On
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes it has an 18% approval rating based on 11 reviews, only two being positive. The site's critical consensus reads: "
The Crow: Salvation adds nothing new to the series and is plagued by bad acting and dialogue." Lisa Nesselson of
Variety responded positively to the film, opining that it was "a reasonably suspenseful, adequately made programmer" with a "calmly and wryly effective" protagonist and "efficient f/x artillery."
JoBlo's Berge Garabedian gave the film a score of 4 out of 10, and concluded, "The film itself was definitely a little more entertaining than
the second installment with some pretty slick gory death scenes, a loud but cool soundtrack, and a lead who doesn't throw you off with a cheesy accent. In fact, I credit Mabius for pulling off a decent outing despite my initial skepticism (A teen Crow? Never!). Unfortunately, you don't really care about ANY of the characters, especially the bad guys or the family left behind, so all you're basically left with is a low-rent
Crow retread with a decent lead, a nice look, but plenty of bad dialogue, zero originality or depth." David Nusair of
Reel Film Reviews had a similarly middling response to the film, giving it a score of 2 out 5, criticizing its casting and anemic violence, and writing, "While
Salvation certainly isn't as bad as that first sequel, it still doesn't come near the sheer coolness of the first one."
Nathan Rabin of
The A.V. Club lambasted the film as "a repugnant exercise in emptily stylish ultraviolence that plays like the longest, most expensive
Rammstein video ever made" and closed his review of it with, "Dour and humorless even as its over-the-top violence and awful dialogue propel it to the realm of high camp,
The Crow: Salvation marks a nadir for a series that was never especially good to begin with." Jonathan Barkan of
Bloody Disgusting counted
Salvation and
Wicked Prayer as being among the worst horror films that he had ever seen, calling them "deplorable" before going on to say, "Both of them felt like lazy, slapdash, thoughtless, cash cows and that feeling permeates in every scene, oozing out of the celluloid like some damn viscous disease." Nick Perkins of
Coming Soon was similarly derisive, ranking it as the worst in the series, and writing, "In theory, it's a good story. It should be, as it was written by
Crow creator, James O'Barr. It's just the execution that left a lot to be desired. Mabius absolutely lacked the charisma that
Brandon Lee possessed in spades. And though Kirsten Dunst also starred in this film, the supporting characters were generally as bland as the lead." ==Sequel==