Atom User Reviews for Antlers
Its a very slow burn, however characters are great the cinematography is beautiful, and the score complements the movie perfectly..
Needed to show the monster more than what they did and explain it more on how it came about
Just kinda ehh. The storyline has potentials, but never got deep dived into the why it happened. I left feeling disappointed since my questions weren’t answered.
Cinematography: Beautiful Cast: Great Several movie scenes made me jump. Some scenes made me very sad. I like the movie.
The whole movie is so sad but really interesting. My heart was pounding and I was super emotionally invested.
it's not a bad movie just really slow. the acting and look are done well, just felt like it took forever to end. also pretty dark
background wasn't explained enough,
It was creepy
Creepy but in a good way, had some scene that made people jump. Worth the money
Creepy and builds dread for the viewer, the wendigo scenes don’t disappoint. However, there are points in the story where you will roll your eyes at the stupid decisions *horror movie characters* will make. Twist ending.
amazing. totally recommend
I enjoyed this movies. Good story line and a perfect amount of scares
Incredibly bleak…
The beginning was good but before the end of the movie I stood up and left, it was very very stupid
this movie was totally stupid. not worth your time or effort or money. Skip it.
Very good movie , story was simple , characters were developed well & plenty of gore and jump scares
Couldn’t have kinder words to say about this film. Wholesome to say the least. Would recommend for the the whole family this holiday season
meh
Please don't make a Second One.
A great horror movie to end the month of October. The pace was slow at first but overshadowed by the intense plot later on. You can tell this movie has a touch of Guillermo’s ideas as the creature designs are well done. Definitely recommend for a fun watch, overall a well done movie.
Metacritic
Committed performances by Keri Russell, Jesse Plemons and extraordinary young actor Jeremy T. Thomas vividly communicate the deeper emotional stakes of Antlers, if somewhat unfortunately without adding an ounce of fun or excitement to its mythmaking.

At his best, Cooper is someone who can wring tension and understanding from what’s come before, not necessarily in anticipation of what’s about to happen. Antlers ends up getting caught between the two.
What makes suggestion-driven Antlers so disturbing isn’t the movie’s tension- and dread-building mechanics so much as the way the filmmaker burrows into the minds of his two main characters.
