Mercy (2026)

Chris Pratt has 90 minutes to prove his innocence to an AI judge — and the whole trial plays out on your screen like a digital panic attack.

Crowd Score: 6.2/10

Who Is It For?

Fans of high-concept thrillers and screenlife cinema (Searching, Unfriended) who enjoy watching stories unfold through digital interfaces. If you like Chris Pratt in dramatic mode and want a tight, real-time race-against-the-clock thriller, this delivers 99 minutes of escalating tension. Also for viewers curious about near-future AI justice concepts.

Vibe Match

Searching meets Minority Report with a dash of 12 Angry Men

What People Are Saying

A screenlife thriller that divides audiences between those who enjoy the gimmick and those who find it headache-inducing.

— crowd consensus

Chris Pratt carries the film with unexpected dramatic weight, even as the concept strains under its own restrictions.

— editorial

Rebecca Ferguson's AI judge is an unsettling, compelling presence that elevates the courtroom tension.

— editorial

The real-time 90-minute format creates genuine urgency that keeps you locked in.

— editorial

The screenlife format becomes exhausting — staring at simulated phone screens and dashboards for 99 minutes wears thin.

— editorial