Atom User Reviews for Blink Twice
This film was unique to me and I've watched several hundred of films. it is a slow pace but I was completely engaged and taking the ride with the characters! I'm going to watch again. This is definitely a movie that you can miss bread crumbs throughout. highly recommend!
One of the best movies I’ve seen in a long time.
This movie had great actors, and I liked seeing them perform together. The movie was slow with a rather quick rushed ending. Looks like there could be a sequel with how the ending ended. See it in the theater or stream at home in pjs......either way you can say you've seen it. I wanted to love it...but only just liked it.
Not what I expected had some good scenes but I felt like it left a lot of gaps
Channing Tatum doesn’t disappoint— whole cast is superb and excellent twists!!
Really surprising and you definitely have to catch all the little clues.
Best I’ve seen in a long time
The Movie
would definitely see it again.
This movie was amazing! You have to go watch it ! What a plot twist !
came into this having known only what the first trailer had shown us. in other words, i came in blind. this film took me for a RIDE in the best way possible. i was engaged from beginning to end. no matter how many times i thought i had it figured out they shocked me once again!! Zoë Kravitz really did her thing on this one! i’ll definitely be watching this again.
This movie was better, than I expected it to be. So many plot twists, with than ending you didn't see coming!
Has the potential to be much better. Do appreciate the Trigger Warning
Metacritic
For a film that’s so explicit in how it tackles trauma, it makes for a frustrating experience.
Blink Twice sucker punches the audience with its sexual violence and then fails to find intelligence or dexterity in its handling of it or any of the themes running adjacent.
The film goes on longer than it needs to, and as with so many in its genre, its director loses control by the third act. But “Blink Twice” is a promising debut that’s haunting for its performances (Ackie gives a vivid, vulnerable star turn; Tatum finds, behind his good-guy smile, an eeriness he’s never shown on-screen; Geena Davis pops up to steal a few scenes, as is her right) and for its feminist sensibility.