63
Metascore
16 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- It’s a B-movie operating at the highest levels of craftsmanship, intrigue, and performance.
- 70VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeThe movie’s razor-sharp visuals leave scratch marks on the back of your eyeballs, liable to burst back into your consciousness in subsequent dreams.
- 70Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonThe sci-fi horror-thriller Ash makes the most of a minimal budget, casting Eiza Gonzalez as the lone survivor on a distant planet whois unsure how she got there or who she is. With Aaron Paul playing a fellow astronaut trying to help jog her memory about a massacre that occurred at the base, the film quickly establishes an aura of paranoia and bad vibes, paving the way for deft twists and an appreciably gory finale.
- 67IndieWireKatie RifeIndieWireKatie RifeTrying to fight this film’s sensations, as unpleasant as they may be at times, will bring nothing but misery. So just give in, vibe out, and take solace in the fact that “Ash” is way more accessible than Flying Lotus’ first film.
- 63Slant MagazineSteven ScaifeSlant MagazineSteven ScaifeFlying Lotus and his collaborators give Ash enough visual flair to occasionally transcend such limitations as forgettable characters with fuzzy motivations.
- 63ReelViewsJames BerardinelliReelViewsJames BerardinelliThe film will likely find a receptive audience among those who enjoy blood-soaked B movies. It has enough gory elements to enhance the overpowering mood.
- 60ColliderNate RichardColliderNate RichardAsh feels too familiar, which is disappointing coming from such an idiosyncratic filmmaker like Flying Lotus. This material feels like it's too derivative to be effective, but the video game-like atmosphere, bonkers direction, and reliable cast make it far more watchable.
- 50Screen RantMae AbdulbakiScreen RantMae AbdulbakiAsh can be horrific and genuinely startling; there’s a specific scene near the end that underscores the apprehension that permeates the film. It’s chilling and memorable. And yet, had the sci-fi thriller given its characters more dimension, it would have been all the stronger.
- 50IGNRafael MotamayorIGNRafael MotamayorWith heavy inspirations from games like Dead Space and movies like Alien and The Thing, Flying Lotus' Ash is an ambitious, visually enthralling sci-fi horror movie. But its tale of a space station terrorized by a mysterious, gooey threat is otherwise empty and derivative, and takes too long to get going.
- 50The A.V. ClubJacob OllerThe A.V. ClubJacob OllerTrue to its inspirations, Ash offers up a formal mix between traditional sci-fi filmmaking and frequent first-person segments (either through pseudo-body cam footage or more explicitly video game-like bouts of point-of-view panic) that gives the familiarity a bit more energy than your average knock-off.