Art and culture

Britt Lower on Rachel-David Romance, Violent Finale Twist

SPOILER ALERT: This story includes key storylines and details about “I Will Find You,” now streaming on Netflix.

Harlan Coben’s latest Netflix murder mystery series, “I Will Find You,” appears to have captured most everyone’s attention. Just look at the numbers that the streamer has put out there.

As Variety’s Jennifer Maas reported on Tuesday, “I Will Find You” had the streamer’s highest second week of viewers for an English-language scripted series launch in 2026, so far. That milestone came after it captured 24 million views (making it Netflix’s top TV show launch of the year) in the first week after its June 18 debut.

I’m on a Zoom with star Britt Lower when I tell her that I not only binged the series over one weekend, but I would fight sleep late at night just so I could keep watching.

“That’s what’s so fun about this show. It’s summer and it’s like when you’re a kid and you’re fighting sleep,” Lower says. “When else do you get to have that experience of I’m not tired, I’m gonna stay up and I’m gonna keep eating snacks? I’m really thrilled for everyone. I keep getting text messages that people can’t go to sleep, and I’m like, ‘Well, school is out for the summer.’”

Lower stars in the eight-episode series – an adaptation of Coben’s novel of the same name — as Rachel, a Boston Globe journalist who sets out to prove that her ex-brother-in-law David (Sam Worthington) was wrongly convicted and sent to prison for the gruesome murder of his young son Matthew. What unfolds is a prison break, run-ins with Boston mobsters and entanglements with doctors and a seemingly sinister wealthy family. There’s also the father-daughter FBI team (Chi McBride and Logan Browning) who are on the hunt for fugitive David.

The who-done-it leads up to one of Coben’s signature final twists. In this case, Rachel’s ex-boyfriend, a scion of a wealth family played by Milo Ventimiglia, is revealed to have kidnapped Matthew because he believes he’s the boy’s father.

“I read the book before I had read the scripts,” Lower says. “I think we only had maybe three or four of the scripts going into filming, and then we do block shooting, so you do a couple at a time, and then by the time it’s the end, you’ve gotten all the scripts.”

It’s Rachel who jumpstarts the story when she visits David in prison after noticing a boy who eerily looks like Matthew in the background of a photo that a friend had posted to Facebook.

 “The [Hayden] twist really is connected to why Rachel has this instinct in the first place and everything just makes more sense,” Lower says. “Oh, she had this Spidey sense, and it was connected to this person who was supposed to be like her best friend.”

Hayden not only violently kills a detective who accuses him of being connected to Matthew’s disappearance but he also fatally shoots his own mother (Madeleine Stowe). “That’s really good casting because Milo is the total opposite,” Lower says. “He’s the loveliest most gentle human.”

But another finale twist to consider is when Rachel and David are seen holding hands, leading many viewers – including myself – to wonder if a romance had developed between the two.

“I loved how quiet that last moment was,” Lower says. “I think it feels so earned based on everything we’ve been through together, and there’s a sense that it’s open-ended where the story takes them.”

She continues, “They have this unspoken understanding of what the other person has been through, and that connection felt stronger than any kind of romance could be. They have a shared loneliness and a belief in their family system and a drive to save this boy. There’s really no room for much romance when you think about all that’s going on. But that kind of gentle gesture of support with the hand-hold, I thought that felt appropriate.”

  • For more: Elrisala website and for social networking, you can follow us on Facebook
  • Source of information and images “variety “

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button

Discover more from Elrisala

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading