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Film: “They Will Kill You”
Director: Kirill Sokolov,
Cast: Zazie Beetz, Myha’la, Patricia Arquette, Tom Felton, Heather Graham
In “They Will Kill You,” Asia Reaves (Zazie Beetz) takes a maid job at The Virgil, a 100-year-old apartment building in the heart of New York City. Long a place where the elite, the one percenters, have called it “home,” she’s not there for simple employment but for a deadly purpose. Her true motives for taking the gig are soon revealed.
Not unlike the Continental in The John Wick series, the building may seem like just another impressive piece of Gilded Age architecture built for the wealthy. But it’s really housing something much more: a devil-worshipping cult that has been granted immortality in exchange for finding human sacrifices for Satan.
In the opening sequence, Asia abandons her younger sister Maria (Myha’la) after the two run away from their abusive father. He tracks them down and Asia shoots him, but he survives and takes her sister away to endure further years of abuse.
Meanwhile, Asia goes to prison for the next decade. While in prison she’s hardened up and has trained to defend herself through whatever means is necessary.
Once she’s freed, Asia tracks down her long-lost sibling to the building, which has a dark history of the help going missing. It soon becomes clear that the building’s tenants have nefarious plans for her, intending to make her an offering to Satan in exchange for continued immortality. But, Asia comes prepared with a bag full of weapons and the determination to save her sister. Little does she know that her sister isn’t quite on board for being rescued as she had planned.
Underpinning the movie’s high-octane action sequences, the film features an iconic ensemble cast, from Patricia Arquette‘s Irish building superintendent Lilith to wealthy tenants Kevin (Tom Felton) and Sharon (Heather Graham.) Each brings unhinged performances to their characters as cult members in this high-octane, adrenaline-pumping flick. Given her Irish background, Lilith provides a bridge between the wealthy owners and the ethnic staffers — having married a Black man a century ago before coming to the building and gaining immortality.
For example, Asia blows Graham’s head away, splattering blood, bones and brains everywhere. What remains is a stump where the head was, with the body still flailing about. But because she’s immortal, the next scene shows a tiny head regrowing where the shoulders were. It’s bizarre, sort of funny and repulsive as ever.
Director Kirill Sokolov is quite a student of filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino and even earlier ones like Sam Peckinpah. He spares no blood throughout the film, with red spraying from wounds and viscera everywhere. He uses some creative visual tricks that test the limits of his villains’ invincibility.
With nods to samurai films and shoot-'em-ups, Beetz gives the physical performance of a lifetime, wielding swords, machetes and shotguns while firing at a gang of evil residents. Asia and Maria also pack an emotional punch with their tragic story of complicated sisterhood, pushing the pair to reconnect and make things right. Although Satan prefers blood, it turns out the most impactful sacrifices come from love.
Sokolov offers his genre-driven take on satanic cults, with touches of humor and heart and lots of red. Thanks to a stellar cast, led by this pair of newly minted ‘Scream Queens’, audiences will root for them to eliminate the one percent. Obviously, the movie appeals to audiences beyond just the horror film fans due to its underlying political message -- that the wealthy willingly sacrificing anyone beneath them for fealty to Satan. Though I'm not sure it was a conscious notion to express this socially conscious element -- beat down the rich because they have no moral rudder -- that certainly makes the film more relevant than ever in this day and age.
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| Celia Keenan-Bolger and Susannah Perkins in Antigone (This Play I Read in High School) (photo: Joan Marcus) |
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| Zabryna Guevara in Public Charge (photo: Joan Marcus) |
Photo by Chris Lee
At the wonderful Stern Auditorium, on the night of Tuesday, March 31st, I had the exceptional privilege to attend an amazing concert—presented by Carnegie Hall as part of its festival, United in Sound: America at 250—featuring the renowned Philadelphia Orchestra under the outstanding direction of Marin Alsop.
The event started thrillingly with a masterly realization of the New York premiere of John Adams’s brilliant The Rock You Stand On from 2024, which was co-commissioned by this venue and this ensemble. About the piece, the composer says: “The title, The Rock You Stand On, is non-specific and is not meant to suggest anything other than perhaps hinting at the qualities—loyalty, determination, devotion—that make Marin Alsop so very special to me.” He adds that “there is a certain ‘big band’ quality to the ensemble writing, with the full orchestra at times executing irregular, bouncing figurations that are driven by an underlying jazz-inflected pulse.”
An astonishing soloist—and evidently a rising star—Hayato Sumino, then joined the musicians for an enthralling performance of George Gershwin’s marvelous Piano Concerto in F, from 1925. The composer commented with reference to his earlier, celebrated work for piano and orchestra, Rhapsody in Blue:
Many persons had thought that the Rhapsody was only a happy accident. Well, I went out, for one thing, to show them that there was plenty more where that had come from. I made up my mind to do a piece of absolute music. The Rhapsody, as its title implied, was a blues impression. The Concerto would be unrelated to any program.
Gershwin’s friend, the talented composer Morton Gould, described the concerto as “a unique and highly original piece that bypassed all the fashions and trends.” Gershwin wrote the following program note for the work:
The first movement [Allegro] employs the Charleston rhythm. It is quick and pulsating, representing the young, enthusiastic spirit of American life. It begins with a rhythmic motif given out by the kettledrums, supported by other percussion instruments, and with a Charleston motif … The principal theme is announced by the bassoon. Later, a second theme is introduced by the piano.
The second movement [Andante con moto] has a poetic nocturnal atmosphere which has come to be referred to as the American blues, but in a purer form than in which they are usually treated. The final movement [Allegro agitato] reverts to the style of the first. It is an orgy of rhythms, starting violently and keeping to the same pace throughout.
The initial movement opens ostentatiously and rather busily but the piano enters moodily, recalling the works of Maurice Ravel, and this quality recurs throughout even as it is sometimes eclipsed by showier passages—it reaches a grand climax which precedes many more virtuosic measures before closing rapidly. The ensuing slow movement is more lyrical at first but in the main is more frolicsome and jazzy at times, although the introspective impulse returns even as the music intensifies before concluding softly. The finale begins exuberantly and continues propulsively and dazzlingly until it ends forcefully. Enthusiastic applause elicited a fabulous encore from the pianist: his own, jazz arrangement of Gershwin’s classic song, “I Got Rhythm.”
The second half of the evening was at least equal in strength: a glorious rendition of selections from Sergei Prokofiev’s magnificent ballet score, Romeo and Juliet, Op. 64, which was finished in 1936.
The composer originally envisioned concluding the piece happily but later recalled: “After several conferences with the choreographers, it was found that the tragic ending could be expressed in the dance and in due time the music for that ending was written.”
A standing ovation drew forth another delightful encore: Dmitri Shostakovich’s "General Dance of Enthusiasm and Apotheosis" from his ballet score, The Bolt.




