Review:

Spoiler-Free Summary
The Lonely Crowd takes the familiar nightmare of modern dating and twists it into something far more chaotic, dangerous, and strangely charming. Peter, a cynical former baseball player reluctantly pushed back into the world of online romance, finds himself opposite Ashley, a woman who instantly challenges, frustrates, and unsettles him. What begins as an awkward mismatched date quickly spirals beyond bruised egos and bad first impressions when the pair are forced together by a violent encounter that pulls them into a tangled web of crime, mistrust, and survival.
Blending old school romance, noir-tinged crime, and 90s-style entanglement thriller energy, the film uses its bad-date setup as a springboard into something much bigger. Beneath the stolen money, corrupt figures, and escalating danger is a story about lonely people colliding at the worst possible time, bringing all their assumptions, pride, fear, and emotional baggage with them. The result is a genre-mixing thriller with a sharp romantic edge, where chemistry and conflict are often the same thing, and where one terrible evening refuses to end quietly.
“Balancing being menacing and charming in all the right ways.”
The film follows the lives of two everyday, ordinary people whose lives collide in fascinating fashion. The dialogue does a great job at highlighting the lack of tolerance or patience for this new digital world of online dating, particularly from the point of view of those not brought up with it as the standard way to meet and interact. It also serves as a quirky but slightly terrifying reminder that a situation can escalate with potentially devastating consequences at any given moment, regardless of your moral compass. In this case, even off the back of a terribly mismatched blind date.
At its core, it’s really a mixed genre of old school romance, crime, and entanglement thrillers from the 90s. It works exceptionally well to balance all those elements. Whenever one gets too prominent, another slaps you in the face to keep you engaged.
Adam Wesley stars as Peter, a former baseball player, bitter and cynical at life, who is nudged into a Tinder-style date with the kind of carefree encouragement of every well-meaning but happily married best friend.
The date itself is every old school companionship seeker’s worst nightmare when he meets the beautifully intriguing Ashley. She is everything that annoys him. Late, assumption-making, a little condescending, and abrupt. The date doesn’t last long, but fate conspires to keep the pair together when Peter intervenes during a violent altercation between Ashley and her past baggage.

“One of the few indie films in a while to master the art of noir iconography.”
Taylor Anne Danehower is fantastic as Ashley. Her introduction was almost perfect as a femme fatale; however, the dialogue did steer her more towards the unsympathetic than the intriguing very quickly, although she did well to try to control the boat back and keep the nuance.
Her character’s dialogue could have been more on the mysterious side as opposed to having her overly explain to us every which way that she is an awful person. I personally would have preferred to see her give away tells more succinctly. In contrast, however, Peter’s baseball past sets up an excellent manner to perfectly encapsulate his entire situation by using a casual sports game to reference and establish.
However, once the pair are thrown into the intense situation, her character rapidly becomes its own glorious entity, and the chemistry between both really does make for an interesting His Girl Friday-style back and forth.
The supporting cast is what really shines. Usually in a film like this, the peripheral cast are not strong, but at various points, it’s almost an ensemble. Kudos to very good casting in pivotal roles, which lends credibility to the story and naturally adds momentum to the progression of the characters’ truths. In particular, Giancarlo Carmona as Jake. He manages to inhabit menace in a fresh yet terrifying, edgy manner.
What also struck me about this is the consistent care that has gone into the visual elements. Whether intentional or not, there’s no denying that in places, this film is very noir. Showcasing some incredible iconography. One of the few indie films in a while to master the art of this. Throughout the film, but in particular the last scene from red to blue, with that cheeky bit of scarlet in the mix.

“A nostalgic feeling film that will somehow, against your better judgement, charm the pants off you.”
Who This Is For
90s thriller fans will love this. It ticks the box for every genre in the mix, but it’s slicker than many in the action department. Balancing being menacing and charming in all the right ways. A nostalgic feeling film that will somehow, against your better judgement, perhaps, charm the pants off you.
Final Verdict
The film is strong when it’s utilising tricks of the trade in a seamless manner to hide its indie roots and elevate its locations, whilst Garrett Stotko’s cinematography keeps us in the genre mix of the moment.
The set-up of the commotion is interesting and natural, as were a lot of the crime thriller traps and tropes to keep them together.
It went from a bad date, to a kidnap heist, to Meet the Fockers and back again, but it did so in a great way and somehow managed to feel like this is a weird Tinder date we could realistically be on and subsequently thrown into. A credit to the direction by David St. Clair that all the elements were effectively balanced, a majority of the time to achieve this.
There are a few scenes that, although they are good, are unnecessary to move the story along. Whilst it has excellent character interactions, scenes, and moments, some scenes fell into the category where The Lonely Crowd should have been a series, or it should have been shorter. As such, the initial claustrophobic nature of the intense situation dissolves as the locations and run time increase. The payoff doesn’t quite hit the home run that it should; perhaps it feels like the portion drifted and came back. But it is in no way bad; it just doesn’t pack the same punch, action-wise, as the early portions of the film set up well.
Unfortunately, it does get a little repetitive in the dialogue, even in the character moments where the scene itself works well, which ultimately contributes to the feeling of dragging towards the final third of the film.
If you had a shot every time the word “money” is mentioned, you’d pass out. Which is a shame as with some tightening, this would be a full-marked, interesting, well-acted, taut film that takes you straight back to those 90s classics.
Overall, a splendid way to spend an evening. Average Score: 7.2/10

Follow The Film:
The Lonely Crowd is available now on Prime Video: https://www.primevideo.com/detail/0KCQTUM74V7EXPLUF2UYUUL18O
Official Website: https://www.thelonelycrowdmovie.com/
IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt35508372/?ref_=fn_t_1
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelonelycrowdmovie/
YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/@desarioproductions
TMDb: https://www.themoviedb.org/movie/1665163-the-lonely-crowd?language=en-US
Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/film/the-lonely-crowd/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thelonelycrowdmovie
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thelonelycrowdmovie
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/tlcmovie.bsky.social
Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/thelonelycrowdmovie

Main Crew
Writer/Director: David St. Clair
Producer: Jim St. Clair
Cinematographer: Garrett Stotko
Editor: Daniel Seigerman
Composer: Kevin Morrison
Technical Info
Runtime: 106 minutes
Resolution: 1080p, 1920 x 1080
Frame Rate: 24 fps
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
Sound: Stereo AAC, 5.1 mix available
Captions/Subtitles: English and French available
Main Cast
Peter: Adam Wesley
Ashley: Taylor Anne Danehower
Jake: Giancarlo Carmona
Phil: Jon Oshei
Diana: Haley Spencer
Matt: Blair Chambers
Barnes: Matthew Doman
Gloria: Amanda Casarella
Charlie: Andrew Mena
Watch More:
The Review
The Lonely Crowd (2026)
A bad date spirals into a slick, noir-tinged 90s thriller.
PROS
- Performance
- Characters
- Story
CONS
- Runtime
- Slow towards the final
- On the nose dialogue
Review Breakdown
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Story
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Performance
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Direction
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Cinematography
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Payoff


