
Just because you're invited, doesn't mean you're welcome.
Chris and his girlfriend Rose go upstate to visit her parents for the weekend. At first, Chris reads the family's overly accommodating behavior as nervous attempts to deal with their daughter's interracial relationship, but as the weekend progresses, a series of increasingly disturbing discoveries lead him to a truth that he never could have imagined.
- 7.6
- 2017
- Released
- 1h 44m

Daniel Kaluuya
Chris Washington
Allison Williams
Rose Armitage
Catherine Keener
Missy Armitage
Bradley Whitford
Dean Armitage
Caleb Landry Jones
Jeremy Armitage
Marcus Henderson
Walter
Betty Gabriel
Georgina
LaKeith Stanfield
Andre Logan King
Stephen Root
Jim Hudson
Lil Rel Howery
Rod Williams
Ashley LeConte Campbell
Lisa Deets
John Wilmot
Gordon Greene
Caren L. Larkey
Emily Greene
Julie Ann Doan
April Dray
Rutherford Cravens
Parker Dray
Geraldine Singer
Philomena King
Yasuhiko Oyama
Hiroki Tanaka
Richard Herd
Roman Armitage
Erika Alexander
Detective Latoya
Jeronimo Spinx
Detective Drake
Ian Casselberry
Detective Garcia
Trey Burvant
Officer Ryan
Sean Paul Braud
Police Officer #2
Zailand Adams
Chris 11 year old
Keegan-Michael Key
NCAA Prospect (uncredited)
Jordan Peele
Dying Deer / UNCF PSA Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Evan Shafran
Travel Passenger (uncredited)
Tahj Vaughans
Dead Ex Boyfriend (uncredited)
Bradley Hoover
White Partygoer (uncredited)


















Released
en
$4,500,000.00
$255,407,969.00
- #kidnapping
- #externally controlled action
- #manipulation
- #dark comedy
- #hypnosis
- #parents-in-law
- #satire
- #racist
- #revenge
- #interracial relationship
- #disappearance
- #racism
- #psychological thriller
- #neurosurgeon
- #missing person
- #stereotype
- #brain surgery
- #satirical
- #race-conscious
- #frightened
- #hipnotismo
Reviews

Racist movie from a racist director Jordan Peele. Movie basically is giving us a message that all white people are bad and evil and all black people are the good and great ones. It's a trash movie and should be left in a trashcan.

Not surprisingly, "Chris" (Daniel Kaluuya) is apprehensive of his first meeting with the parents of his girlfriend "Rose" (Allison Williams) as the couple arrive at their remote country home. Now what we can plainly see from the outset comes as a bit of a shock to the folks, but they are cordial enough and it seems that maybe this weekend isn't going to be so very bad for "Chris" after all. Thing

Uncomfortably entertaining! The reason for the aforementioned is that <em>'Get Out'</em> sets up the premise so, so well and you are just waiting for the penny to drop, so all the events leading up to the reveal are very awkward - which only adds to the overall enjoyment in seeing it all unfold onscreen. I've seen Daniel Kaluuya in a few (not as many as I should have by now) films and have a

Man all you fans are going to be embarrassed once racism is bad again... remember back in the day where we were supposed to judge people by the content of their character and not the color of their skin? That attitude is going to come back, in many cases it never died, and even though the faux progressives are pushing to judge people by their skin color... yeah, people are going to just not be ra

**An excellent film, which deserves our attention.** I saw this movie yesterday. I've been thinking about it for a while, and yesterday I took the opportunity to do so. I already had a notion that it was a very successful film, and that it was successful at the box office and with specialized critics. For a horror movie, that's pretty good stuff. For my part, I think it's a good film, well abov
I loved this movie. I can’t express how happy and excited this movie made me for reasons I’ll talk about here… Most haven't seen, but this is what I was talking about yesterday with my review on Brightburn (on Letterboxd). It was a horror movie with a good idea bad bad execution with no plot or character development to help us care about the characters. Get Out is the perfect mix of horror, cha
The hypnotism aspect changed the tone of the film, even though something menacing was expected all along. The end shriveled into routine gore and gun violence. The racial implications may make some feel guilty. Good enough overall but also overrated. Ms. Williams may be more than another NBC 'talent', time will tell.

**Now you're in the sunken place!** Not all the directional debut sees this kind of welcome from the audience. Yeah, Jordan Peele had written and directed it. It is similar to the 90s style mystery-thrillers. Definitely must see for the 90s, 80s guys. It kind of looked like a black comedy, but I guess that's not they had preferred. Especially that teacup scenes and some of the close up shots, t

Perhaps it was the months of hype-related-preamble I had before getting the chance to see _Get Out_ that caused me to be not entirely blown away by it, or maybe it just doesn't resonate with me the same way it did with its audience at large. Either way, I was still very impressed with Jordan Peele's directorial debut. It's a great combination of freaky and funny, as well as realist and absurdis
**Opening Remarks** I went out to see this film armed only with the snippets I watched in the form of television commercials and YouTube ads. The film had a very interesting look and that really caught my attention. I noticed that the film focused primarily on race, which seemed like an interesting concept for a horror/psychological thriller. I also saw that Jordan Peele (of "Key and Peele" fa

~ NO SPOILERS ~ This is an extremely impressive film from Peele. Its smart and knows it-- teasing you along the way of what is to unfold at the film's climax. The main character is a photographer goes to visit his GF's house and all-white family. Things are not as they appear at first glance, and as the film progresses it becomes even more disturbingly obvious that the family is hiding a secre
Horror and comedy have blended well since around the beginning of film for one key reason: the release that both allow from the audience. The building set-up is not unlike the quiet before the jump scare. Both utilize equations of timing to provoke an unconscious reaction. Because of these similarities, the horror-comedy is a well-tapped genre, especially in the last couple decades of works aiming











