41
Metascore
13 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75MovielineS.T. VanairsdaleMovielineS.T. VanairsdaleTo Stewart and screenwriter Cory Goodman's credit, the whole set up takes about 10 minutes flat, leaving Priest's remaining 77 minutes to the dark, desolate action at hand. Even more to their credit, there's something evocative in that darkness, something poetic in its desolation.
- In an era where monster mythology has become raw material for all sorts of mediocrity, Priest is one of the best examples of a broad-scale vampire blockbuster.
- 60New York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierNew York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierIt appears that turning the John Ford/John Wayne classic "The Searchers" into the church-vs-vampire adventure Priest was not an altogether god-awful idea. As long as we don't get "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" as an elegiac zombie drama, this adaptation of a graphic novel has some bite.
- 50VarietyLeslie FelperinVarietyLeslie FelperinNot exactly an unholy mess, but still a rather too pious retread of classic sci-fi/action/horror riffs that lacks originality or pizzazz.
- 42Entertainment WeeklyEntertainment WeeklyIts B-movie sins are many, worst among them an icy hero and a plot that feels like it was built from relics of other, better films.
- 40The Hollywood ReporterRay BennettThe Hollywood ReporterRay BennettA short, dour and stodgy creature feature with average 3D effects that draws on so many film influences from westerns, action adventures and sci-fi tales that what fun there is comes from spotting the many sources.
- The film is somehow a disappointing combo of too-full and oddly empty. Even with all the various parts and pieces going into its structure, it feels bare-bones.
- 38Orlando SentinelRoger MooreOrlando SentinelRoger MooreA mad mash-up of sci-fi, Western, sacrilegious silliness and vampire movie. What lifts it to "I've seen worse" status is the previous teaming of star and director Scott Stewart, who last gave us the archangel fighting off other angels fiasco "Legion."
- 33The A.V. ClubNathan RabinThe A.V. ClubNathan RabinBettany's performance consists entirely of a purposeful frown paired with a menacing glare: He goes about his godly business with solemn, no-frills intensity. The film follows suit.