Reception The Descent had its world premiere at the Edinburgh horror film festival
Dead by Dawn on 6 July 2005. It opened to the public in the UK on 10 July 2005, showing on 329 screens and earning £2.6 million. The film received limited releases in other European countries. The
London bombings were reported to have affected the box office performance of
The Descent. The picture had its North American premiere at the Sundance Film Festival just after midnight on January 26, 2006. On its debut weekend in the US,
The Descent opened with a three-day gross of $8.8 million, and finished with $26,005,908. Total worldwide box office receipts are $57,051,053.
Roger Ebert's editor, Jim Emerson, reviewed the film for Ebert's column whilst Ebert was on leave due to surgery, giving it four out of four stars. He wrote, "This is the fresh, exciting summer movie I've been wanting for months. Or for years, it seems." Manohla Dargis of
The New York Times described
The Descent as "one of the better horror entertainments of the last few years", calling it "indisputably and pleasurably nerve-jangling". Dargis applauded the claustrophobic atmosphere of the film, though she perceived sexual overtones in the all-female cast with their laboured breathing and sweaty clothing. Rene Rodriguez of
The Miami Herald thought that the film devolved into a guessing game of who would survive, though he praised Marshall's "nightmare imagery" for generating scares that work better than other horror films. Rodriguez also noted the attempt to add dimension to the female characters but felt that the actresses were unable to perform. Lawrence Toppman of
The Charlotte Observer thought a weakness of
The Descent was the failure of the writer to explain the evolution of the creature, though he said, "Their clicking and howling, used for echolocation and communication, makes them more alien; this otherness gives humans permission to mutilate them without seeming too disgusting to be sympathetic." Michael Wilmington of the
Chicago Tribune thought that the crawlers should have been left out of the film, believing, "Watching those gray, slithering beings chasing and biting the women makes it hard to maintain any suspension of disbelief."
Top ten lists, 2006: • 1st – Bravo's 13 Even Scarier Movie Moments • 7th —
Sight & Sound • 10th – Nathan Lee,
Village Voice • 10th – Stephen Hunter,
The Washington Post Since its release,
The Descent has been regarded as one of the best horror films of the 2000s. In the early 2010s,
Time Out conducted a poll with several authors, directors, actors and critics who have worked within the horror genre to vote for their top horror films;
The Descent placed at number 39 on their top 100 list. The
2013 Tomb Raider reboot, and the depiction of its main character,
Lara Croft, were inspired in part by
The Descent. Home media The Descent was released on
DVD and
Blu-ray on 26 December 2006. The discs contain both the unaltered UK release and the edited US theatrical cut, the former being advertised as an "unrated" version. ==Sequel==