Leo looks at the final package on his seat. It’s small. Pulsing. Addressed to him. The tape hisses static. And from the back of his van, he hears a soft, rhythmic knock.
Leo Mendez has worked the night shift at the "Last Mile" distribution center in Crescent Hills for three years. It’s a gray, windowless warehouse on the edge of a dying town. His job: deliver the un-deliverable. The packages that drivers during the day refused. The ones that smell like wet earth. The ones that tick. amazon prime movie horror
It’s a recording of himself, three days from now. His hair is white. His eyes are black voids. He’s sitting in his living room, surrounded by every package he’s ever delivered—all opened. And he’s whispering into the camera: Leo looks at the final package on his seat
The packages get worse. A child’s music box that replays the last words of a drowning victim. A mirror that shows not your reflection, but the person you’ve hurt most. A set of keys that unlock any door—including the one inside your mind to a memory you’ve repressed. Addressed to him
“Don’t knock. Don’t scan the last one. Just drive. Drive until the gas runs out. Because what’s in Package 4B… isn’t a thing. It’s a choice. And once you make it, you become the next delivery driver.”
The climax arrives when he scans his final package of the night. The label is smudged, but the address reads: Apartment 4B, Crescent Hills— his own apartment. His name is printed in shaky handwriting he recognizes as his own, from a future he hasn’t lived yet.
A reclusive delivery driver for a remote Amazon Prime hub discovers that the "unreturnable" packages he’s forced to deliver at night contain cursed objects meant to break the spirit of their recipients—and his final stop of the shift is his own apartment.