When struggling writer Lowen Ashleigh is offered the chance of a lifetime — to finish the bestselling series of injured author Verity Crawford — she believes her luck has finally turned. Invited to the Crawfords’ lavish, eerie home to go through Verity’s notes, Lowen soon discovers an unfinished autobiography hidden in a drawer… one that was never meant to be read. And what she finds inside changes everything.

The manuscript is shocking — raw, disturbing, and painfully intimate. In it, Verity confesses to chilling acts and sinister thoughts about her family, particularly her twin daughters. As Lowen reads further, she becomes haunted by the lines between fiction and reality, especially as she begins to fall for Verity’s grieving — and dangerously charming — husband, Jeremy.
But things in the house aren’t what they seem. Verity lies mute in bed, allegedly brain-damaged, but Lowen starts to suspect she’s faking her condition. Strange sounds echo at night, objects move, and a growing sense of dread begins to consume her. As her attraction to Jeremy deepens, so does her fear — not just of Verity, but of what she’s capable of doing with the secrets she’s uncovered.

Torn between telling the truth and protecting herself, Lowen faces a horrifying choice: expose Verity and risk everything — or stay silent and become part of the deception. But the deeper she digs, the more tangled the truth becomes, and soon she must question who the real monster is — the woman in the bed, the man beside her, or herself.

Verity (2026) is a tense, seductive psychological thriller that pulls viewers into a world where obsession, manipulation, and buried trauma collide. With twists that will leave audiences gasping and a final revelation that changes everything, this film asks one unforgettable question: how far would you go for the truth — and can you live with it once you know?
