Rotten Tomatoes, a
review aggregator, reports that 50% of eight critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 7.5/10. J. Hurtado of
Twitch Film wrote, "A film is only as good as its ending, and
Holy Ghost People really had me going up until the ludicrous finale that conjures memories of some other great films, just rehashed and with less style." Dennis Harvey of
Variety also criticized the "underwhelming payoff", though he said the film is atmospheric and has a "promising buildup". Jim Harrington of the
San Jose Mercury News called it "a relentless psychological thriller that features a solid script and even better acting." Heather Wixson of
Dread Central rated it 3.5/5 stars and called it "an eerie exploration of power and religion" that is "an often hypnotic and surreal journey". Joshua Starnes of
Shock Till You Drop rated it 6/10 stars and wrote, "The production is slick and the film is beautifully shot, but it’s missing that spark to become more." Evan Dickson of
Bloody Disgusting rated it 3/5 stars and wrote that the film is "a well shot piece of work with an intriguing premise and several amazing performances", but the ending "teeters dangerously close" to going off the rails. Scott Weinberg of
Fearnet called it "easily [Altieri's and Flores'] most complete, cohesive, and compelling thriller yet." Samuel Zimmerman of
Fangoria rated it 2/5 stars and criticized the film's narration, which he states wrecks viewers' engagement with its redundancy. Inkoo Kang of the
Los Angeles Times wrote the film "boasts great performances and urgent, intimate camera work" but "makes nasty beasts of the very people Adair strived to humanize". Kang concludes, "Long before its feeble, drawn-out ending, it's clear no miracle can cure this film's many frailties." == References ==