In a near-future where entertainment has become dangerously immersive, a disgraced film editor is forced to walk through a two-kilometer physical movie — and discovers the film is rewriting his past in real time.
The path becomes a dark forest. Fog, low-frequency hum. Trees have screens for bark, each showing a different "lost audience member" — people who entered Kilometer Films and never exited. Their eyes blink. One mouths: "Don’t reach the end." Kaelen realizes: the 2kmovie isn’t entertainment. It’s a containment protocol for unwanted memories, exiled people, deleted identities. Lena was "edited out" of reality. 2kmovie
He receives an anonymous message: "Walk the 2kmovie. Find Lena. Don’t trust the exit." Kilometer 0 (The Lobby) Kaelen enters a sterile white tunnel. A voice (AI curator "MUSE") greets him: "Welcome to your personalized 2kmovie. Duration: 2 kilometers. Every step reveals a truth. Do not stop walking." He’s given no script, no synopsis. Only a wristband that glows red as his stress rises. In a near-future where entertainment has become dangerously
The twist: The film’s narrative adapts to your biometrics — heart rate, pupil dilation, gait, even skin conductance. It knows your fears, your regrets, your buried memories. Kaelen Voss (34) — once a brilliant film editor, now a reclusive technician who splices "memory loops" for grieving families (digital ghosts of lost loved ones). He’s haunted by a single event: the disappearance of his younger sister Lena during a "Kilometer Film" premiere five years ago. She walked into the 2km movie… and never came out. The production claimed she exited midway. Kaelen knows she didn’t. Trees have screens for bark, each showing a
The 2kmovie Protocol