Critical response The film received negative reviews from critics. It holds a 12% rating on
Rotten Tomatoes based on 109 reviews, with an average rating of 3.8/10. The site's consensus states: "The plot of
Cold Creek Manor is too predictable and contrived to generate suspense". On
Metacritic — which assigns a weighted mean score — the film has a score of 37 out of 100 based on 31 critics, indicating "generally negative reviews". Audiences surveyed by
CinemaScore gave the film a grade "C−" on a scale of A+ to F.
Stephen Holden of
The New York Times observed, "A serious filmmaker like Mike Figgis can be forgiven, I suppose, for slumming, when he's got a cast as stellar as the one that infuses the scream-by-numbers thriller
Cold Creek Manor with more psychological credibility than its screenplay merits". He said the film "belongs to the
Cape Fear tradition of thrillers in which the mettle of a civilized family man is tested in a life-or-death struggle with crude macho evil".
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times rated the film 1½ stars and called it "an
anthology of
cliches" and "a thriller that thrills us only if we abandon all common sense". He added, "Of course, preposterous things happen in all thrillers, but there must be at least a gesture in the direction of plausibility, or we lose patience". Edward Guthmann of the
San Francisco Chronicle said, "As haunted-house thrillers go,
Cold Creek Manor is more ludicrous than the average but at the same time more handsomely produced. Hokum with a big-budget gloss, it's a simple, formulaic nail-biter ... The script ... grafts from every possible thriller – most of which had pilfered their predecessors – and loads on implausibilities until we wonder why the actors play it seriously".
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone rated the film one star and commented, "It's sad to see risk-taking director Mike Figgis do a generic thriller for a paycheck and then not even screw with the rules . . . the only things haunting this movie are cliches". Steve Persall of the
St. Petersburg Times graded the film D and thought "all this bad acting and run-of-the-thrill dialogue might be entertaining if something would just happen besides a silly snake scare and a wan truck chase. The movie plays like an all-star episode of
This Old House for the first hour, a
telenovela for the next 30 minutes, then, finally, a hack boogeyman flick in the last reel. This isn't a movie, it's
channel surfing". Todd McCarthy of
Variety called the film "a woefully predictable imperiled-yuppie-family-under-siege suspenser that hardly seems worth the attention of its relatively high-profile participants. Taking a break from his multiple-perspective digicam experiments, helmer Mike Figgis displays at best a half-hearted interest in delivering the commercial genre goods, while Dennis Quaid and Sharon Stone fish in vain to find any angles to play in their dimension-free characters".
Box office The film opened in 2,035 theaters in the United States on September 19, 2003, and grossed $8,190,574 in its opening weekend, ranking #5 at the box office, behind
Underworld,
Secondhand Lions,
The Fighting Temptations and
Once Upon a Time in Mexico. It eventually earned $21,386,011 in the United States and $7,733,423 in foreign markets, for a total worldwide box office of $29,119,434. Bonus features include commentary with director Mike Figgis; deleted scenes and an alternate ending;
Rules of the Game, in which Figgis discusses the components of a psychological thriller; and ''Cooper's Documentary'', in which he discusses the process of making the film within the film. A
Blu-ray edition was released on September 4, 2012. ==References==