The Three Act Structure has been used for thousands of years, beginning when Aristotle officially created it. The structure has a series of events that should exist in the film making process. Our film strays from the structure in some ways, but it allows us to communicate elements like normalcy and time more efficiently without adhering strongly to the structure. Act I: The inciting incident begins the film as a person is being kidnapped and bound. Following that, more information about the situation and the characters happens as daily life is introduced. Act II: There is no tension at first because the situation is not strange for MAN. Therefore, MAN has no false victory or plan to save himself. Instead, tension increases as one victim dies and one runs away. The escaped victim is the major source of distress for MAN. Act III: In his frenzy, MAN decides to stay with the family despite his acceptance of the police arriving. His decision is the climax. The falling action is when MAN dies from the paralytic drug.