When grieving widower Marty Hanlon receives an unmarked package containing a jigsaw puzzle of his own kitchen, curiosity drags him into a quiet descent. Each piece he fits reveals more of his home—then things that shouldn’t exist: a stain that wasn’t there, his late wife’s reflection, her final words. The puzzle begins to change the room itself, until reality folds around the image he’s completing. The boundary between memory and matter dissolves, and Marty discovers the picture he’s finishing is not of his house, but of him inside it. To complete the puzzle is to become part of it. Blending grief, isolation, and supernatural inevitability, The Puzzle is a slow-burn psychological horror about how love, guilt, and remembrance can consume what’s left of the living.