Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
Men in movies are often just overgrown boys, and Seven Psychopaths is out to prove it - in the most twisted, hilarious way possible. Read full review
An energetically demented psycho-killer comedy set in faux-noir L.A., Seven Psychopaths rollicks along to the unique narrative beat and language stylings of Anglo-Irish writer-director Martin McDonagh (In Bruges), channeling Quentin Tarantino. Read full review
While it's way behind the "Pulp Fiction" curve, Seven Psychopaths can be terrifically entertaining. Read full review
Blood splatters, heads explode, and McDonagh takes sassy, self-mocking shots at the very notion of being literary in Hollywood. It's crazy-killer fun. Read full review
Absurdly entertaining even after it disappears up its own hindquarters in the last act, and it gives some of our weirder actors ample room to play. Read full review
There's something overtly mechanical about McDonagh's approach that keeps it all from being as outrageously fun as it's pretending to be. Read full review
Meta and messy, Seven Psychopaths does not hang together like "In Bruges." Read full review
Each cast member helps push it along, with standouts including Rockwell, Harrelson and Gabourey Sidibe in a brief but memorable scene. They help make Seven Psychopaths an astute, bloody and bloodshot-eyed addition to a genre it knows it's part of. Read full review
The violence wears you down. Like one of its nutso characters, Seven Psychopaths has a death wish. Read full review
Compared with other movies, Seven Psychopaths is clever and inventive enough to be considered a weak success or a modest failure, the kind of effort that usually gets damned with the faint praise of "not bad." Read full review
4.0
Dave White Profile
There will be squibs. Read full review
Exclusive Cast Interivew Colin Farrell, Woody Harrelson and director Martin McDonagh name the most outrageous character and Sam Rockwell and Christopher Walken talk about the craziest scenes. Woody Harrelson Talks Dark Humor in 'Psychopaths' The veteran actor sat down with us during the Toronto Film Festival last month to chat about the humor in the film and also touches on the upcoming Hunger Games sequel.