Direction: Anna Kendrick
Country: USA
Anna Kendrick steps into the director’s chair with confidence and purpose in her debut film, Woman of the Hour. Based on a screenplay by Ian McDonald, the film recounts the story of notorious serial killer Rodney Alcala, who eluded authorities for nearly a decade due to systemic negligence. Known as the “Dating Game Killer” after his appearance on the popular 1978 show, Alcala worked briefly as a typesetter at the Los Angeles Times while carrying out his gruesome murders.
In the film, Kendrick plays fictional character Sheryl Bradshaw, a struggling actress from Pennsylvania who encounters Alcala (Daniel Zovatto) on The Dating Game. Blending dark and satirical tones, Woman of the Hour reveals Alcala’s brutal acts across Los Angeles, Wyoming, New York, and San Gabriel, exposing the misogyny and systemic failures that allowed him to remain undetected.
Kendrick delivers an effectively unsettling film—directing without unnecessary embellishment, allowing the stark horror of the crimes to speak for itself. Zovatto brings a deeply unnerving intensity to Alcala, adding layers of dread each time he’s on screen. Though Woman of the Hour doesn’t delve deeply into Alcala's backstory, its straightforward approach and restrained style make it a chilling, sharply crafted thriller that lingers in the mind.