Parker is ambitious and relentless in pursuing her dream of acting in Los Angeles – a rising star who years ago unceremoniously left a life in Arizona in her rear-view mirror. Indiana is Parker’s older and now estranged sister – an effortless force of nature whose life of crime in Arizona is slowly catching up with her. In I’VE SEEN ALL I NEED TO SEE, we follow Parker as she is called back to her hometown after learning of Indiana’s sudden and violent death.
This film is an examination of grief, loss, and unending love between two sisters. Who are we when we lose the people we love most? What do they take with them? What do they leave behind? Is there an ancestral predetermination that has us on a trajectory towards an inevitable fate?
I’VE SEEN ALL I NEED TO SEE is equal parts drama and thriller. It meticulously looks at the gaps in space and time that we create when attempting to move on from a tragedy. Sometimes, the closer you look, the quicker you realize those gaps are more like holes punched into drywall. Dark voids, searching for and swallowing all available light. Constant reminders of the violence coded into our cells.
Will Parker surrender herself to a spinning, incomprehensible darkness? Or will she escape the immense gravity of loss with greater knowledge of who she really is?