Amazon Studios | Release Date (Streaming): March 18, 2022
4.7
USER SCORE
Mixed or average reviews based on 26 Ratings
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6
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14
Negative:
6
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6
bertobellamyMar 26, 2022
'Master' tackles normalized racism in the U.S.A. in a somewhat interesting way, but it lacks the wit and the impact of 'Get Out!' The horror angle of the film is half-baked; nevertheless, the drama around three black women suffering from'Master' tackles normalized racism in the U.S.A. in a somewhat interesting way, but it lacks the wit and the impact of 'Get Out!' The horror angle of the film is half-baked; nevertheless, the drama around three black women suffering from silent but vicious attacks from white people in a prestigious college leads to a strong finale. Expand
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5
Voodoo123Sep 30, 2022
The decent production value and cast elevate the poor material that seems to waver between being a coming of age racially charged drama that sometimes disguises itself as a horror film. Juggling it's time between the two major characters theThe decent production value and cast elevate the poor material that seems to waver between being a coming of age racially charged drama that sometimes disguises itself as a horror film. Juggling it's time between the two major characters the ideas here are interesting but flawed in a movie that fails to fully capitalize on either concept instead settling for a mediocre outing. Expand
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5
JLuis_001Mar 19, 2022
Amidst the conflicts of decision that its director deploys, Master turns out to be a story that is diluted in development and not so much in conceptualization.
The story and representation are there, but not a truly focused approach.
The
Amidst the conflicts of decision that its director deploys, Master turns out to be a story that is diluted in development and not so much in conceptualization.
The story and representation are there, but not a truly focused approach.

The story this director tells is about the racism embedded in the cultural existence of communities that are majority white, and institutionally in universities of higher education. So far so good, especially in tone.
But what could have been much more relevant for its thematic content and excellently atmospheric for its cinematic style, is dissipated by a constant foolishness to create sequences that feel more disorienting than frightening.

Again, the message is there and that helps, and the questions it provokes are more than pertinent, but if you're aiming to make a horror/suspense film with it's notable social commentary, you have to go beyond what Jordan Peele does.
Master is a more serious film than Peele's, but it's clear that there are a lot of lessons here that were learned from Get Out and Us.
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4
Mauro_LanariMay 10, 2022
(Mauro Lanari)
In her feature film debut, Diallo faces an avalanche of arguments she can't focus, jamming "too many plot beats, characters and polemical points into the narrative for all of them to pay off satisfactorily" (Ann Hornaday of
(Mauro Lanari)
In her feature film debut, Diallo faces an avalanche of arguments she can't focus, jamming "too many plot beats, characters and polemical points into the narrative for all of them to pay off satisfactorily" (Ann Hornaday of "The Washington Post").
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3
hnestlyontheslyJan 12, 2023
This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. Master is a movie that came onto my radar as I'm thinking more about the breadth and potential for horror films to tell different kinds of stories than we've seen in the past. The Slate review of this movie (the sole reason that I even thought to see it) mentions that the movie is a complete serviceable satire of college life as a PoC with a horror film that feels a little shoehorned in and I sympathize with that assessment. As with Raw, the elements of realism and the depictions of human cruelty directed toward a young and vulnerable woman in her first few weeks of freshman year are a lot more scary than any of the fantastical moments. Actually, come to think of it, a lot of the horror sequences are the moments that take me out of the story the most. For instance, there's this weird subplot of Mennonites who live on the borders of town that really feels like its going to pay off at some point, which it doesn't really. If anything, their completed thread in the plot leads to an even more bizarre and stupid plot point that's related to (spoiler) trans-racial identity, I guess (???). There's this random running sequence that starts in what might be the morning on a brisk fall day but ends up being a winter's evening that stretches into the dark when the Headmaster of the college, Gail Bishop (Regina Hall), ends up running into a cemetery with a flashlight and finds Amelia, Jasmine Moore's roommate, but it doesn't really make any sense. It feels like the way that Bishop responds to Amelia's disheveled state, bloodied knees and torn stockings is that she identifies it as a sexual assault, especially since Amelia doesn't want to get checked out by the nurse and she hurriedly pronounces she "knows what happens" next if she comes forward and talks. Without being explicitly stated, it really does seem like Bishop just lets off these frat boys with less than a slap on the wrist, though? And then that lack of administrative action leads to Jasmine being isolated and alone for the second semester, which leads to all sorts of consequences that are kind of too dumb to recount, except to say that there's quite a bit of lazy writing toward the end.

We can get into the weeds about this other spoilery plot point since--hey, what else are we going to do with this messy movie?--it's probably not one you're likely to see during an opening weekend or ever, to be honest, what with its release on Amazon Prime this month and no theatrical release in sight. Jasmine's suicide feels boring at best and at worst is kind of trash as social commentary. One of the coolest organizing principles of this film are the chapter title cards at the beginning of each scene which anticipate some especially charged line. In the suicide chapter, the audience is primed for Jasmine's realization that her Headmaster's observation about racism being present everywhere and unavoidable. This observation leads her, presumably, to hang herself after a rough night/Thanksgiving week/semester at college, copycatting the suicide of another Black freshman student in the 1960s whom she's been tracking. The upshot of Jasmine's insight really feels shallow. Racism is everywhere, even if you haven't directly experienced it as valedictorian of your racial paradise in the Seattle-Tacoma suburbs? What does that even mean? How is Jasmine so naive? Also, why is the film so **** obsessed with making The Scarlet Letter mean something racial or not? Anyway, the best moments are things like the white kids at the frat singing the N-word with the hard "r" at the party, the way that the girls so flippantly reduce Jasmine during financial exchanges, and the like, moments that feel all-too-familiar to personal experiences as an outsider. But the scary moments are mostly pretty flat. Bishop's scary scenes are almost exclusively bug related? Probably the first sleep walk sequence is the most startling and unsettling and the further along we progress, the more mentally prepared you are for **** which in turn actually lessens the impact of some of the truly wild images. It's really strange that there wasn't more of an effort to make students responsible for the horror elements of the film, as was the case, I assume, with a movie like Black Christmas. I've written before about how much I like horror films that allow for the audience to feel some surrogate agency through their protagonist's fighting back against the supernatural or human antagonists in their environment, how that kind of catharsis is really satisfying in a way that simply sympathizing with their terror is not. Master probably has some mileage for you and your friends if you're looking for a movie with some light racial commentary, but mostly is just consumed by some deranged ideas about what the process for tenure looks like at elite college universities. I've obviously been on a horror kick this month with X, then Turning Red, and now this. I give this movie half a Babadook.
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