ghost’s wail sounds suspiciously like a goat in labor.
It’s hard to be scared when you’re busy laughing.
Plot Holes You Could Drive a Hearse Through
By the time the credits roll (mercifully), Reyvumun has raised more questions than it answers. Why is Hareera haunting them? Why does Yanish see blood everywhere but no one else does? Why does Zufar suddenly disappear halfway through the movie like he realized how bad this was going to be?
And most importantly: who greenlit this script, and are they okay?
Even the ending fails to provide closure. Instead of resolving the ghost story, the film simply stops — as if the editor got tired, sighed deeply, and hit “export.”
The Real Horror: Wasted Potential
To give credit where it’s due, the idea could have worked. Domestic abuse intertwined with supernatural revenge could make for an emotionally potent horror film — something like The Babadook meets Sleeping With the Enemy.
But Reyvumun doesn’t trust its own premise. It wants to be psychological but settles for nonsensical. It wants to be scary but ends up sleepy. It wants to be art, but it’s more like an accident that happened near art.
It’s the kind of movie that makes you appreciate bad Hollywood horror — because at least those have lighting and a sense of direction.
Final Verdict: Ghosted by the Audience
Reyvumun is a film so devoid of life that even its ghosts look like they’re asking to clock out early. It’s a confusing, poorly executed attempt at horror that fails to scare, thrill, or even mildly entertain.
If you’re looking for a Maldivian horror movie to actually frighten you, keep looking. If, however, you’re in the mood for something that might cure your insomnia or give you a newfound respect for The Bye Bye Man, this one’s for you.
Rating: 1.5 out of 5 haunted light switches.
Because the only spirit truly trapped here is the viewer’s will to live.
