- A man having various dreams of dying in the same spot of his house tries to figure things out with his therapist, which makes him deduce that the visions must be happening for a reason that he must discover.
- A man confesses to his therapist that he constantly has dreams which always concludes with him dying. Convinced that these experiences are not just a function of his going through tough times, they delve deeper into what is behind the situations that he finds himself in. But his visions are so disparate that they seem random until he realizes there are two commonalities. One, each vignette involves someone from his work group, and two, it always ends with his death in the same location, the living room of his house. A thriller described as "Groundhog Day" meets "The Sixth Sense," Find Me is a taut psychological puzzle that pulls all of its pieces together at the very end.
- Drum, short for Drumond, sits in his living room, a picture of depression. He stares out to nowhere. Because of this he visits with a therapist, Rita, and tells her that he is experiencing three distinct dreams every night, and always when he does, he dies in the very same place in his house. Because he knows they are the same dreams but curiously enough cannot remember what they were, Rita helps him to relive each dream, the first by way of inducing him into hypnosis. In this first dream, we are at his house during the day and he serves as a mentor to a youth in need of guidance. An ex-boxer, Drum trains the young man, Rico, on the fundamentals of boxing, and as they do, Rico changes from at incorrigible youth with an attitude to a young man now mature and better off in facing the world. After he gives Rico some parting advice, Drum returns to his house where he has a heart attack and collapses dead in his living room. Awaking out of the hypnosis, Drum can now remember everything about his dreams but still does not know what they mean. Rita asks Drum about the second one and he proceeds to tell her. We are back at his house, only it is at night and we meet two men, Chris and Steve, who enter and find what they are looking for, Drum's computer. Steve is a computer hacker and Chris is his partner with a gun. We discover that they are out to steal Drum's crypto wallet. Unlike the in-and-out operation that they had envisioned, things do not go smoothly. Steve cannot find a way into Drum's wallet as the firewalls built in are too complex. To make matters worse, they are surprised by Drum and his wife, Andrea, returning home from a night at the theater. The men surprise them and hold them at gun point while they try to figure out what to do. Drum scoffs at these "amateurs" and Andrea discovers that the man she married is not who she thought he was. She learns that he is the "Ghost," a genius computer hacker who over the course of time has built up a fortune by hacking into accounts and stealing money. Having also purchased a ton of bitcoin when it was selling for pennies on the dollar, he is now a billionaire many times over, who keeps his fortune in a crypto wallet, which Chris and Steve are now trying to access. In addition to being a legendary hacker, Drum is also a big man who can handle himself in combat. He manages to wrestle the gun away from Chris, and in so doing, shoots him dead. He then turns to Steve and shoots him too. Returning to his computer, Drum comments that Steve got close to breaking in but close doesn't mean anything. In the process of setting up more firewalls he tells Andrea that he wants a divorce as he intends to run away to Paris with Grace, an actress who got the part of the lead in the play they just watched for which Andrea, an aspiring actress herself, tried out for too but wasn't cast. In the process of gleefully telling Andrea of his intentions, he manages to blurt out the password to his crypto wallet. Andrea then uses Chris' gun to shoot Drum and then calls in a 911 emergency call where she uses her acting skills to feign being in duress over the fact that two men broke in and shot her husband, who also managed to kill the two men. The dream ends with Drum lying in the same place on the floor, dead from Andrea shooting him. We return to Drum commenting about this dream to Rita. He then proceeds to describe the last dream, which he claims is really wild. Drum is an employee at a hardware store. He welcomes fellow workers, Reid, Bobby, and Allison to his house. They all brings platters of sushi. They talk about one particular worker at the store, Walt, a screen maker, who is on everyone's list of worst people they've ever known in their lives. He is rude, always a grouch, and never associates with anyone. They are waiting for Walt, who surprisingly has accepted an invitation from the group to join them at Drum's for a sushi party. But when Walt arrives it seems the group has another purpose. Drum tells Walt that because no one likes to visit him in his office, he would be the perfect person to be the drop off and pick up point of contact for their cocaine distribution ring. They show him a pack of white powdery substance neatly wrapped in clear plastic, and Drum points a gun at Walt's face to convince him that it is an offer he can't refuse. Ornery Walt suddenly turns meek, afraid, and promising not to tell on the group. He pleads to be left alone, and when FBI agents break in to bust the group after months of secret surveillance, Walt crumples to the ground crying, "Who'll feed my cats!" This prompts Drum to tell Walt that everything was a ruse. They don't run a drug ring, the cocaine was just a pack of white flour, the gun merely a prop, and the agents are actually friends of Bobby. They just wanted to get back at him for being... "An asshole?" Walt asks? "Yes," Drum admits. Unexpectedly, Walt laughs at being the butt of everyone's joke and says, "That's great!" Later, as everyone dines on sushi, comments are made that what Walt brought to the sushi table is the best. He is questioned as to where he got it. Walt responds by saying he bought the fish in Chinatown and he cut it and made his own sushi watching some YouTube videos. Walt gets a call on his cell. He answers it and it is the fish store. He's told the fish he picked up was a mistake. He argues that's not his fault and no, he's not paying a penny more for what he bought. But then he's told that the fish is "fugu," the puffer fish that is a Japanese delicacy, but fatal if not properly cut. He turns and finds that the sushi group is lying dead, and Drum, in particular, lies dead in the very same spot in his living room. Walt utters to himself, "Oh oh." Back in the therapy session, and Drum is laughing at the outrageous outcome, but is still perplexed as to why these dreams are occurring. On Rita's prompting, Drum discovers another common thread. Everyone in these dreams works at the bank he worked at for years, from which he recently retired. He also then finally places Rita, who has always looked familiar to him. She used to also work at the bank. Rita then helps Drum to finally realize what has happened. He has died, a victim of an accidental overdose of pain killers, while he wallowed in depression over the recent death of his niece, Clarice, who perished in a car accident driving the car he gave to her for her 17th birthday. Rita is there to help guide him into the light. Back in real time, Andrea, Walt, and Rico have lunch in the company break room, and comment about how weird it is to not see Drum, the bank security guard, at the front door. They discover that each had a dream about Drum the night before - Rico in the mentor dream, Andrea in the crypto dream, and Walt in the sushi dream. They comment that the long odds of this happening is a sign that they should visit Drum, which they decide to do after work. As they leave the break room, they pass a photo plaque on the wall that announces the break room is named after Rita Helmsly, the former human resources director of the company who passed away the year before. As they arrive on Drum's property, Rita and Drum watch from another dimension, and Rita tells Drum that the reasons for the dreams was that his co-workers could come to find him, for he couldn't transition into the light until his body was found. The trio peek into Drum's house and do, in fact, see his dead body lying on the floor. Back with Rita, Drum realizes that they were never in her psychologist office, but rather on some ethereal plane in between earth and heaven, and now that his co-workers have found him, he can enter into the light. As he does, he sees his beautiful niece, Clarice, waving, "Hi, Uncle Drum!" Drum walks into the light and embraces Clarice.
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