Initial On review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 73% based on 240 reviews, with an average score of 7.2/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "A raw and unsettling morality piece on modern angst and urban disconnect,
Crash examines the dangers of bigotry and
xenophobia in the lives of interconnected Angelenos." On
Metacritic, the film has a score of 66 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.
Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four stars and described it as "a movie of intense fascination", listing it as the best film of 2005. Ebert concluded his review with the sentiment "not many films have the possibility of making their audiences better people. I don't expect
Crash to work any miracles, but I believe anyone seeing it is likely to be moved to have a little more sympathy for people not like themselves."
Ella Taylor of
LA Weekly described it as "not just one of the best Hollywood movies about race, but along with
Collateral, one of the finest portrayals of contemporary LA life period." The performances of Dillon, Cheadle, Bridges, Peña, and Howard were singled out.
Todd McCarthy of
Variety wrote, "Specific scenes, especially those involving Dillon as the racially resentful cop who, like everyone else, has his reasons, bristle with tension as the character continuously pushes past conventional limits in abusing his authority and, redeemingly, in his display of uncommon valor." Joanne Kaufman of the
Wall Street Journal opined, "Ultimately,
Crash succeeds in spite of itself," noting that at a certain point, it "starts to feel obvious and schematic" but remains "a complex blend of compassion and sorrow". The film's plot elements, such as the means through which all the characters are connected, were derided by critics as contrived and unconvincing.
Ty Burr of the
Boston Globe wrote that the film "is one of those multi-character, something-is-rotten-in-Los Angeles barnburners that grab you by the lapels and try desperately to shake you up. It's more artful than
Grand Canyon, less artsy than
Magnolia (LA gets dusted with snow instead of frogs), and much less of a mess than
Falling Down." Others noted how the film had nothing new or insightful to say on racism, with
Stephanie Zacharek of
Salon writing that
Crash "only confirms what we already know about racism: It's inside every one of us. That should be a starting point, not a startling revelation."
A.O. Scott of the
New York Times described it as "a frustrating movie: full of heart and devoid of life; crudely manipulative when it tries hardest to be subtle; and profoundly complacent in spite of its intention to unsettle and disturb." Much criticism focused on how the film presents racism and its origins, with many noting its depiction of race relations as too simplistic and tidy. The redemption arcs of the white characters, particularly Sergeant Ryan, drew controversy for their execution. In 2009, cultural critic
Ta-Nehisi Coates criticized the film as shallow and "unthinking", naming
Crash "the worst film of the decade". The film has been described as using multicultural and sentimentalist imagery to cover over material and "historically sedimented inequalities" that continue to affect various racial groups in Los Angeles. In a retrospective review, Tim Grierson of
The New Republic opined, "Haggis has characters hurl nasty epithets at one another, as if that's the most corrosive aspect of discrimination, failing to acknowledge that what's most destructive aren't the shouts but, rather, the whispers—the private jokes and long-held prejudices shared by likeminded people behind closed doors and far from public view." The film was also criticized for depicting the Persian shopkeeper as a "deranged, paranoid individual who is only redeemed by what he believes is a mystical act of God". The film ranked at #460 in
Empires 2008 poll of the "500 Greatest Films of All Time". In 2010, the
Independent Film & Television Alliance selected
Crash as one of the 30 Most Significant Independent Films of the last 30 years. In a retrospective piece for
The Guardian in 2025, commemorating the film's twentieth anniversary, critic Scott Tobias compared the film to
Panic in the Streets, a 1950 film noir. Tobias said of the film: "it has one big, fat theme and orchestrates every moment to serve it, like a grade-school essay that jams a few paragraphs of supporting evidence to support the thesis that is offered in the first paragraph and repeated in the last. There’s no room in there for how actual humans might behave."
