Get Out isn't a great film because of its excellent pacing, strongly defined characters, and mastery of tone. It's a great film because it never loses sight of its concept. "Get Out" feels fresh and sharp in a way that studio horror movies almost never do. It is both unsettling and hysterical, often in the same moment, and it is "Get Out" opens with a fantastic tone-setter.
Top Rated Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Showtimes & Tickets In Theaters Coming Soon Coming Soon Movie News India Movie Review this title Comedian Jordan Peele's race-based horror movie combines genuine thrills with a no-holds-barred critique of black-white relations. By this time, however, Chris has gotten in too deep, as the feel of "Get Out" shifts from eerie suspense-setting to full-on horror-movie mode.
In "Get Out," a young black man goes to meet the parents of his white girlfriend and gets more than he bargained for. A young black man meets his white girlfriend's parents in Jordan Peele's chilling satire of liberal racism in the US. Jordan Peele's Get Out Is Terrifying, Socially Conscious Horror. Jordan Peele's Get Out is the satirical horror movie we've been waiting for, a mash-up of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? and The Stepford Wives that's more fun than either and more illuminating, too. Whether it's accidental or intentional, sometimes a movie arrives in theaters at just the right time. Such is the case for writer-director Jordan Peele's thriller Get Out, the story of a black man who discovers all is not what it seems at his white girlfriend's family estate, which hits theaters at a point.
Trailer Get Out
Get Out isn't exactly the sort of film that viewers turn to for life lessons. And while we definitely have a hero to root for, we're not so Get Out does have moments of comedy, some of which would feel right at home in a Key & Peele sketch. But for the most part, this is a straight-up.
It stars Daniel Kaluuya, Allison Williams, Lil Rel Howery, Bradley Whitford, Caleb Landry Jones. The more absurd Get Out becomes, the more deeply you buy into its reality—a neat trick that comes out of Peele's deft mixture of horror tropes and Get Out has done something uniquely powerful with horror. Comedian-turned-director Jordan Peele skewers black paranoia A jolt-a-minute horroshow laced with racial tension and stinging satirical wit. How is one movie all that?