Box office After Death has grossed $11.4 million in the United States and Canada and $352,534 in other territories, for a worldwide total of $11.8 million The film was released on October 27, 2023, in 2,605 theaters in the United States and Canada. It made $2.1 million on its first day and a total of $5.1 million in its opening weekend, finishing in fourth.
RogerEbert.com's Nick Allen, rating the film 0.5 of 4 stars, felt it "barely works as an infomercial". He went on to say "Midway through, the superficial
After Death thinks you have been sold on these transcendental experiences (and maybe you have)… [It's] all about the spectacle and the emotion it can create from such an experience, and it then curdles with a creepiness when it lets people talk for longer."
Variety Owen Gleiberman similarly criticized
After Death approach, writing "After a while… we start to notice that the film is presenting the recoveries themselves as miracles… That's fine; maybe it's even faith. But when faith feels compelled to sell itself by pretending it's something else, you'd be forgiven for thinking it's propaganda."
Indiewire David Ehrlich, giving it a "D" grade, was also negative: "Audiences who swear by the gospel of
Colton Burpo probably won't see the problem here, but those of us who are less inclined to believe… might struggle to accept a handful of teary anecdotes and bizarre medical anomalies as compelling evidence that Christianity got everything right about life after death. On the contrary, such viewers are liable to be left with more questions than answers." In his review for
CNN, Brian Lowry referred to
After Death as "a fairly limp documentary" and compared it to the 2021
Netflix docu-series
Surviving Death. Writing for
The Guardian, Leslie Felperin added that "solemn music, moody lighting and dramatic re-creations don't just make things magically factual. Or even especially persuasive." Reviewing
After Death for
The New York Times, Nicolas Rapold stated that "the stories are rolled together in a hash of editing, and the speakers can be oddly low energy", concluding that "whether you believe these phenomena are spiritual journeys or visions created by the human mind (or both), the film loses its sense of
epiphany in the lackluster jumble of its moviemaking". == References ==