Box office Gone Girl grossed $167.8 million in the United States and Canada and $203.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $370.9 million, against a production budget of $61 million. The film was released on October 3, 2014, in North America in 3,014 theaters and earned $13.1 million on its opening day, including the $1.3 million it earned from Thursday late-night showings. It finished in first place at the North American box office, earning $37.5 million after a neck-and-neck competition with
Warner Bros./
New Line Cinema's horror film
Annabelle which earned $37.1 million. The film was the biggest debut of Fincher's career, breaking
Panic Rooms opening. It was the third biggest opening weekend for Affleck—behind
Pearl Harbor ($59.1 million), and
Daredevil ($40.3 million)—and Rosamund Pike's second biggest opening—behind
Die Another Day ($47 million). The film is the tenth biggest October debut overall. The film played 60% female and 75% over 25 years old. before being overtaken by
Fury in its third weekend. Outside North America, it earned $24.6 million from 5,270 screens in 39 international markets on its opening weekend, higher than expected. High openings were witnessed in the United Kingdom ($6.7 million), Russia ($3.4 million),
Critical response 's performance garnered widespread critical acclaim, earning her a nomination for the
Academy Award for Best Actress.
Gone Girl received highly positive reviews from critics, with Pike's performance in particular earning widespread acclaim.
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 88%, based on 368 reviews, with an average rating of 8/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Dark, intelligent, and stylish to a fault,
Gone Girl plays to director David Fincher's sick strengths while bringing the best out of stars Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike." The
Vultures critics praised the direction, screenplay, editing, score, visual style, and acting, particularly from Pike, Affleck, Tyler Perry, Carrie Coon, and Missi Pyle.
Kenneth Turan of the
Los Angeles Times wrote: "Superbly cast from the two at the top to the smallest speaking parts, impeccably directed by Fincher and crafted by his regular team to within an inch of its life,
Gone Girl shows the remarkable things that can happen when filmmaker and material are this well matched."
The Economist called the film a "brilliantly glacial adaptation ... This may not be the perfect film—but it is a perfect adaptation". In response to some of the criticisms of the film, Flynn said, "The whole point is that these are two people pretending to be other people, better people, versions of the dream guy and dream girl, but each one couldn't keep it up, so they destroy each other". In 2025, it ranked number 64 on
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and number 79 on the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list.
Accolades Gone Girl garnered awards and nominations in a variety of categories with praise for its direction, Pike's performance, Flynn's screenplay, and its soundtrack. At the
87th Academy Awards, Pike received a nomination for
Best Actress. The film received four nominations at the
72nd Golden Globe Awards:
Best Director for Fincher,
Best Actress in a Drama for Pike,
Best Screenplay for Flynn, and
Best Original Score. Pike received a nomination for Best Actress at the
68th British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs). The
National Board of Review included the film in their list of top ten films of the year, and the soundtrack was nominated for the 2015
Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media.
Top ten lists Gone Girl was listed on many critics' top ten lists. • 3rd – Matthew Jacobs & Christopher Rosen,
The Huffington Post • 3rd – Genevieve Koski,
The Dissolve • 3rd –
People • 3rd – Mara Reinstein,
Us Weekly • 3rd – James Rocchi,
TheWrap • 4th – Ben Kenigsberg & Nick Schager,
The A.V. Club • 4th – William Gross,
Austin Chronicle • 4th – Joshua Rothkopf,
Time Out New York • 4th – Brian Tallerico,
RogerEbert.com • 4th – Adam Chitwood,
Collider • 4th – Rene Rodriguez,
Miami Herald • 4th – Gregory Ellwood,
HitFix • 5th –
Peter Travers,
Rolling Stone • 5th – David Ehrlich,
Little White Lies • 7th – Tasha Robinson,
The Dissolve • 7th – Chris Nashawaty,
Entertainment Weekly • 7th –
Christopher Orr,
The Atlantic • 7th – Justin Chang & Scott Foundas,
Variety • 8th – Jeff Baker,
The Oregonian • 8th –
Christy Lemire,
RogerEbert.com • 8th – Steve Persall,
Tampa Bay Times • 8th –
James Berardinelli,
Reelviews • 9th – Rene Rodriguez,
Miami Herald • 9th – Joe Neumaier,
New York Daily News • 9th – A. A. Dowd and
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky,
The A.V. Club • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) –
Dana Stevens,
Slate • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) – Calvin Wilson,
St. Louis Post-Dispatch • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) – Claudia Puig,
USA Today ==Themes==