‘Night Always Comes’ Review: Vanessa Kirby’s Relentless Neo-Noir Descent Is as Unforgiving as the Night Itself
Night Always Comes. Vanessa Kirby as Lynette in Night Always Comes. Cr. Allyson Riggs/Netflix © 2025
Vanessa Kirby commands every frame in Benjamin Caron’s tense, one-night thriller — a bruising portrait of survival in a city that offers no lifelines.
Netflix’s Night Always Comes traps viewers in a relentless, neon-streaked Portland night where desperation moves faster than reason. Directed by Benjamin Caron (The Crown, Andor, Sharper) and adapted from Willy Vlautin’s acclaimed novel, this is not a film about quick thrills or cinematic redemption — it’s a claustrophobic character study sharpened into a crime odyssey.
Vanessa Kirby plays Lynette, a woman teetering on the edge of financial and emotional collapse. Living in her crumbling childhood home with her developmentally disabled brother Kenny (Zack Gottsagen) and their erratic mother Doreen (Jennifer Jason Leigh), Lynette’s fight is brutally simple: secure enough money to buy the house and keep social services away from Kenny. But when Doreen shatters their plan by blowing the down payment on a new car, Lynette is left with less than 24 hours to raise $25,000 — and a city full of bad memories to claw through.
Night Always Comes. (L-R) Stephan James as Cody and Vanessa Kirby in Night Always Comes. Cr. Allyson Riggs/Netflix © 2025
Caron builds the night with the pacing of a pressure cooker. From a humiliating encounter with a wealthy client (Randall Park), to tense run-ins with old acquaintances — including Julia Fox’s razor-sharp, self-absorbed escort and Eli Roth’s predatory party host — the film refuses to hand Lynette a clean break. Each choice ratchets up the danger, forcing her deeper into a moral freefall.
What keeps the film anchored is Kirby. As both lead and producer, she gives Lynette an unsettling mix of street-hardened pragmatism and raw vulnerability. The quiet, unguarded moments with Gottsagen’s Kenny — tender, genuine, and heartbreaking — are the film’s pulse, making every reckless decision sting that much more. Leigh, meanwhile, leans fully into Doreen’s selfish oblivion, crafting a mother-daughter dynamic so brittle it feels dangerous to touch.
Night Always Comes. (L-R) Zack Gottsagen and Vanessa Kirby in Night Always Comes. Cr. Allyson Riggs/Netflix © 2025
Cinematographer Damián García bathes Portland in shadows and sodium light, letting the darkness feel both suffocating and seductively anonymous. Adam Janota Bzowski’s score hums with low, throbbing dread — a perfect companion to Lynette’s ticking-clock spiral.
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If there’s a flaw, it’s in the emotional payoff. The final confrontation between Lynette and Doreen arrives charged with years of unspoken rage, yet Caron plays it with restraint that borders on underwhelming. The film hints at a broader commentary on America’s disappearing working class and the futility of “getting ahead” in a rigged system, but it often stays too close to Lynette’s immediate plight to let those themes fully detonate.
Still, Night Always Comes is a gripping, atmospheric descent that refuses the easy way out. It’s a long night you can’t look away from — even if you might want to.
Rating: ★★★★☆
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Night Always Comes
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“Vanessa Kirby’s raw, unflinching turn makes Night Always Comes one of Netflix’s most quietly devastating originals — a thriller that cuts deeper than its genre trappings.”
Airdate: Friday, August 15 | Netflix
Cast: Vanessa Kirby, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Zack Gottsagen, Stephan James, Randall Park, Julia Fox, Michael Kelly, Eli Roth
Distributor: Netflix
Creators: Directed by Benjamin Caron, Written by Sarah Conradt, based on the novel by Willy Vlautin
Out Now: Streaming on Netflix
Rating: R