When the director yelled “Cut,” most actors would instinctively drop character. Anna Kendrick did the opposite. On the set of her 2024 directorial debut, Woman of the Hour, Kendrick often remained frozen in place, subtly shifting her gaze and posture to preserve something fragile and unsettling: the precise moment a woman realizes she is no longer safe.
The film tells the chilling true story of Rodney Alcala, a prolific serial killer who appeared as a contestant on the television show The Dating Game in 1978. Kendrick not only directed the film but also starred as Sheryl Bradshaw, the woman who unknowingly chose Alcala as her winning date. Balancing both roles, she approached the material with a level of psychological precision that has become the film’s defining strength.
During the recreation of the Dating Game scenes, Kendrick focused less on dialogue and more on what she calls “micro-shifts”—tiny, almost imperceptible changes in a woman’s expression when discomfort hardens into fear. Crew members noted that even after scenes were technically finished, Kendrick stayed in character, letting silence do the work that words could not. As she later explained, “The silence was the most terrifying part of the encounter.”
That philosophy permeates the entire film. Rather than leaning on jump scares or sensationalized violence, Woman of the Hour builds dread through absence: unanswered pauses, forced smiles, and the social pressure that prevents women from openly reacting to danger. This restraint sets the film apart from much of the true-crime genre, which often centers the killer rather than the victims.
Critics responded strongly. Upon its release on Netflix in October 2024, the film quickly became a global streaming hit and earned a 91% “Fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Reviewers praised Kendrick’s “intelligence and subtlety,” particularly her refusal to glamorize Alcala or reduce the women in his orbit to narrative devices.
The film’s success was already foreshadowed earlier in the year, when it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, where it generated significant buzz for its victim-centered approach. Kendrick also drew from personal experience, incorporating moments inspired by uncomfortable auditions she faced early in her career, further grounding the film in emotional truth.
By the time the credits roll, Woman of the Hour has transformed a bizarre piece of television history into a quiet, devastating study of intuition and survival. In her first turn behind the camera, Anna Kendrick proved that suspense doesn’t always come from what is shown—but from what is withheld. Silence, in her hands, becomes the sharpest weapon of all.