Rotten Tomatoes, a
review aggregator, reports that 56% of nine surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 5.64/10. Liam Lacey of
The Globe and Mail rated it 3/4 stars and called it a "political horror movie" that "provide[s] a timely commentary on supposedly safe homes and distant wars." Peter Howell of
The Toronto Star rated it 3/4 stars and wrote, "
388 Arletta Avenue is a superior chiller that speaks to modern fears." John Anderson of
Variety wrote that the film is "a taut, often ingenious thriller" for as long as it stays focused on its gimmick, a couple stalked via constant surveillance. Martyn Conterio of
Little White Lies wrote that the film's only shock comes from Vincenzo Natali's involvement. Conterio called the film "a very poor effort within the increasingly irrelevant found footage subgenre". Darryl Loomis of
DVD Verdict wrote that the film rises above its gimmick, a combination of
found footage and home invasion film, to deliver "a solid story with a whole lot of tension". Rohit Rao of
DVD Talk rated it 2.5/5 stars and wrote, "
388 Arletta Avenue is built around an interesting idea but its execution suffers from lapses in logic and an unsatisfying ending." == See also ==