On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds approval rating, based on reviews with an average score of . The website's critics consensus reads: "
Tyrel uses its seemingly innocuous setup to take an admirably uncomfortable -- albeit occasionally somewhat diffuse -- look at modern American race relations." On
Metacritic,
Tyrel has a score of 71 based on 18 critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Because the film debuted at the
2018 Sundance Film Festival and dealt with themes like race and
fish-out-of-water situations,
Tyrel received comparisons to
Get Out, which premiered at Sundance a year earlier and went on to become a major critical and commercial success. Positive reviews praised the story's social commentary and nuances. Dennis Harvey of
Variety said "this lively, unpleasant seriocomedy...does very well at capturing the queasiness of being alone and uneasy at a party you immediately know you won't fit into", Fear added, "Viewers are both complicit in Tyler's breakdown — the look of self-contempt on his face after he's pressured to imitate an elderly black woman feels like a slap to ours — and right there with him as he goes deeper into a nightmare fueled by tone-deaf idiocy and too much Irish coffee." Writing for
The New York Times,
Bilge Ebiri commented that the film takes on a more "surreal" tone with Michael Cera's appearance, but said, "the stranger
Tyrel gets, the more accurate it feels. The ecosystem of behaviors and attitudes on display is so unnervingly sharp that some of us may well find ourselves wincing in recognition." Critics also noted how the depictions of characters Nico and Dylan, who are Argentinian and
gay, respectively, show how "something so theoretically nice as
intersectional solidarity is not necessarily on the table here." Fear wrote
Tyrel is "also one of the least dogmatic takes on the subject of race in ages, and so much of that is courtesy of [Mitchell]." Yolanda Machado of
TheWrap expressed that the film did not go far enough into why Tyler felt the need to
code-switch and fit in with this all-white group. Harvey commented, "Nothing terrible happens in
Tyrel, at least no more terrible than the kind of weekend you hope to forget because of personal behavior you don't entirely remember anyway, among people you'd probably prefer not to see again." ==See also==