Anna Kendricks directing debut Woman of the Hour has been acquired by Netflix after its Toronto premiere on Friday. The streamer is paying in the $11 million range for the ripped-from-the-headlines thriller, making it the first major sale of the festival. The deal covers the U.S. and several international territories including France, Italy, Japan and South Korea.
Sources tell Variety that Netflix won out in a competitive situation after the film garnered multiple offers.
In the movie based on a true story, Kendrick plays a contestant on The Dating Game in 1978, who picks Rodney Alcala as her potential date. Alcala, who died in prison in 2021, turned out to be a serial killer of at least eight victims but possibly over a hundred. The Dating Game contestant, Cheryl Bradshaw, never went on the date with Alcala, who had already been convicted of being a sex offender. Daniel Zovatto plays the killer, who posed as a photographer in Los Angeles to take pictures of his victims. Tony Hale and Nicolette Robinson also star in the film.
The eight-figure deal brings Woman of the Hour back to Netflix after the streamer initially optioned the story from a Black List script by Ian MacAllister McDonald and attached Kendrick to star; however, the project was scuttled due to a wave of cost-cutting at the streamer. When the original director also exited, Kendrick stepped behind the camera to helm the picture as well. Her bold move paid off and the film debuted to rave reviews at TIFF, many of which praised the Oscar nominees aptitude as a director.
Woman of the Hour did not receive a SAG-AFTRA interim agreement, so Kendrick did not attend the festival in solidarity. At the premiere, a statement from her was read by one of the producers, saying, This film festival has proven time and time again that it is an artist-driven festival, and it has been my absolute honor to have TIFF as part of my career for the last 14 years. I truly cant express how proud I am to have the world premiere of Woman of the Hour at TIFF. It is more than a dream come true. I am heartbroken to not be with you all in this moment.
Kendrick produced via her Lets Go Again banner with Vertigo Entertainments Roy Lee and Miri Yoon, as well as BoulderLight Pictures J.D. Lifshitz and Raphael Margueles. Executive Producers include Stuart Ford, Zach Garrett, Miguel A. Palos, Jr., Ian McDonald, Joe Penna, Paul Barbeau, Sean Patrick OReilly, Andrew Deane and Stephen Crawford. BondIt Media Capital financed the project for AGC Studios and Matthew Helderman and Luke Taylor served as executive producers on the project for BondIt.
The deal was made by CAA Media Finance, Range and AGC Studios. The sale was first reported by Deadline.