Eye Candy

Eye Candy
A história gira em torno de Lindy (Victoria Justice, de Zoey 101 e Victorious), uma jovem especializada em computação que mantém um blog sobre ataques terroristas e suspeitos de assassinato.
Seguindo os conselhos de sua companheira de quarto, Lindy começa a buscar por encontros online. Mas logo ela descobre que um de seus pretendentes é um perigoso stalker e assassino em série em potencial. Assim, com a ajuda de seus amigos, ela começa a investigá-lo.
Seguindo os conselhos de sua companheira de quarto, Lindy começa a buscar por encontros online. Mas logo ela descobre que um de seus pretendentes é um perigoso stalker e assassino em série em potencial. Assim, com a ajuda de seus amigos, ela começa a investigá-lo.
⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Eye Candy – Stine Goes Dark, and It Works
Eye Candy is RL Stine for the older crowd — a sharp, tech-driven psychological thriller miles away from the spooky fun of Goosebumps. This one leans into adult fear: obsession, surveillance, digital footprints, and the way modern life leaves us exposed in ways we barely understand. It’s fast, tense, and surprisingly layered for a one-season wonder.
Victoria Justice carries the series with real strength — she’s got that mix of vulnerability and fire that makes her easy to root for, especially as the story spirals into darker territory. Every twist lands, every red herring feels intentional, and the tech aspect actually works instead of feeling like Hollywood’s usual attempt at “hacker chic.”
The comparison to You is impossible to ignore — they’re two sides of the same coin. You shows obsession from inside the killer’s mind; Eye Candy shows how it feels to be hunted, watched, and stalked through every digital crack in your life. Considering Stine wrote the novel a decade earlier, it’s hard not to feel that You owes at least a spiritual debt here.
It’s genuinely gripping, the kind of thriller you binge in one sitting and regret only when you hit the credits and realise… that’s it. The biggest crime Eye Candy ever committed was being cancelled after one season — it deserved more.
🍸 Pairing: An iced espresso martini — sleek, sharp, and wired with tension, just like the world Eye Candy drags you into.
⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Eye Candy – Stine Goes Dark, and It Works
Eye Candy is RL Stine for the older crowd — a sharp, tech-driven psychological thriller miles away from the spooky fun of Goosebumps. This one leans into adult fear: obsession, surveillance, digital footprints, and the way modern life leaves us exposed in ways we barely understand. It’s fast, tense, and surprisingly layered for a one-season wonder.
Victoria Justice carries the series with real strength — she’s got that mix of vulnerability and fire that makes her easy to root for, especially as the story spirals into darker territory. Every twist lands, every red herring feels intentional, and the tech aspect actually works instead of feeling like Hollywood’s usual attempt at “hacker chic.”
The comparison to You is impossible to ignore — they’re two sides of the same coin. You shows obsession from inside the killer’s mind; Eye Candy shows how it feels to be hunted, watched, and stalked through every digital crack in your life. Considering Stine wrote the novel a decade earlier, it’s hard not to feel that You owes at least a spiritual debt here.
It’s genuinely gripping, the kind of thriller you binge in one sitting and regret only when you hit the credits and realise… that’s it. The biggest crime Eye Candy ever committed was being cancelled after one season — it deserved more.
🍸 Pairing: An iced espresso martini — sleek, sharp, and wired with tension, just like the world Eye Candy drags you into.



















