Hunt Her, Kill Her is a minimalist entry into the survival-horror genre. While it leans on familiar tropes, its focus on a blue-collar protagonist and its effective use of an industrial setting provide a visceral, if sometimes "tasteless" (as described by some critics), viewing experience.
This paper examines the 2022 survival-horror film (originally titled Night Shift ), directed by Greg Swinson and Ryan Thiessen. The film is a lean, single-location "home invasion" thriller that subverts the industrial workspace into a labyrinth of terror. I. Overview and Plot Summary Hunt Her, Kill HerCAM
IMDb ratings sit at a 5.1/10, reflecting a divide between viewers who enjoy its straightforward, "one-person army" action and critics who find its plot or character logic thin. Hunt Her, Kill Her is a minimalist entry
The film grounds its horror in economic desperation. Karen's struggle is not just against the intruders, but against a system that forces her into a dangerous, isolated job. The film is a lean, single-location "home invasion"
What follows is a high-stakes game of cat-and-mouse. According to the synopsis on Rue Morgue , Karen must rely on her "crafty instincts and barbaric violence" to navigate the factory's dark corridors and fend off the attackers.