Box office The Master grossed $242,127 at five theaters during its opening day on September 14, 2012, setting a single-day record for an
art house film. Overall the film made $736,311 from five theaters for a per-theater average of $147,262, setting a record for the highest average for a live-action film. During its first week nationwide, the film grossed $4.4 million in 788 theaters.
Critical response On
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes,
The Master has an approval rating of 85% based on 257 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Smart and solidly engrossing,
The Master extends Paul Thomas Anderson's winning streak of challenging films for serious audiences." On
Metacritic, the film has a
weighted average score of 86 out of 100, based on 43 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
Kenneth Turan of the
Los Angeles Times, in praising Anderson's directing and Phoenix's performance, wrote: "Phoenix, known for immersing himself in Oscar-nominated roles in
Gladiator and
Walk the Line, makes Quell frighteningly believable." About the film itself, he stated: "
The Master takes some getting used to. This is a superbly crafted film that's at times intentionally opaque, as if its creator didn't want us to see all the way into its heart of darkness."
Lisa Schwarzbaum of
Entertainment Weekly gave the film a perfect "A" grade, stating: "It's also one of the great movies of the year - an ambitious, challenging, and creatively hot-blooded, but cool-toned, project that picks seriously at knotty ideas about American personality, success, rootlessness, master-disciple dynamics, and father-son mutually assured destruction." was also praised by critics and received her fourth
Academy Award nomination for her performance. Peter Rainer of
The Christian Science Monitor wrote that "the performances by Phoenix and Hoffman are studies in contrast. Phoenix carries himself with a jagged, lurching, simian-like grace, while Hoffman gives Dodd a calm deliberateness. Both actors have rarely been better in the movies. The real Master class here is about acting – and that includes just about everybody else in the film, especially Adams, whose twinkly girl-next-door quality is used here to fine subversive effect."
A. O. Scott of
The New York Times wrote: "It is a movie about the lure and folly of greatness that comes as close as anything I've seen recently to being a great movie. There will be skeptics, but the cult is already forming. Count me in." Scott Tobias of
The A.V. Club, giving the film an "A" grade, wrote: "It's a feisty, contentious, deliberately misshapen film, designed to challenge and frustrate audiences looking for a clean resolution. Just because it's over doesn't mean it's settled."
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone gave the film four stars out of four, praising Anderson's directing: "
The Master, the sixth film from the 42-year-old writer-director, affirms his position as the foremost filmmaking talent of his generation. Anderson is a rock star, the artist who knows no limits." About the film itself, he wrote: "Written, directed, acted, shot, edited, and scored with a bracing vibrancy that restores your faith in film as an art form,
The Master is nirvana for movie lovers. Anderson mixes sounds and images into a dark, dazzling music that is all his own." He would later call the film the Best Film of 2012.
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "In a film overflowing with qualities, but also brimming with puzzlements, two things stand out: the extraordinary command of cinematic technique, which alone is nearly enough to keep a connoisseur on the edge of his seat the entire time, and the tremendous portrayals by Joaquin Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman of two entirely antithetical men, one an unlettered drifter without a clue, the other an intellectual charlatan who claims to have all the answers. They become greatly important to each other and yet, in the end, have an oddly negligible mutual effect. The magisterial style, eerie mood and forbidding central characters echo Anderson's previous film,
There Will Be Blood, a kinship furthered by another bold and discordant score by
Jonny Greenwood." Justin Chang of
Variety magazine wrote: "The writer-director's typically eccentric sixth feature is a sustained immersion in a series of hypnotic moods and longueurs, an imposing picture that thrillingly and sometimes maddeningly refuses to conform to expectations."
James Berardinelli of
ReelViews gave the film three stars out of four and praised Phoenix's performance, stating: "Gaunt, sick-looking, with stooped shoulders and a shambling gait, Phoenix buries himself in Freddie's persona and there's never a moment when we disbelieve him." He added: "Yet, for all of
The Masters laudable elements, it falls short of greatness for one simple reason: the storytelling is unspectacular." Even less enthusiastic was
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times, who gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of a possible four. He wrote that it was "fabulously well-acted and crafted, but when I reach for it, my hand closes on air. It has rich material and isn't clear what it thinks about it. It has two performances of Oscar caliber, but do they connect?" However, Ebert later included
The Master as an honorable mention on his list of the best films of 2012, naming it alongside nine other titles he granted his Grand Jury Prize that year. Calum Marsh of
Slant Magazine gave the film two stars out of four, stating: "
The Master is Paul Thomas Anderson with the edges sanded off, the best bits shorn down to nubs."
