On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 38% based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of 4.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "
Run Rabbit Run boasts some powerhouse performances, but they're largely overwhelmed by a thin plot and overreliance on stale horror tropes." On
Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 52 out of 100 based on 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Leila Latif of
Sight and Sound wrote, "For those not particularly steeped in the horror highlights of the past decade,
Run Rabbit Run may make for a worthwhile watch; the direction, script and sun-dappled camerawork are all competent, bordering on elegant. But for genre fans, every beat is so familiar that the film feels like the ungodly creation of an AI that was tasked with blending
Repulsion (1965),
The Babadook (2014),
Relic (2020),
Hereditary and even last year's
Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner
Nanny." Jourdain Searles of
The Hollywood Reporter also noted the film's similarities to
The Babadook and
Hereditary. Searles said that the film was "moody and atmospheric" and "easily builds tension and dread", but "keeps hinting at depth that never comes. Director Daina Reid takes us through all the similar motions–hallucinations, mysterious injuries, bursts of violence in the most generic way possible. Even the symbolic white rabbit that appears throughout the film inspires neither interest nor dread."
IndieWire Ryan Lattanzio gave the film a C grade, calling it "a pile-up of banal horror tropes", but praised the film's cinematography. He added, "The saving grace that makes
Rabbit maybe worth seeing is an unkempt Sarah Snook, who goes into full, well,
Babadook and
Black Swan and even
Repulsion territory in the movie's final throwdown." Ed Gibbs of
The Times gave the film 3/4 stars, writing, "Reid's handsomely shot film takes its time building to its inevitable climax, and some of the more familiar genre tropes feel a little on the nose. But Snook carries the piece with gusto".
Justin Chang of the
Los Angeles Times said that the film "delivers a succession of initially effective frights before devolving into
Run Rabbit Run Rinse Repeat", but added, "I was glad to see it in a packed Park City house regardless, happily sandwiched between two friends whose nervous giggles, along with Snook's characteristically arresting performance, were more than enough to keep me in my seat." Damon Wise from
Deadline Hollywood described the film as "effective but perhaps overlong" but with "a poetic resonance" that makes for a "nightmarish essay on action and consequence, not to mention the isolation and travails that come with single parenthood". Wise said the film "deliberately overlap[s] notions of reality and abstraction", and praised LaTorre and Snook's performances. In addition to critical commentary, streaming performance metrics indicate that the film drew significant audience interest on Netflix during its release period. According to weekly viewership data reported by
Media Play News, based on measurements from research firm PlumResearch,
Run Rabbit Run generated 4.8 million unique viewers and 5.9 million hours watched on Netflix during the week of June 26 to July 2, 2023. ==Awards==