No One Gets Out Alive is a 2021 British horror film directed by Santiago Menghini from a screenplay by Jon Croker and Fernanda Coppel, loosely based on the 2014 novel of the same name by Adam Nevill.
In search of a place to stay, she finds a dilapidated boarding house run by Red, who requires the first month's rent up front.
After Becker takes one of the women downstairs; Red tells Ambar that his dad was an archaeologist (as seen in the home movies at the start of the film) who brought back a stone box from his trip to Mexico in 1963.
This causes the monster, the Aztec goddess Ītzpāpālōtl (God of Paradise made possible through sacrifice), associated with the moth seen throughout the film (Rothschildia erycina), to retreat back into the box.
As she starts to leave the house, her ankle, broken by Becker earlier, suddenly heals as a result of sacrificing Red to the monster.
She stops and puts out her hand to let a moth land on it then turns back towards the basement door, showing the same darkened throbbing veins that Becker had.
"[5] Randy Myers of San Jose Mercury News awarded three stars out of four, stating the film is "a stand-up-and-take-notice feature debut from filmmaker Santiago Menghini.
"[7] In a three out of five star review published by The Age, Jake Wilson writes: "If you've ever felt adrift in a new city, or woken up at night wondering how you're going to pay the rent, you may find this particular nightmare more haunting than most.
"[8] In a negative review from Showbiz Cheat Sheet, Jeff Nelson criticised the lack of variety in its "creepy moments", calling them "less effective" as they are essentially repeated.
[9] Lyra Hale of Fangirlish gave the film a grade of F, stating the reason as: "No One Gets Out Alive falls flat on its face from the very start as it tries to present itself as this arthouse-style movie that exemplifies the hardships of immigrants with a twist of horror.