For- Jadynn Stone In-: Searching

Rating: ★★★★½ (Docked half a star only because the middle section in the abandoned library drags by exactly four minutes too long—but even that feels intentional.)

And then, three days later, it hit me. I was still searching for Jadynn Stone. In my car. In the way a stranger held their coffee cup. In an old voicemail from a friend I haven’t called back.

Searching For: Jadynn Stone In— is not entertainment. It is an interactive ghost story where you are the medium. It asks a question far more unsettling than "Who is Jadynn Stone?" It asks: Why are we so desperate to find someone we were never promised we could know? Searching For- Jadynn Stone In-

Do not watch this if you need plot, catharsis, or answers. Do watch it if you believe that art’s highest purpose is to create an absence so profound that you feel compelled to fill it with your own humanity.

The supporting cast doesn’t act to an absence; they act around a wound. A child (no more than eight years old, credited only as "The Rememberer") draws a crayon portrait of Jadynn that the camera never shows us. But the child’s face—a mixture of profound love and utter confusion—tells us more than any exposition ever could. Rating: ★★★★½ (Docked half a star only because

There are works that demand to be watched, and then there are works that demand to be felt . Searching For: Jadynn Stone In— (the deliberate trailing dash in the title is the first clue) belongs defiantly to the latter category. Directed with an almost unnerving restraint, this experimental short film / psychological docu-fiction (the genre itself seems to blur) is not a story about a person. It is a story about the negative space a person leaves behind.

The narrative, if one can call it that, unfolds through a series of fragmented interviews. A gas station clerk (a stunning, raw performance by relative newcomer Elias Corso) remembers "a person who paid in lint and silence." An ex-lover (Vera Harlow, devastating in her single three-minute monologue) describes Jadynn as "a verb pretending to be a noun." A private investigator, whose face we never see, reads aloud a list of items found in Jadynn’s last known apartment: one unsharpened pencil, three different left shoes, a jar of river water, no photographs. In the way a stranger held their coffee cup

Searching For: Jadynn Stone In— will haunt your peripheral vision for weeks. You will find yourself glancing at crowded rooms, wondering if Jadynn is there. And in that wondering, the film wins.