Rex Reed of the
New York Observer gave the film a negative review, writing: "Call
The Master whatever you want, but lobotomized catatonia from what I call the New Hacks can never take the place of well-made narrative films about real people that tell profound stories for a broader and more sophisticated audience. Fads come and go, but, as Walter Kerr used to say, 'I'll yell tripe whenever tripe is served.'" Reed also made mention of how Phoenix's performance and the supporting characters' lack of development further hurt the film. On Phoenix's performance,
Kent Jones of
Film Comment noted, "Freddie is not so much played as nuzzled, and jerked into being by Joaquin Phoenix. ''I'm Still Here'' aside, Phoenix's Freddie seems like genuinely damaged goods. He and his director feel their way into this man-in-a-bind from the inside out, and they establish his estrangement from others in those opening scenes through awkward smiles and out-of-sync body language alone". "As always with Anderson," Jones continued, "the character opposition borders on the schematic, and the structure threatens to come apart at the seams. But the courting of danger is exactly what makes his films so exciting, this new film most of all. I don't think he has ever done a better job of resolving his story, perhaps because he has come to terms with the irresolution within and between his characters."
The Master was placed #1 in both the critics poll of the best films of 2012 by
Sight and Sound, and by
The Village Voice on its
annual film poll. The film also ranked second by both and
Indiewire on their year-end film critics polls, following
Holy Motors.
The Master was later placed #1 on
The A.V. Clubs list of the best films of the 2010s up until April 2015, and was named as one of the top 50 films of the decade so far by
The Guardian. Anderson considers it his favorite of the films he has made; in an interview with the
Los Angeles Times, he said: For sure. I think that won't change. The amount of emotion I put into it and they put into it—they being Phil [Seymour Hoffman], Joaquin [Phoenix], and Amy [Adams]. I'm not sure it's entirely successful. But that's fine with me. It feels right. It feels unique to me. I really hope it will be something people can revisit and enjoy in a way that equals my pride in it. And pride can be a dangerous thing, and I'm not being very quiet about my pride in saying all this. But I just feel really proud of it. And of course, there's a particular sentimentality attached to it for a number of personal reasons. It's all wrapped up. In May 2025,
ScreenCrush ranked the film at number 20 on its list of "The 20 Best Movies of the Last 20 Years," with Matt Singer writing "On a recent rewatch, I felt like
The Master is as much a twisted love story as Anderson’s
Phantom Thread, and was mostly struck with the poignance of its story about a man who claims he can erase trauma suffered in past lives, who cannot even help his most fervent follower deal with the trauma he has experienced in
this life." In June 2025, the film ranked number 42 on
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and number 87 on the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list. In July 2025, it ranked number 44 on
Rolling Stones list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century."
Top ten lists The Master was listed on many critics' top ten lists. • 1st –
Peter Travers,
Rolling Stone • 1st –
The A.V. Club • 1st –
Nathan Rabin,
The A.V. Club • 1st – Scott Tobias,
The A.V. Club • 1st – Noel Murray,
The A.V. Club • 1st –
Karina Longworth,
Village Voice • 1st –
Glenn Kenny,
MSN Movies • 1st –
Wesley Morris,
Boston Globe • 1st – Peter Rainer,
Christian Science Monitor • 1st –
Peter Bradshaw,
The Guardian • 1st – Marc Mahon,
The Oregonian • 1st – Brian Tallerico, Hollywood Chicago • 1st – Rafer Guzmán,
Newsday • 1st –
Total Film • 2nd – Joe Neumaier,
New York Daily News • 2nd – Scott Foundas,
The Village Voice • 2nd – Jake Coyle,
Associated Press • 3rd –
David Ansen,
The Village Voice • 3rd –
Lisa Schwarzbaum,
Entertainment Weekly • 3rd – Eric Kohn,
IndieWire • 3rd – Alison Willmore & Keith Phipps,
The A.V. Club • 3rd – Richard Brody,
The New Yorker • 4th –
Dana Stevens,
Slate • 4th –
Michael Phillips,
Chicago Tribune • 5th –
A.O. Scott,
The New York Times • 5th – Mary Pols,
Time • 5th – Sean Axmaker,
MSN Movies • 6th – Marlow Stern,
The Daily Beast • 6th –
Christy Lemire,
Associated Press • 6th –
Todd McCarthy,
The Hollywood Reporter • 6th – Kevin Jagernauth,
Indiewire • 6th – Patrick McDonald, Hollywood Chicago • 6th –
Christopher Orr,
The Atlantic • 7th – David Germain,
Associated Press • 7th – Tasha Robinson,
The A.V. Club • 8th –
J. Hoberman,
Artforum • 10th – Sam Adams,
The A.V. Club • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) –
Manohla Dargis,
The New York Times • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) –
Joe Morgenstern,
The Wall Street Journal • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) –
Bob Mondello,
NPR • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) –
David Denby,
The New Yorker • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) –
Phillip French,
The Observer • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) – Stephen Whitty,
The Star-Ledger • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) –
Joe Williams,
St. Louis Post-Dispatch ==Accolades==