IMDb 6.4 2015 HD

Good Kill

Good Kill

2015
Drama Thriller War
104 min R USA
5.967 / 10
6.4 IMDB

In the shadowy world of drone warfare, combat unfolds like a video game–only with real lives at stake. After six tours of duty, Air Force pilot Tom Egan…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Andrew Niccol / Jennifer Josephson / Nicholas Mastandrea
Starring
Ethan Hawke / January Jones / Zoë Kravitz / Jake Abel / Bruce Greenwood / Alma Sisneros / Kristen DeVore Rakes / Dylan Kenin

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

thought-provoking bleak unsettling moral intense detached weary relevant somber disturbing complex human

Reviews

S
Seraphina Reed
Apr 18, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

This is a film that lingers long after the credits roll. 'Good Kill' eschews the usual heroic tropes of war cinema for a more introspective and disturbing examination of drone warfare. Ethan Hawke is exceptional as Tom Egan,…

A
Arthur Pendelton
Apr 18, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

'Good Kill' offers a stark look at the psychological burden carried by drone operators, with Ethan Hawke giving a commendable performance as a pilot grappling with his conscience. The film’s tone is deliberately bleak, reflecting the grim reality…

G
Genevieve Dubois
Apr 18, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

Director Unknown crafts a chillingly intimate portrait of a drone pilot’s descent in 'Good Kill'. Ethan Hawke is superb, embodying the quiet desperation of a man whose conscience is being steadily chipped away by the digital battlefield. The…

M
Marcus Bellweather
Apr 18, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

In 'Good Kill', the sterile confines of a Nevada airbase become the unlikely theatre for a profound moral drama. Ethan Hawke anchors the film with a performance that captures the slow erosion of a soldier's soul under the…

E
Eleanor Vance
Apr 18, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

Ethan Hawke delivers a compellingly weary performance as Tom Egan, a drone pilot caught in a moral quagmire. The film’s strength lies in its unflinching portrayal of the psychological toll of remote warfare, eschewing bombast for a quiet,…

FAQs

Egan's desire to return to a physical cockpit signifies his deep-seated need for tangible engagement and a sense of direct control, which he feels is lost in the disembodied nature of drone warfare. It represents a longing for a more traditional form of military service, where the risks and rewards are more immediate and less abstract. This yearning also highlights his disillusionment with the sterile, morally ambiguous reality of his current role.