Audience viewership Despite limited distribution and marketing,
Accused topped Netflix charts in several countries, including the United Kingdom, and peaked at number 7 on Netflix's global movie chart. During its first week on the platform, the film gained over 3.3 million views and was in the top 10 in 23 countries worldwide. On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film sits at 100% on the
Tomatoemeter based on 15 critic reviews. Many reviews praised Kular's performance in particular, with Tom Nicholson from
Empire Magazine giving it a 4/5 and describing it as "a movie built on a potentially star-making performance from Kular." Matthew Monagle from
The Playlist gave the film an 'A-' writing "Kular crosses over with aplomb, carrying the entirety of Barantini’s film with very little onscreen support. The actor sells every second of his slow descent into hell and handles a sudden turn to violence with aplomb. It may not be a star-making turn for the actor, but it is undoubtedly the film that will put Kular on the radar of every Hollywood casting director." Benjamin Lee gave the film 3 out of 5 in
The Guardian, stating "It’s a tough sit for the first half but our anxiety is strangely alleviated when hateful tweets transform into hateful violence, the film faltering when it turns into a more conventional home invasion thriller. It’s not ineffective exactly (the violence is potently nasty) but there’s just something a little flattening as scenes of a more familiar panic seep in, the film becoming more like so many others before it, tension de-escalating by the minute. It’s relatively short, just shy of 90 minutes, but it perhaps would have benefited from being turned into a tighter, hour-long TV drama, playing almost like a grounded episode of Black Mirror. Before it reaches and surpasses the boiling point though, Accused packs one hell of a punch." The film holds a score of 3.2 on
Letterboxd indicating favourable reviews amongst audiences.
Box office The film grossed a total of $133,284 from its release in Spain and Russia. == References ==