Top 10 lists Crash was listed on many critics' top 10 lists. • 1st –
Roger Ebert,
Chicago Sun-Times • 1st – Steve Davis,
Austin Chronicle • 3rd – Kevin Thomas,
Los Angeles Times • 3rd –
Richard Roeper,
Ebert & Roeper • 3rd –
Ella Taylor,
L.A. Weekly • 4th –
Stephen Hunter,
The Washington Post • 6th –
Christy Lemire,
Associated Press • 7th – Claudia Puig,
USA Today • 8th –
Richard Schickel,
Time • 8th –
Lisa Schwarzbaum,
Entertainment Weekly • 9th –
Peter Travers,
Rolling Stone Oscar controversy At the
78th Academy Awards,
Crash won the Oscar for
Best Picture, triumphing over the heavily favored
Brokeback Mountain in what is considered as one of the most notable Oscars upsets. After announcing the award, presenter
Jack Nicholson was caught on camera mouthing the word "whoa" out of apparent surprise at the result. The film's use of moral quandary as a storytelling medium was widely reported as ironic since many saw it as the "safe" alternative to
Brokeback Mountain, which is about a
gay relationship (the other nominees,
Good Night and Good Luck,
Capote, and
Munich also tackle heavy subjects of
McCarthyism, homosexuality, and
terrorism). Critic
Kenneth Turan suggested that
Crash benefited from
homophobia among Academy members, some of whom openly voiced their discomfort with
Brokeback Mountain due to its subject matter. After the Oscars telecast, critic
Roger Ebert insisted in his column that the better film won the award.
Film Comment magazine placed
Crash first on its list of "Worst Winners of Best Picture Oscars", followed by
Slumdog Millionaire at #2 and
Chicago at #3. Similarly, a 2014 survey of film critics by
The Atlantic identified the film's victory as among the most glaring mistakes made by the Academy Awards. In 2017, David Ehrlich and Eric Kohn of
IndieWire ranked
Crash as the worst on its list of "Best Picture Winners of the 21st Century, Ranked from Worst to Best". In 2015,
The Hollywood Reporter polled hundreds of Academy members, asking them to re-vote on past controversial decisions. For the 2005 Best Picture winner,
Brokeback Mountain beat
Crash and the other nominees. In a 2015 interview, Haggis commented, "Was [
Crash] the best film of the year? I don't think so. There were great films that year.
Good Night, and Good Luck – amazing film.
Capote – terrific film. Ang Lee's
Brokeback Mountain, great film. And Spielberg's
Munich. I mean please, what a year.
Crash, for some reason, affected people, it touched people. And you can't judge these films like that. I'm very glad to have those Oscars. They're lovely things. But you shouldn't ask me what the best film of the year was because I wouldn't be voting for
Crash, only because I saw the artistry that was in the other films. Now however, for some reason that's the film that touched people the most that year. So I guess that's what they voted for, something that really touched them. And I'm very proud of the fact that
Crash does touch you. People still come up to me more than any of my films and say: 'That film just changed my life.' I've heard that dozens and dozens and dozens of times. So it did its job there. I mean, I knew it was the social experiment that I wanted, so I think it's a really good social experiment. Is it a great film? I don't know." In a 2020 retrospective about the film and its Oscars win, K. Austin Collins of
Vanity Fair wrote the film "is a throwback to a familiar strain of Oscar-friendly, liberal
message movie—in which the 'message,' often, is that people are complicated, goodness is relative, and evil is not a terminal condition. It dramatizes racism the same way that classical Hollywood storytelling has long dramatized things: through a sense of character and intention and a guise of psychological realism, through arcs and archetypes, through a slow climb toward third-act revelations about who people really are as evinced by the things they've achieved, the changes they've undergone by film's end."
Accolades Crash received several awards and nominations, and was named one of the top 10 films of the year by both the
American Film Institute and the
National Board of Review. The film was nominated for six awards at the
78th Academy Awards and won three, for
Best Picture,
Best Original Screenplay, and
Best Film Editing. It was also nominated for nine
British Academy Film Awards and won two, for
Best Original Screenplay and
Best Supporting Actress for Newton. Dillon received nominations for best supporting actor at the Academy Awards, and
Screen Actors Guild Awards for his performance. Additionally, the cast won the
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, and Harris and Moresco won the
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay. ==Television series==