Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote in
The Monthly Film Bulletin: "
Russian Roulette is a watchable if forgettable thriller which reflects the work of Lombardo's one-time employer
[Robert Altman] in only marginal respects. ... Of the actors, the only disappointment (apart from the fact that Louise Fletcher is given so little to do) is Cristina Raines: her habit in
Nashville of wrinkling her nose disdainfully at nearly everything she encounters seems to have completely taken over her repertoire of responses, whether she is confronting a corpse in her bathroom or George Segal arriving late for a date, and throughout the film she remains as improbably unruffled as her suede jacket."
Variety wrote: "A creditable directing debut by film editor Lou Lombardo, occasionally generates
Day Of The Jackal type of suspense, though Segal's playing is lacklustre and supporting cast varies in quality. ... Tech credits include lenser Brian West's interesting use of Vancouver landscapes and inclement weather, brassy and somewhat overdone music by
Michael J. Lewis, and effective stunt coordination by Bill Couch and
Alf Joint." ==References==