Jordan Mintzer of
The Hollywood Reporter described the film as a successful
post-war thriller with fantastic direction and camerawork. Siddhant Adlakha for
Variety, however, criticized the script as disjointed, needlessly jumping between time periods, losing its core themes in the process. The decision to include an extended in-color flashback of Mengele employing torture and murder on prisoners at
Auschwitz proved controversial. Some critics characterized the sequence as a brutal yet necessary segment for the viewers to understand Mengele's outlook later in life and how he viewed his past crimes. The scene's presentation in a
home movie style also drew mixed reactions. == References ==