Viewership The Electric State debuted at No. 1 on Netflix's English films chart from March 10–16, accumulating 25.2 million views. The following week, from March 17–23, it remained in the top position on the English films list with 22.5 million views. In the subsequent week, between March 24–30, the film placed No. 2 on the English films chart, garnering 7.6 million views.
Nielsen Media Research, which records streaming viewership on certain U.S. television screens, reported that it was streamed for 3.254 billion minutes between January and June 2025, ranking seventh among films in that period. Netflix later announced that in the first half of 2025,
The Electric State garnered 158.2 million hours of watch time across 74.2 million views, placing seventh among films on the platform. For the full year, Nielsen Media recorded 3.8 billion minutes of watch time, ranking the film eighth among the "Top Movies for General Audiences" of 2025.
Critical response The film received negative reviews from critics. Many critics took issue with the film's loose interpretation of the original novel. In a scathing review by
The New York Times, Elisabeth Vincentelli panned the film's creative departures from the source material. She opens her review describing the plot of the novel, highlighting how "the book is elliptical in narrative, muted in color palette and melancholy in mood" whereas the movie "is obvious, garish and just plain dumb". Courtney Howard of
Variety criticized the film's lack of capitalization on its source material, "in favor of a generic conceit centered on freedom, preachy commentary on prejudice and a reductive, rote conflict between humankind and robots."
IGNs A.A. Dowd gave the film a 4 out of 10, also critical of the film's handling of the novel, saying: "Leave it to the directors of Marvel's most overstuffed event pictures to bastardize a deeply lonely science fiction yarn into another expensive group hug and team-building comedy routine." Brown's and Pratt's performances were also received negatively. Kevin Maher of
The Sunday Times gave the film one star out of five. He questioned Brown's performances in her previous cinematic outings as well as
The Electric State, left wondering if she was "profoundly ill-equipped" for big-screen acting. Comic Book Resources' C.M. Ramsburg came to a similar conclusion, explaining that despite the casting of Pratt and Brown, "their performances remain flat and one-dimensional as they portray characters without depth or substance", giving the film a 3 out of 10.
Screen Rants Alex Harrison found little to note about the film, other than "Millie Bobby Brown's look to echo
Eleven and Chris Pratt's look to echo
Star Lord". Several critics thought that the film's reported $320 million budget was wasted. Sam Adams from
Slate called the end product disastrous, saying the film joins "the list of the costliest films of all time".
New York Posts Johnny Oleksinski noted the Russo brothers' directing efforts after
Avengers: Endgame as "some of the worst and priciest movies of the past six years". He panned the film's lack of originality. Jared Rasic of
Detroit Metro Times praised the film's special effects but panned the screenplay, calling the end product film "a garish, unfunny, Netflix original dumpster fire."
Accolades == Tie-in media ==