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One Point O
Full Movie·2004·1h 35m·en

One Point O

Are you infected?

A computer programmer's apartment becomes a prison of mysterious packages and hidden cameras in this 2004 cyberpunk nightmare. One Point O asks: who's watching, and why can't he escape?

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Movie OTT Editorial

4 min read · Published June 30, 2026

5.7/10

The story of One Point O

One Point O opens with a premise that'd unsettle anyone: Simon, a paranoid computer programmer, wakes to find a package in his apartment. He didn't order it. Nobody delivered it—at least not through any visible means. What follows is a nightmare of escalating dread as more packages arrive, each one appearing despite his increasingly desperate attempts to seal his living space. Cameras are watching. Voices whisper through his walls. The deeper Simon digs to understand who's behind this torment, the less certain he becomes about what's real and what's the product of his own unraveling mind. It's a slow-burn psychological horror that trades jump scares for the creeping sensation that the world itself has turned hostile.

Behind the making of One Point O

One Point O emerged in 2004 from a genuinely international production—VIP 2 Medienfonds, ZentAmerica Entertainment, Armada Pictures, the Icelandic Film Corporation, and Hakuhodo all pooled resources to bring this vision to screen. The film was written and directed by Jeff Renfroe and Marteinn Thorsson, a creative partnership that blended American and Icelandic sensibilities to craft something distinctly unsettling. Jeremy Sisto, known for his intensity in roles like Law & Order: SVU, carries the film with a performance that captures Simon's unraveling believably. The supporting cast includes Deborah Unger (Crash, The Game), Lance Henriksen (Aliens, The Terminator), Eugene Byrd, Bruce Payne, and Udo Kier—character actors with serious pedigree who lend weight to even minor scenes. At 95 minutes, the film doesn't overstay its welcome, though it's a lean runtime that sometimes leaves you wondering what hit you. The production design emphasizes minimalism and surveillance aesthetics; Simon's apartment becomes a character itself—sterile, monitored, inescapable. On IMDb, it holds a 5.7/10 rating, which tells you this isn't a crowd-pleaser, but rather a film that divides viewers between those who find its paranoia brilliant and those who find it muddled.

What makes One Point O stand out in 2004 cyberpunk horror

What's striking is how One Point O doesn't rely on explosions or elaborate set pieces to create dread. Instead, it trusts the audience's own paranoia—the idea that you're being watched, that systems are closing in, that escape is impossible. The performances anchor the film's weirdness; Sisto doesn't play Simon as a hero figuring things out, but as a man whose grip on reality is genuinely slipping, and you can't always tell if he's the victim or the architect of his own nightmare. The film sits at an interesting intersection of sci-fi and psychological horror, asking whether the threat is external surveillance or internal collapse. I keep coming back to the package concept itself—it's such a simple, everyday thing made terrifying through repetition and mystery. There's no grand conspiracy reveal waiting at the end, no villain monologue explaining everything. Instead, the film commits to ambiguity in a way that frustrates some viewers but fascinates others. Honestly, that refusal to give you clean answers is part of what makes it linger. The craft is solid throughout: the cinematography emphasizes confined spaces and overhead angles (all those cameras, watching), and the sound design—those whispers, the hum of technology—creates an atmosphere of constant surveillance that doesn't let up.

Where to stream One Point O online

One Point O is available on major OTT services, and the "Where to Watch" widget at the top of this page will show you exactly which platforms currently have it in your region. Streaming rights rotate regularly, so Movie OTT keeps track of where titles land as deals shift. If you're browsing through Movie OTT's catalog and looking for similar paranoid sci-fi from that era, you'll find One Point O sits nicely alongside other early-2000s tech-horror films that were exploring surveillance anxiety before it became mainstream conversation. The film's 95-minute length makes it an easy weeknight watch, even if the content isn't exactly light.

Frequently asked questions

Q: Who directed One Point O?

One Point O was written and directed by Jeff Renfroe and Marteinn Thorsson, an international duo who blended American and Icelandic filmmaking styles to create the film's distinctive paranoid atmosphere.

Q: What is the runtime of One Point O?

The film runs 95 minutes, a lean runtime that keeps the paranoia tight without unnecessary padding.

Q: Who stars in One Point O?

Jeremy Sisto carries the lead as Simon, with support from Deborah Unger, Lance Henriksen, Eugene Byrd, Bruce Payne, and Udo Kier in a cast built on character-actor credibility.

Q: Is One Point O based on a true story?

No—One Point O is an original screenplay exploring themes of surveillance and paranoia through a fictional lens, though its anxieties about being watched have only grown more relevant since 2004.

Q: What does the tagline "Are you infected?" mean?

The tagline hints at the film's ambiguity: is Simon infected with paranoia, or is something genuinely infecting his environment? The film never fully answer that question.

Final thoughts on One Point O

One Point O isn't for everyone—it's deliberately slow, refuses easy answers, and ends on a note of unresolved dread. But if you're drawn to paranoid sci-fi that trusts your intelligence, or if you're interested in how early-2000s filmmakers were already grappling with surveillance culture, it's worth your time. The performances are committed, the atmosphere is suffocating, and the questions it raises about being watched—about privacy, about control, about sanity itself—haven't gotten any less relevant. Seek it out on your preferred streaming platform and prepare to feel watched.

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Streaming charts today

One Point O is #21,078 on the Movie OTT Daily Streaming Charts today. (first day on the chart — check back tomorrow for movement)

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