Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Release: We Still Know Where You Live

 
We Still Know Where You Live
Genre: Horror
Director: Franck Khalfoun
Writer: Jack Brown
Sequel to We Know Where You Live
Cast: Toby Kebbell, Ben Mendelsohn, Kelsey Asbille, Grace Van Dien, Abigail Cowen, Madison Pettis, Zoe Levin, Marc Blucas, Ione Skye, Jack Champion, Ryan Kiera Armstrong, Moises Arias



Budget: $22,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $41,188,105
Foreign Box Office: $24,954,000
Total Profit: $24,480,111

Reaction: Thanks to slight increases in the box office figures, this sequel brought in almost exactly the same profits despite a cost increase. While this series isn't exactly a huge box office breakout hit, it is proving to be a steady earner.





"With We Still Know Where You Live director Franck Khalfoun and writer Jack Brown deliver an uncompromising, dark sequel to its predecessor. The film picks up directly from the events of the first installment and while I wasn't the biggest fan of the first movie, I must say that I enjoyed this one much more. Ben Mendelsohn shines as the broken investigator Shaw, while Grace Van Dien delivers a haunting performance as the manipulated Blondie. Not for the faint-hearted, but a strong entry in the genre." - Clark Chase, Chicago Sun-Times


"This movie goes hard. From blood-soaked mind games to culty creeps in the woods, We Still Know Where You Live dials the dread up to eleven and never lets go. Grace Van Dien and the girl gang are terrifyingly hypnotic, and Toby Kebbell proves his Abraham Browning is horror's next cult-icon villain. It’s brutal, stylish, and disturbingly addictive." - Frank Estelle, Boca Breeze




"We Still Know Where You Live is a technically well-made film in service of something deeply unpleasant. Franck Khalfoun crafts a relentlessly grim sequel soaked in blood, fire, and sadism, but offers little insight to justify its cruelty. The performances are strong — especially Ben Mendelsohn — but they’re buried beneath waves of exploitative violence and emotional nihilism. It’s horror without heart, and by the end, the only thing scarier than its killers is how numb the viewer may feel." - Jon Farrell, Hollywood Reporter









Rated R for strong bloody violence, disturbing content, language, and sexual material.






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