Box office , the film has grossed $2.9million in the United States and $356,592 in other territories for a worldwide total of $3.2million. The film began a limited release in the United States in December 2024, with a gradual rollout during awards season. In its first weekend, it earned $54,794 from two theaters in New York City (the
Angelika Film Center and
AMC Lincoln Square), for a per-screen average of $27,397. It opened in Los Angeles the following week, expanding to five theaters and earning $62,865 in its sophomore weekend and $34,145 in its third. It made $144,948 in its fourth weekend after adding 13 screens nationwide and grossed $119,911 playing in 26 theaters in its fifth. During the four-day
MLK weekend, the film expanded to 240 theaters and made $386,191 to cross the $1million mark stateside. Its three-day per-screen average of $1,246 was on the lower end of fellow awards-season films. After obtaining two Oscar nominations, it moved to 540 screens in its seventh weekend, earning $348,060 and pushing its nationwide cume past $1.5million. Internationally, the film earned $356,592 from the United Kingdom, where it played for three weeks in January 2025.
Critical reception Sight & Sound put the film as their tenth pick on their list of the best 50 movies of 2024. Lovia Gyarkye of
The Hollywood Reporter praised the film and cast performances. She highlighted the unique visual style, cinematography, and Ross's artistic portrayal of the novel's story. Pete Hammond writing for
Deadline Hollywood criticized the "overlong" runtime and Ross's use of first person POV-style shooting of one character talking to another that is not seen on camera and only heard. He wrote, "It is a dangling conversation approach that goes quickly from being intriguing to being annoying, pointing to artifice rather than serving the story", and added, "I hope it doesn't prevent some audiences from getting the larger point that we should be talking about". Maureen Lee Lenker of
Entertainment Weekly felt a disconnection with Elwood and Turner by the POV approach, explaining, "Both Wilson and Herisse give subtle, affecting performances but the first-person approach means they are often not on camera. Their performances are largely experiential, which makes it difficult to connect with their work on an emotional level".
Carla Renata writing for
TheWrap applauded
Alex Somers and Scott Alario's music score, casting and performances. She expressed: "This may sound like another Black trauma porn motion picture sanctioned by Hollywood to exploit Black history for financial gain. Thankfully, through the lens of Ross, this narrative doesn't fall into that trap we have seen for decades. Ross [...] brings his unique cinematic sensibility, allowing audiences to experience this type of story from a sensory perspective".
IndieWire David Ehrlich gave the film an "A" grade, emphasizing the film's visual style and storytelling technique. David Canfield of
Vanity Fair wrote the film's "
avant-garde approach is cannily balanced by its moral urgency and aesthetic rigor. Like last year's
The Zone of Interest, it all but reinvents the language for movies about a particular, dark historical chapter, and seems primed to spark conversations about both its content and its form". Filmmaker
Barry Jenkins named it one of his favorite films of 2024, saying "This is medium-defining work — aesthetically, spiritually — a rich and overwhelming cinema where the camera is always curious and what it finds is always arresting. In a time where there are more ways to make a film than ever (and yet less variation in the look, the feel, the shape of those films than in any other point in the medium’s history) RaMell has given us a new way of seeing. It is a thing to make one both humbled… and filled with gratitude." In May 2025,
ScreenCrush ranked the film at number 11 on its list of "The 20 Best Movies of the Last 20 Years," with Matt Singer calling it "something original, something bold, something with a point of view — or, in this case, two points of view ... If used improperly, that technique could become a distracting gimmick. In Ross’ hands, you truly feel like you’ve seen the world in a new way. And maybe seen the future of movies too." In June 2025, filmmaker
Julie Dash named it one of her favorite films of the 21st century. That same month, it ranked number 48 on
Rolling Stones list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century." == Accolades ==