Box office Get Out grossed $176 million in the United States and Canada and $79.4 million in other territories for a worldwide gross of $255.5 million, against a production budget of $4.5 million.
Vulture described
Get Outs 5.3
multiple (total divided by opening weekend gross) as "staggering". In North America,
Get Out was released on February 24, 2017, alongside
Collide and
Rock Dog, and was expected to gross $20–25 million from 2,773 theaters in its opening weekend. The film made $1.8 million from Thursday night previews and $10.8 million on its first day. It went on to open for $33.4 million, finishing first at the box office. 38% of the film's opening-weekend audience was African American, while 35% was white, with Georgia being its most profitable market. 90% of its opening weekend ticket sales were purchased at the theater (versus in advance). In its second weekend, the film finished in second at the box office behind new release
Logan ($88.4 million), grossing $28.3 million, for a drop of 15.4%. Horror films tend to drop at least 60% in their second weekend, so this was above average. In its third weekend, the film grossed $21.1 million, dropping just 25% from its previous week, and finished third at the box office behind newcomer
Kong: Skull Island and
Logan. In March 2017, three weeks after its release,
Get Out crossed the $100 million mark domestically, making Peele the first black writer-director to do so with his debut movie. On April 8, 2017, the film became the highest-grossing film domestically directed by a black filmmaker, beating out
F. Gary Gray's
Straight Outta Compton, which grossed $162.8 million domestically in 2015. Gray reclaimed the record two weeks later when
The Fate of the Furious grossed $173.3 million on its fourteenth day of release on April 27. Domestically,
Get Out is also the highest-grossing
debut film based on an original screenplay in Hollywood history, beating the two-decade-long record of 1999's
The Blair Witch Project ($140.5 million). The critical consensus reads, "Funny, scary, and thought-provoking,
Get Out seamlessly weaves its trenchant social critiques into a brilliantly effective and entertaining horror/comedy thrill ride." The film was the highest rated wide release of 2017 on the site. On
Metacritic, the film has an average weighted score of 85 out of 100, based on 48 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, while
PostTrak reported filmgoers gave an 84% overall positive score and a 66% "definite recommend". Keith Phipps of
Uproxx praised the cast and Peele's direction, saying, "That he brings the technical skill of a practiced horror master is more of a surprise. The final thrill of
Get Out—beyond the slow-building sense of danger, the unsettling atmosphere, and the twisty revelation of what's really going on—is that Peele's just getting started." Mike Rougeau of
IGN gave the film 9/10, and wrote, "
Get Outs whole journey, through every tense conversation, A-plus punchline and shocking act of violence, feels totally earned. And the conclusion is worth each uncomfortable chuckle and moment of doubt."
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone gave
Get Out a 3.5 out of 4, and called it a "jolt-a-minute horrorshow laced with racial tension and stinging satirical wit." Scott Mendelson of
Forbes said the film captured the
zeitgeist and called it a "modern American horror classic". Critic
Armond White gave a negative review in
National Review, referring to the film as a "Get-Whitey movie" and stating that it "[reduces] racial politics to trite horror-comedy ... it's an
Obama movie for
Tarantino fans." The
New York Observer critic
Rex Reed included the film on his list of 10 Worst Films of 2017, and later sardonically stated in a
CBS Sunday Morning interview, "I didn't care if all the black men are turned into robots." A writer on
Sunday Mornings website noted that there are no robots in the film. In 2018,
IndieWire writers ranked the script the third best American screenplay of the 21st century, with Chris O'Falt arguing that Peele "walked a narrative tightrope that required as much craft as insight [...] the audience's understanding of what Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) is thinking and feeling is always clear.
Hitchcock-like in its execution, and playing off genre and audience expectation (especially about how racial dynamics are traditionally portrayed on screen), the twists and turns of
Get Out are not only gasp-inducing; each one reveals a new layer to its exploration of systematic racist belief systems."
Accolades At the
90th Academy Awards, the film won an Oscar for
Best Original Screenplay and was nominated in three other categories:
Best Picture,
Best Director, and
Best Actor for
Daniel Kaluuya. Peele became the third person (after
Warren Beatty and
James L. Brooks) to earn Best Picture, Director and Screenplay nominations for a debut film, and the first African-American winner for Best Original Screenplay (and fourth overall nominated, after
John Singleton,
Spike Lee, and
Suzanne de Passe). It also became the 6th horror film to be nominated for best picture, after
The Exorcist,
Jaws,
The Sixth Sense,
The Silence of the Lambs and
Black Swan.
Get Out divided Oscar voters, with many older members of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences dismissing the film or declining to watch it. According to
Vulture, new voting members said they ran into "interference" from more senior members when it came to evaluating the film as
Best Picture. "I had multiple conversations with longtime Academy members who were like, 'That was not an Oscar film, according to a new voter. "Honestly, a few of them had not even seen it and they were saying it, so dispelling that kind of thing has been super important." One anonymous Oscar voter told
The Hollywood Reporter they felt alienated by the Oscar campaign: "Instead of focusing on the fact that this was an entertaining little horror movie that made quite a bit of money, they started trying to suggest it had deeper meaning than it does, and, as far as I'm concerned, they played the
race card, and that really turned me off. In fact, at one of the luncheons, the lead actor [Kaluuya], who is not from the United States, was giving us a lecture on racism in America and how black lives matter, and I thought, 'What does this have to do with
Get Out? They're trying to make me think that if I don't vote for this movie, I'm a racist.' I was really offended." At the
75th Golden Globe Awards,
Get Out received two nominations:
Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy and
Best Actor – Comedy or Musical for Daniel Kaluuya. The submission in the comedy category prompted debate about the premise of the film. Although advertised as a "satirical horror film," Universal Pictures submitted it as a comedy because of less competition in the category, which gave the film a greater chance of receiving accolades. Peele joked in a tweet, "
Get Out is a documentary," but it was reported he approved of the submission. The film also received nominations at the
24th Screen Actors Guild Awards,
49th NAACP Image Awards, and
23rd Critics' Choice Awards, among others. It won
Best Foreign International Film at the
British Independent Film Awards. At the
33rd Independent Spirit Awards on March 3, 2018, Jordan Peele won the Best Director Award and the film won Best Picture. In 2021, the
Writers Guild of America ranked the screenplay the greatest of the 21st century so far. In the decennial
critics' poll published by the
British Film Institute's magazine
Sight and Sound in 2022,
Get Out was tied for the 95th greatest film of all time. In June 2025, the film ranked number 8 on
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century". In July 2025, it ranked number 22 on
Rolling Stones list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and number 2 on
The Hollywood Reporters list of the "25 Best Horror Movies of the 21st Century." ==See also==