Verity (2026) is a psychological thriller adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s bestselling novel, bringing its chilling blend of romance, obsession, and suspense to the screen. Stylish, unsettling, and full of shocking twists, the film explores the blurred lines between truth and fiction, and the darkness that hides behind closed doors.

The story follows Lowen Ashleigh (played by a rising star), a struggling writer who is offered the opportunity of a lifetime: to finish the remaining books in a successful series by the acclaimed author Verity Crawford, who has been incapacitated after a mysterious accident. To begin her work, Lowen is invited to stay at the Crawford home, where she can sift through Verity’s notes and outlines.
Once inside the sprawling, isolated house, Lowen becomes entangled with Verity’s husband, Jeremy (rumored to be cast with a charismatic leading man), who is still grieving the tragic loss of their twin daughters. As Lowen spends more time in the home, she begins to uncover chilling secrets—most notably Verity’s hidden autobiographical manuscript, which reveals shocking confessions about her marriage, her children, and her true nature.
Torn between her growing attraction to Jeremy and the horrifying discoveries she’s making, Lowen spirals into paranoia. Is Verity truly incapacitated, or is she faking her condition? Are the “confessions” in the manuscript real, or a twisted work of fiction? As tension builds, every glance, every whisper in the dark, and every creak in the house blurs the line between reality and manipulation.

The film escalates to a nerve-shredding climax, forcing Lowen—and the audience—to confront a devastating choice: who to believe, and what truth to accept, when every version of the story could destroy someone’s life.

Verity (2026) promises to be a sleek, atmospheric thriller in the tradition of Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train, filled with unreliable narrators, claustrophobic suspense, and morally tangled romance. It’s a film that will leave audiences debating long after the credits roll: was Verity a monster, or simply a victim of the stories told about her?