Bizarre
The basic premise: A family outing in the RV turns dark when the couple's young daughter disappears. Local law enforcement takes up the search and investigation, but the couple also take it upon themselves to find her.
The directing is competent. Where this movie goes totally off the rails is the story and the acting.
At times my wife and I weren't sure whether it was meant to be a black comedy or not. In the course of their misadventures, the couple end up killing a few people unintentionally. So they are trying to find their daughter, while simultaneously trying to avoid getting caught for their crimes.
Other times it drops in some sexual thriller stuff when the husband starts lusting after the wife in a nearby RV who puts on a sex show through the window for him.
Shady characters abound EVERYWHERE! The guy who runs the campground has a dark secret. The mentally challenged kid who maintains the park is sure sketchy. The strangely untalkative, unfriendly husband in the next RV... what's his deal? And who is that shirtless guy sleeping on the ground next to a fire deep in the woods... is he the escaped convict on the loose in the area?
And, omg, did they just use that corny old cliche where the wife -- nervously exploring a dark room -- is startled by the cat that jumps out?!
Anne Heche gives new meaning to the word "histrionics". As times she seems less "extremely upset mother" and more "screeching homeless woman off her meds". Even the normally reliable Thomas Jane is reduced to high school drama level acting here. Jason Patric as the local law officer is the only one who gives a credible performance.
One reviewer described it as "an unexpectedly twisty psychological thriller". They clearly haven't seen enough movies because you'll figure out the ending long before you get there.
The sort of movie that would be good only if you were drunk or high and made up your own dialogue as you watched it.