47
Metascore
27 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 70The Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweThe Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweWhile Hooper favored shock value and jump scares, Kenan and cinematographer Javier Aguirresarobe construct far more fluid sequences as the camera glides and hovers over its subjects, reserving the most impactful shots for the climactic scenes, particularly a concluding sequence that’s particularly thrilling.
- 67Entertainment WeeklyClark CollisEntertainment WeeklyClark CollisThe only really frightening thing about the 2015 version of Poltergeist is how haunted it is by the original.
- 60VarietyAndrew BarkerVarietyAndrew BarkerLess a steadily escalating thriller than a guided tour through a county-fair-style haunted house, Poltergeist offers some quality jump scares, and Kenan has a knack for staging solid individual setpieces. But he proves weirdly incapable of modulation or mood setting here.
- 60Total FilmMatt GlasbyTotal FilmMatt GlasbyVery tame, but saved from the remake scrapheap by Sam Rockwell's surprisingly touching performance and a final reel that – briefly – takes the material somewhere new.
- 60Time Out LondonTom HuddlestonTime Out LondonTom HuddlestonPoltergeist, while entertaining, has more in common with slick, audience-goosing spookers like "Insidious" and "Sinister" than with the imaginative original.
- 60The TelegraphMike McCahillThe TelegraphMike McCahillMostly it’s a scare machine, and in this respect Kenan’s is the more efficient telling, its VFX lubricating all that now creaks about the original.
- 50Screen DailyFionnuala HalliganScreen DailyFionnuala HalliganA good cast including Sam Rockwell and Jared Harris wander around sincerely in what feels, at times, almost a shot-by-shot remake, and at others, an obstinately wrong-footed exercise in dabbling with the narrative.
- 40EmpireNick de SemlyenEmpireNick de SemlyenA disappointingly tame and unimaginative effort, which throws away much of what was best-loved about the original and fails to find worthy replacements.
- 35TheWrapAlonso DuraldeTheWrapAlonso DuraldePoltergeist ultimately plays like the most perfunctory of remakes, one born of rights ownership and title marketability rather than a burning desire on anyone’s part to do something interesting or provocative with a classic. The 1982 original remains unassailable, all the more so when stood side by side with its pipsqueak descendant.
- 25Slant MagazineClayton DillardSlant MagazineClayton DillardIt's the cinematic equivalent of a pat on the back accompanied by a slap in the face.