63
Metascore
15 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90Village VoiceApril WolfeVillage VoiceApril WolfeIt’s science fiction that’s complex, thoughtful and funny, like 12 Monkeys or Primer run through a Fargo filter.
- 75RogerEbert.comGlenn KennyRogerEbert.comGlenn KennyIt’s a movie that puts the viewer into a bad dream, and is very canny in dispensing the keys to unlock the meanings of that dream — and in strategically withholding some of those keys.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeThe Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeAn affecting brainteaser with echoes of Lynchian dissociation.
- 70VarietyGeoff BerkshireVarietyGeoff BerkshireAn unusual movie like Buster’s Mal Heart demands an unusual star, and Rami Malek proves an ideal fit for Sarah Adina Smith’s sophomore feature.
- 67The A.V. ClubKatie RifeThe A.V. ClubKatie RifeBuster’s Mal Heart is indie sci-fi at its most abstract, taking elements of more populist, influential films like "Fight Club" and "The Matrix" and filtering them through philosophical exchanges and coolly stylized compositions to produce something that’s somehow simultaneously more weighty and more slight.
- 60We Got This CoveredLauren Humphries-BrooksWe Got This CoveredLauren Humphries-BrooksDespite its undoubted ambition and an excellent central performance from Rami Malek, Buster’s Mal Heart slips into the traps that so often face thrillers of its type.
- 60The New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisThe New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisBuster’s Mal Heart is about the making of a madman. It also aspires, with less success, to philosophically query the void at the center of modern life and Christianity’s failure to fill it.
- 50The Film StageJordan RaupThe Film StageJordan RaupDespite a committed lead performance and flashes of finding beauty in the bizarre, Buster’s Mal Heart loses confidence as it proceeds, resulting in a journey of half-formed ideas that could’ve used as much focus as Malek’s dead-eyed glance.
- 50The PlaylistKevin JagernauthThe PlaylistKevin JagernauthIn Buster’s Mal Heart, many of the intriguing thematic ideas in the first half of the picture, are left adrift in favor of trying to keep the audience on its toes.
- 50Slant MagazineKenji FujishimaSlant MagazineKenji FujishimaWriter-director Sarah Adina Smith's film confuses narrative gimmickry for the sensitive evocation of an inner life.