Box office By the end of its domestic theatrical run,
Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts recorded 154 thousand admissions, making it Surya's most commercially successful project to date.
Critical response On
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 98% from 44 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Subversive, gorgeously shot, and suitably visceral,
Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts injects timely feminist themes into a neo-western grindhouse framework." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 77 out of 100 from 13 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Variety's Maggie Lee gave the film a glowing review, praising Surya's ability to "build nail-biting tension" and ending the film with a climax that "rivals any of [Quentin]
Tarantino's high concept violence". Lee coined the term "satay Western" to describe the film's
Western style but told from a female perspective while incorporating Indonesia's
traditional values and setting. Gary Goldstein of the
Los Angeles Times praised the film for "eschew[ing] excess gore and mayhem, largely making its points in more subtly incisive ways. In a 3-star review,
Godfrey Cheshire of
RogerEbert.com singled out the film's "confident eloquence of the staging, framing and editing" and noted that "the story is essentially a revenge fantasy like many another, but its feminist slant never feels rhetorical or heavy-handed. The whole thing is handled with sly wit as well as unfailing stylistic smarts, which makes for a very satisfying package."
Manohla Dargis of
The New York Times called the film "an unwavering slow burn" and praised Surya who "smartly foregrounds all that comeliness and every so often folds in a long shot that turns the characters into doll-like figures, a downsizing that gestures toward a nature vs. culture dynamic." Writing for
The Jakarta Post, Stanley Widianto called the film "one hell of a ride" while noting its inspired take on the "spaghetti western trope". ==Accolades==