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The Girl - On The Train(2016)

The "new" wife (Rebecca Ferguson) who is fiercely protective of her domestic bliss.

Their stories weave together to show how expectations of women can push them to a breaking point. The Verdict: Is It Worth a Watch? The Girl on the Train(2016)

What makes this film so unsettling isn't just the mystery; it’s the unreliable narrator . Because of Rachel's frequent blackouts, we only see the world through her fractured, alcohol-soaked lens. Director Tate Taylor uses "drunk vision" cinematography to put us right in her shoes—confused, defensive, and desperate for the truth. The "new" wife (Rebecca Ferguson) who is fiercely

The "perfect" wife who is actually trapped in her own secrets. What makes this film so unsettling isn't just

Everything changes when Rachel sees something shocking from the train window. The next day, Megan is reported missing, and Rachel wakes up covered in blood with zero memory of the night before. Suddenly, she’s no longer just a voyeur—she’s a key witness (or perhaps a suspect) in a missing persons investigation. Why It Works: The Power of the Unreliable Narrator

Blurred Realities: Why The Girl on the Train (2016) Still Haunts Our Daily Commute