Atom User Reviews for Missing
I really enjoyed this movie from start to finish. It was both intense and fun...
Kept our attention the whole movie. Great acting and didn’t suspect the ending!
I almost thought I was in their pants for a second. 😅
Such a great movie! Had us guessing every second of it!!! A must see!!! ❤️
kids needs to watch this too
Wooow completely threw me off of who I actually suspected, taking the Mom😲
Movie was really good and very hard to predict unlike most movies like this!
Definitely could have been better
twist
I watched it with my brother when it came out and I’m going again tomorrow to watch with coworkers
Such good writing. I loved it
it's a solid turn your brain off entertaining time, nothing too complex that you have to think about. Solid plot with solid acting, and finally a logical use of technology by the protagonist unlike with the Unfriended movies
Amazing
Haven’t seen a great movie like this for a. Long time. Would highly recommend it
Was kitty asf High key predictable…
Meh.
really well done!
It was actually very entertaining and interesting
great movie!
just when you thought you figured it out...nope
Loved it!
It’s a decent movie
Played with our emotions
cheap plot twists
Didn’t check the time once during the show. These days that’s a plus when watching a movie. Didn’t disappoint.
You need to be able to read fast and understand cell texting and emojis
My new fav movie
Need the ending explained
Late review but this movie was intense love the camera and webcam aspect I never seen searching but now I’m going too great cast
BEST MOVIE EVER!!!
Metacritic
This picture’s just a clockwork contraption of clever “tools” used cleverly and little more, none of them more than Final Cut Pro or Adobe Premiere or whatever editing software they used to cut this sterile jewel into shape with.

Screenlife may never be one of the primary ways we tell cinematic stories, but Missing is a prime example of what the format is capable of, tapping into our increasingly digital humanity to excellent effect.

Missing captures the constant distractions of the modern age. Pop-up windows continually tug at June’s attention. However, the film’s more engaging moments tap into the older cyber nostalgia of text-based adventure games from the 1970s, where problems are solved by typing the right command.
