After losing her job and her boyfriend in the same week, Olive decides to do a little soul searching out of town. She rents a luxuriously vintage mansion in a remote countryside, where she settles down for some quality time alone. Unbeknownst to her, her host is also experiencing an identity crisis and has vastly different plans for her. Tone Deaf touts itself as horror-comedy, but I found most of the humor to be dry. The characters didn’t feel fully fleshed out, and the intended millennial-boomer conflict had no place in the story. While there were redeeming scenes, the film tried to fit too much into one story and would have been better as a basic slasher.