Box office The Counselor grossed $17 million in the United States and Canada, and $54 million in other territories, for a total of $71 million, against a production budget of $25 million. The film opened to $3.2 million in 3,336 locations on Friday and opened at #4 in the box office with just a $7.8 million over the weekend.
Critical response On
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 34% based on 217 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "
The Counselor raises expectations with its talented cast and creative crew—then subverts them with a wordy and clumsy suspense thriller that's mercilessly short on suspense or thrills." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 48 out of 100, based on 42 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". A 2017 data analysis of Metacritic reviews by
Gizmodo UK found
The Counselor to be the second most critically divisive film of recent years. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "D" on an A+ to F scale.
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter gave a negative review, calling it "not a very likable or gratifying film", adding that "one is left with a very bleak ending and an only slightly less depressing sense of the waste of a lot of fine talent both behind and in front of the camera."
Mark Kermode listed it as number two on his
Ten Worst Films of 2013.
Los Angeles Times critic
Kenneth Turan stated, "As cold, precise and soulless as the diamonds that figure briefly in its plot,
The Counselor is an extremely unpleasant piece of business." Peter Debruge of
Variety criticized
Cormac McCarthy's script, saying that his "first original script is nearly all dialogue, but it's a lousy story, ineptly constructed and rendered far too difficult to follow." Conversely,
Richard Roeper of the
Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four, saying, "Director Ridley Scott and screenwriter Cormac McCarthy have fashioned a sexy, sometimes shockingly violent, literate and richly textured tale of the
Shakespearean consequences of one man's irrevocable act of avarice" and called it "a bloody great time". In addition,
Manohla Dargis of
The New York Times gave it a rave review, stating that "Mr. McCarthy appears to have never read a screenwriting manual in his life [...] That's a compliment." Danny Leigh of the
BBC programme
Film 2013 praised the film, saying that "the real star is the script. What this film really is is a Cormac McCarthy audiobook with visuals by Ridley Scott. It's black as night, engrossing and masterful." He also acclaimed the performances, particularly Diaz's, and said, with regard to the negative reviews, "Movie history is littered with films that we all sneered at and we all laughed at and we all thought were terrible and the critics hated them and no-one went to see them, and then 40 years later they fetch up on programmes like this with everyone saying 'what a masterpiece!'" Scott Foundas, critic for
Variety, wrote a defense of the film titled "Why
The Counselor Is One of Ridley Scott's Best Films" in which he compared it to
John Boorman's
Point Blank (1967) and the screenplay to the work of
David Mamet,
Harold Pinter, and
Quentin Tarantino. Foundas writes that the film "is bold and thrilling in ways that mainstream American movies rarely are, and its rejection suggests what little appetite there is for real daring at the multiplex nowadays." Filmmaker
Guillermo del Toro also praised the film, stating that the film is "a meditation of the illusory nature of normalcy and the devastation to come." Later Ridley Scott said: “The Counselor, to me, was the best dialogue I’ve ever had. Cormac McCarthy wrote the script, and he brought it to me with [producer] Nick Wechsler. I said, “I'll do it now, but it has to be now.” And from that, I got it cast in two weeks—Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, Javier Bardem, Penélope Cruz, Cameron Diaz ... they were all fighting to do these parts. I got some disastrous reviews, I'm told. It was very good film, but too dark for the average person. I think the dialogue is beautiful.“
Accolades ==References==