Natasha Coutinho (MUMBAI MIRROR; June 23, 2018)

Jacqueline Fernandez’s British film, Definition Of Fear, which was shot in 2014–15 and did the rounds of a few film festivals is gearing up for release in India in August. Director James Simpson promises that the psychological horror will give you sleepless nights and raves about Jacqueline, who is “amazing” in it.

The film was shot in Ontario, Canada, and is about how fear can be manipulated and created and sometimes can be very real, too. It’s a story about four girls — Jacqueline, Katherine Barrell, Blythe Hubbard and Mercedes Papalia — who decide to spend a weekend at an isolated mansion deep in a forest. Their play at night with a Ouija board starts something they can’t control. Jacqueline, who plays a psychology student had told Mirror (Nov 11, 2014) earlier, “It’s about understanding what makes us afraid. Initially, we are in a controlled environment with noises created to evoke fear, but slowly we realise that we aren’t the only ones there.”