Box office Mid90s grossed $249,500 from four theaters in its opening weekend for an average of $62,375 per venue, good for the third best of 2018. It expanded to 1,206 theaters the following week and made $3 million, finishing 10th at the box office. In its third weekend of release the film made $1.36 million. The box office closed, grossing $9.3 million. On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 66 out of 100, based on 45 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by
PostTrak gave the film an 83% overall positive score and a 62% "definite recommend". Writing for
The Hollywood Reporter, John DeFore said, "in emotional punch and shoulda-seen-this-coming skill, it is more like Hill's
Lady Bird, a gem that feels simultaneously informed by its author's adolescence and the product of a serious artist's observational distance."
Michael Phillips of the
Chicago Tribune gave the film 2 out of 4 stars and said, "Vivid in bits and pieces,
Mid90s feels like a research scrapbook for a movie, not a movie. The more Hill throws you around in the name of creating a harsh, immediate impression, the more the impressions blur." Connore Lagore of
Vox Magazine said, "But despite some stop-and-go moments between the highest highs and the lowest lows, Hill crafts
Mid90s into an ultimately charming nostalgia trip." Liam Gaughan of
Collider connected
Mid90s with mental health struggles associated with youth. Sarah Fingerhood of the
34th Street made connections of the actors and the attitudes of their characters, concluding, "
Mid90s is Jonah Hill's debut as a director and what a startling debut it is; a visually beautiful and carefully crafted film that has a timeless message to all those that see it." Some critical reviews called attention to the film's use of
homophobic and
racist slurs, as well as its treatment of
toxic masculinity. Sam Adams of
Slate wrote, "The skaters' dialogue is liberally spiced with homophobic and occasional racist slurs, and while anyone old enough to remember the 1990s can attest to the accuracy of their omnipresence, the movie's inclusion of them feels like another cheap shortcut to verisimilitude." Other criticisms cited a scene of
juvenile sexuality between Stevie and Estee for its uncomfortable undertones given the ages of the characters and actors. In response, Hill commented, "The point of the movie is that nothing's black or white. I'm not a moralist; I'm not here to tell an audience how they should feel."
Accolades ==References==