Wall to Wall (2025) follows a man who sinks his life savings into a long-awaited apartment, only to find the building itself refusing to let him breathe. Thin walls amplify night echoes, plumbing becomes a staccato heartbeat, and every creak suggests someone—or something—lurking just out of sight. What begins as annoyance and sleepless nights turns into an obsession: he starts cataloging noises, deciphering muffled conversations, and peering into the lives of neighbors who react with escalating hostility.
As discoveries pile up—hidden passageways, discarded belongings from past tenants, and a history of unexplained departures—the apartment morphs from haven to trap. The film tightens into a claustrophobic thriller that blurs paranoia and reality, exploring themes of isolation, gentrification, and the cost of starting over. With simmering dread and sharp social observation, Wall to Wall keeps viewers guessing whether the danger is in the walls or in the man listening to them.