Initially,
Outcast was due to have been released Friday in China on some 26% of screens in the country, or more than 5,000 theaters, on September 26, 2014. However, hours before its scheduled release, co-financier
Arclight Films was informed via email from via email from distributor and co-financier Yunnan Film Group that the film would not be released with no explanation given as to why. Reasons for the abrupt cancelation of the film's original release were not clarified with some sources speculating that Yunnan Film Group had financial difficulties or were not able to book the number of screens they wanted for the release while other commentary suggested that
Chinese censors had reconsidered their initial approval due to the film's high body count and violent battle scenes.
Box office The film grossed $5.1 million in other territories.
Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned
Outcast a score of 33 out of 100 rating based on 7 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".
Glenn Kenny of
RogerEbert.com centered his review on the performances, primarily that of Nicolas Cage. Of it, he said it marked a career shift from Cage's "entertainingly eccentric phase" into his "genuinely befuddling and perhaps sad phase", and noted his "peculiar (of course)", "near-
British accent"; he also criticized Hayden Christensen's performance as "lifeless".
Jeanette Catsoulis of
The New York Times called the movie a "loony", "wannabe epic rattling with swords and clichés". She chiefly criticized the "barnacle-encrusted plot" as being "dumbed down to the studs", along with the performance of Christensen, while praising photography and "surprisingly classy" battle scenes. Gary Goldstein of the
Los Angeles Times had kinder words to say, calling the movie "visually arresting, smartly paced, well-edited", but otherwise "unremarkable". He said the film may best be remembered for Cage's "warrior coif", saying it was "perhaps his most unflattering movie hairdo yet — and that's saying a lot" and that Cage could "pinch-hit for
Gene Simmons at a
Kiss concert". And Sebastian Zavala, writing for
ScreenAnarchy.com, said that the movie "could certainly have been a better vehicle for an unleashed, energetic Cage", but that "what we end up with is a lifeless, slightly-entertaining-yet-ultimately-disappointing action “epic”." ==Sequel==