They Will Kill You doesn’t walk into the room quietly, it kicks the door off its hinges.
Directed by Kirill Sokolov, the film is a high-octane blend of action, horror, and dark satire that traps its audience inside a world where nothing stays calm for long and nobody is truly safe.
At the center of the storm is a young woman played by Zazie Beetz, who accepts what seems like an ordinary job in an upscale New York skyscraper. But the building quickly reveals itself as something far more sinister—a polished tower hiding missing people, buried secrets, and a powerful network that thrives on silence and control.
What begins as a contained mystery inside glass walls and luxury offices rapidly mutates into something far more volatile. Survival becomes the only language that matters as alliances shift, violence erupts, and the truth behind the building’s elite residents begins to surface in brutal fashion.
Critics have largely framed the film as a genre collision, part revenge thriller, part horror descent, and part pitch-black comedy. Its tone swings sharply between grim brutality and unexpected absurdity, creating a viewing experience that feels deliberately unstable.
Some praise its raw energy and fearless visual style, describing it as a relentless ride that refuses to slow down. Others argue that its commitment to chaos sometimes overwhelms its storytelling, turning moments of tension into pure spectacle.
Still, the film’s intent is unmistakable. It uses extreme violence, corporate paranoia, and revenge-driven storytelling to poke at themes of wealth, power, and moral decay inside modern urban spaces.
In the end, They Will Kill You is not built for comfort or predictability. It is loud, fragmented, and intentionally overwhelming—a film that drags viewers through chaos and dares them to keep up.































