Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Reviews

‘Get Out’ review

Jordan Peele's 'Get Out' is so good, it's scary

Add as a preferred source on Google
Get Out
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Whether it’s accidental or intentional, sometimes a movie arrives in theaters at just the right time.

Recommended Videos

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 when racism, xenophobia, and fear of anyone different are shaping our social and political climate in terrifying ways. It’s an environment that has audiences primed to connect with the film’s clever (and exceptionally scary) themes, and connect it does – with shocking, and occasionally, uncomfortably real results.

The directorial debut of the Key & Peele co-creator, Get Out casts Daniel Kaluuya (Skins, Black Mirror) as a young, black man who agrees to accompany his girlfriend, Rose (played by Girls actress Allison Williams), on a visit to her family’s sprawling home. The more time he spends around Rose and her family, however, the more clues pile up that suggest something is very, very wrong with everyone there – particularly the other non-white people he encounters.

A tense tale from its opening moments to its brutal third act, Get Out is so expertly paced and delivers its frights at just the right frequency (and degree of scariness) that it’s easy to forget that Peele is a first-time filmmaker. To his credit, Peele also manages to avoid doing what’s expected at nearly every turn in the plot, even going so far as to occasionally tease his audience with a potential trope, only to take things somewhere else entirely at critical moments.

The timing couldn’t be more appropriate for the film to arrive in theaters.

Given how predictable the horror genre can be, Peele does a surprisingly good job of avoiding the easy scares – something that speaks volumes to his awareness of the genre and its potential beyond what’s been done time and time before.

As the film’s lead, Kaluuya walks a fine balance between being more aware and perceptive of what’s going on around him than the typical horror movie protagonist while still retaining that precious degree of naivety that makes the twists that much more unnerving when they do happen. When the lights finally do come on – figuratively – for Kaluuya’s character, he handles the transition from victim to determined survivor in believable fashion, coming off with a mix of reluctance and visceral desperation that works well with how he’s played the character up to that point.

Of the supporting cast, the always reliable Catherine Keener (Being John Malkovich, Capote) offers a nice reminder why she’s a two-time Oscar nominee with a performance as Rose’s hypnotherapist mother that shifts from warm to ice-cold sinister in subtle increments. As Rose’s father, Emmy winner Bradley Whitford (The West Wing, The Good Guys) maintains a constant state of awkward creepiness that wavers between being funny and dangerously loony at various points, to great effect.

Get Out
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Williams herself turns in a performance that, although it isn’t matched by Keener and Whitford, also manages to squeeze a lot out of a character that’s somewhat limited for much of the film.

In much the same way It Follows tapped into the awkward fear lurking below the surface of sex and young adulthood, Get Out mines its scares from generations’ worth of simmering racism and bigotry. And with so much of that hatred bubbling to the surface in recent months, the timing couldn’t be more appropriate for the film to arrive in theaters. Its themes resonate in ways that make the scares just a little more frightening, and its horrifying narrative a little more real than it might have seemed a year ago.

Hopefully, Peele is just getting started.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Netflix announces a new adult animated workplace comedy from the minds behind Common Side Effects and Scavengers Reign
The show is set to arrive in 2027
netflix-dealies-animated-series

If you were gutted by the cancellation of Scavengers Reign, Netflix has something that might ease the pain. The streaming giant has officially announced Dealies, a new adult animated workplace comedy set inside the most gloriously unhinged big box store in America.

The show is created by Joe Bennett and Ted Travelstead, and is expected to arrive on Netflix in 2027.

Read more
Google Photos will turn your pictures into a digital wardrobe that you can mix-and-match
Google Photos Wardrobe feature

Google Photos has spent years organizing our memories. Now it wants to organize our closets, too.

Google is rolling out a new feature called Wardrobe that transforms the photos already sitting in your library into a digital closet. Instead of scrolling through hundreds of selfies and outfit photos before heading out, Wardrobe automatically identifies clothing items from your pictures and groups them into a virtual collection you can browse, mix, and match.

Read more
Google Play Books is getting an AI reading companion that remembers where you left off
Page, Text, Electronics

If you’ve ever picked up a book after a long break and spent the first few pages wondering who half the characters are, Google thinks it has a solution.

Google Play Books is rolling out a new feature called Book Insights, an AI-powered reading companion designed to help readers stay engaged without leaving the page. The tool introduces a “Catch me up” button that generates a quick recap of what you’ve already read, making it easier to jump back into a story after days — or even weeks — away.

Read more