31 Days of Hell: Kill List (2011) - Reviewed

Courtesy of IFC Films
Before unveiling one of the very best possible post-pandemic themed films ever made with his 2021 psychedelic COVID-inspired thriller In the Earth, the British husband/wife team of director Ben Wheatley and his co-writer and business partner Amy Jump first made themselves known throughout the world indie horror arena with their 2011 contract killer thriller/horror film and second feature Kill List. 
 
Inarguably the current king and queen of quickies, i.e. microbudget film productions written and directed on the fly, Mr. Wheatley and Mrs. Jump have since gone on to fashion an entire oeuvre of like-minded crime-horror films including but not limited to Sightseers, A Field in England, Free Fire and even the ambitious misfire High-Rise.
 
While Wheatley and Jump are currently at work on the yet-to-be-announced The Meg sequel, let’s circle back to the film that put them on the map with today’s 31 Days of Hell entry, Kill List.  Written specifically for the two leading actors Neil Maskell and Michael Smiley, the film concerns British soldier Jay (Maskell) who having recently returned home from a tour of duty in Kyiv reunites with fellow soldier and friend Gal (Smiley) and their wives for dinner. 

Courtesy of IFC Films
In actuality Jay and Gal have since taken up work as contract killers for hire working for a variety of criminal factions.  Suffering from wartime PTSD, Jay’s erratic outbursts of violent behavior on several of their runs starts spiraling out of control.  Meanwhile mercurial employers continue to demand more dangerous jobs (including but not limited to a mysterious Satanic cult) from the two trying to finish their designated Kill List which threatens to ensnare Jay, Gal and their families in a web of madness and murder.
 
A classic case of hunters becoming hunted in a startling and truly strange crossbreed between the crime thriller and surreal psychological horror with elements of the occult, Ben Wheatley’s unpredictable shape-shifting quietly simmering monster of a movie starts out nebulously before swimming into darker deeper waters as it proceeds to blow up in your face. 
 
Playing on fears of the abrupt shock of brutality, not truly knowing ourselves or the depths we can reach, and the idea of losing complete control of your own life, Kill List begins as a straightforward dialogue driven crime drama-thriller before gradually growing more disturbing and deeply insane as it proceeds to yank the rug out from under you.  By the time you and the characters think you have figured out what is really going on, it is already far too late. 
 
Lensed beautifully in digital panoramic widescreen by Wheatley’s right-hand man Laurie Rose who with exception to In the Earth has shot all of the director’s films, the look of Kill List cements Wheatley’s intense focus on the purely visual aspect of the film with the remaining chips left to fall into place later.  Intercut between handsomely framed wide-angled shots and frenetic intense close-ups often done via handheld, the film gradually begins to aesthetically unravel with the worlds of the characters over the course of the movie. 
 
Then there’s the film’s bizarre, hair-raising electronic soundtrack by now-legendary composer Jim Williams.A recurring Wheatley collaborator who also went on to score Raw, Possessor and the Palme d’Or winning Titane, Williams’ scratchy, grungy electronica distortion filled soundscapes call out raw dread within the listening viewer interspersed with a most unusual use of sampled shark songs.  So weirdly unnerving is the score completely on its own, you could listen to it in total darkness and feel a very strong urge to start screaming.

Courtesy of IFC Films
 Much like the characters in the film, played brilliantly by Maskell and Smiley who went on to win a British Independent Film Award for Best Supporting Actor, Kill List is constantly shedding skin and morphing until we no longer recognize its madcap face.  Smiley, a recurring veteran of the Wheatley horror universe, gives a top tier performance as a mostly-everyman and fellow former comrade trying to keep a lid on their kill list and his possibly-deranged partner in crime. 
 
Though upstaged by Smiley, Maskell is no less inspired in this as a seemingly withdrawn milquetoast who is really chomping at the bit to do violence.  So feeble in appearance is our film’s “hero” that when the moments of raw explicit brutality erupt they feel real and raw, arguably spoken of the same breath as Macon Blair’s vengeful turn in Jeremy Saulnier’s searing southern baked thriller Blue Ruin.  Lending equal support to the two is The Descent veteran MyAnna Buring as Jay’s wife Shel who herself may harbor more in common with her husband’s activities than she leads on.
 
Despite being a small box office performer, Kill List opened to unanimous critical acclaim praising Wheatley’s mysterious direction and the strengths of the two leading performances.  Ostensibly a crime thriller that gradually transforms into outright visceral horror and some heavy gavel drops in the third act, Ben Wheatley and Amy Jump’s second feature ushered in the duo as a force to be reckoned with and worth paying close attention to. 

Courtesy of IFC Films
While not my introduction to (or favorite of) Wheatley, Kill List represents a confident and daring second feature willing to take chances and somehow jump the narrative rails several times over without losing control of itself or the audience.  Wheatley is also one of the few directors to channel elements of folk horror into a contemporary setting and period and by the time we’ve reached the end of his searingly disturbing home run of a movie, we soon realize the implacable fears being stoked by it date back to the beginning of time itself.  Whether it be past or present, Kill List points a flashlight in the middle of darkness to our own internal untapped killer instincts and how little control of our own lives we may really have in the world we live in.

--Andrew Kotwicki