In this 90-minute frantic dash, a woman is recruited for a high-stakes cleaning job in a mysterious, high-security apartment complex. What starts as a simple paycheck quickly devolves into a brutal, claustrophobic fight for survival against a cult-like community with a very specific, very lethal agenda.
Zazie Beetz is the undisputed soul of this film. She operates with minimal dialogue, proving that a well-timed snarl or a look of sheer determination is worth a thousand lines of exposition. Her performance is intensely physical, she embraces the fight choreography to a tee, moving between ferocious survivalism and raw emotion. She isn’t just a “final girl”; she’s a spectacle in motion.
You can practically feel the Muschietti influence dripping off the lens. The production design excels in its spatial awareness, particularly during the crawling tunnel scenes. The camera work is oddly “inviting”… it pulls you into those tight, suffocating spaces so effectively you might find yourself checking your own shoulders for bruises.
The audio-visual experience is punctuated by “unalives” that are as creative as they are gruesome. The decision-making behind the gore is surprisingly sophisticated; the film knows exactly when to lean into a messy splatter and when a surgical, clean cut will provide the bigger shock. Plus, the flaming axe sequence is a masterclass in heavy-metal horror imagery.
Structurally, the film plays with its timeline by bouncing between flashbacks and the present day. It’s a very Tarantino-esque choice that keeps the story progressive rather than confusing. However, even with a lean 90-minute runtime, the pacing occasionally sags, making it feel slightly longer than it actually is.
The final act is where the film makes a hard pivot into spoof territory. It gets ridiculous, bordering on the absurd, but it stays firmly in the “fun” category. While it flirts with being over-the-top, it’s a blast to witness on a big screen. If you’re looking for a sharp, bloody, and stylistically bold night out, this one is worth the ticket.
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