42
Metascore
14 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 83The PlaylistThe PlaylistKoltyarenko serves a bitter pill for viewers of his film, many of whom will likely see themselves as part of the solution to the problem of online radicalization by attempting to grapple with it in this film. The viewers are actually more part of the problem by tuning into Kurt’s stream in the first place.
- 75Chicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperChicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperEvery frame of the film is bursting with sensory overload information, from the shaky, hand-held camera angles to the constant scrolling of viewer messages to the occasional use of split screens.
- 63Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreI have to say I went along with it, more amused by the craft and bursts of wit and gripped by a bit of tension, here and there, than appalled by the inhumanity. It taps into our shared phobia about ridesharing and “over-sharing,” not that EVERYbody is alarmed by these phenomena.
- 58ConsequenceMichael RoffmanConsequenceMichael RoffmanSpree works better as a performance piece for Keery, who never eases up on the pedal. He’s legitimately haunting as Kurt, and like the best sociopaths in film, there’s a subtle guilt that comes from wanting to see what he’ll do next. Oddly enough, that feeling speaks louder than anything actually said in the film.
- 50The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeThe Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeTo the extent that it works, much credit goes to Keery, for finding the real human need inside this twentysomething cipher.
- 50The VergeAdi RobertsonThe VergeAdi RobertsonThe film leans hard into dark comedy rather than outright horror, which saves it from seeming like technophobic scaremongering or a “kids these days” moral panic. If you’re the kind of person who can laugh at slapstick murder vignettes, a lot of Spree works very well.
- 30SlashfilmBen PearsonSlashfilmBen PearsonKeery turns in a good performance, insomuch as Kurt’s thirsty loser is a 180-degree turn from Steve Harrington on Stranger Things, but there’s nothing enjoyable about him slipping into the skin of this maniac, and very rarely anything enjoyable about the experience of watching the film itself.
- 30VarietyJessica KiangVarietyJessica KiangIf you are in need of more reminders of the most extreme of the potential evils of internet interaction than you get every time you fire up an app, by all means, smash the like button on “Spree.” For the rest of us, the best advice might be to mute, block, vote down, unfollow or simply log off and go look at a tree.
- 10The New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisThe New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisCoarsely merging social-media critique and slasher comedy, this shallow take on the evils of internet addiction is as unoriginal as it is unfunny.