- 68%
- 77%
- 83%
- 74%
- Type
- Film
- Status
- Released
- Release
- July 20, 2022 (2 years ago)
- Language
- English
- Origin
- Japan · United States
- Genres
- Sci-Fi Horror
- Production companies
- Monkeypaw Productions · Universal Pictures
- Runtime
- 2h 10m
- Rating
- R
Daniel KaluuyaOJ Haywood
Keke PalmerEmerald Haywood
Brandon PereaAngel Torres
Steven YeunRicky 'Jupe' Park
Michael WincottAntlers Holst
Wrenn SchmidtAmber Park
Barbie FerreiraNessie
Terry NotaryGordy
Devon GrayeRyder Muybridge
Donna MillsBonnie Clayton
Oz PerkinsFynn Bachman
Eddie JemisonBuster
Keith DavidOtis Haywood Sr.
Jacob KimYoung Ricky 'Jupe' Park
Sophia CotoMary Jo Elliot
Jennifer LafleurPhyllis Mayberry / Margaret Houston
Andrew Patrick RalstonTom Bogan / Brett Houston
Lincoln LambertKolton Park
Pierce KangPhoenix Park
Roman GrossMax Park
Ryan W. GarciaSheriff Reyes
Hetty ChangHetty Chang
Alex Hyde-WhiteGrizz
Liza TreygerCommercial Makeup Artist
Courtney StephensMrs. Dolan
Caden J. LovgrenJupiter's Claim Horse Wrangler
Malcolm Jae O'SheaJupiter's Claim Outlaw
Writer-director Jordan Peele’s latest mixes sci-fi, horror, and, yes, western. From start to finish, you don't know what's coming next.
Read Empire's review of Jordan Peele's latest mystery.
Jordan Peele knows how to make a gorgeous crowd pleaser.
Jordan Peele's 'Nope' is a horror-comedy-sci-fi-western that delivers scares and lasting art-movie conundrums. But it's slow and scattered.
Jordan Peele's new sci-fi movie 'nope' is one of the most anticipated sci-fi thrillers of 2022. Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, Steven Yeun star.
In Jordan Peele’s thrilling new movie, Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer are willing to risk death to get something on camera.
Leave it to Jordan Peele to turn a fun twist on a summer saucer story/creature feature into a Major Motion Picture Event. "Nope" is Peele's "Signs," turning his camera away from the scalding racial satire of "Get Out" and the obscurant, self-serious messaging of "Us" and pointing it at everyone in our "get mine" fame-whoring…
Jordan Peele's latest sci-fi horror movie 'Nope' is enjoyable as a spectacle, but conceptually it comes off as barely thought through.
The third film from horror auteur Jordan Peele is a sci-fi epic that feels both comfortably familiar and fresh.
Talented filmmaker Jordan Peele's latest, 'Nope', has met a mixed response, but we say you should seek it out regardless
Jordan Peele reteams with 'Get Out' star Daniel Kaluuya and brings Keke Palmer along for the ride in 'Nope,' a UFO movie with Spielbergian ambitions.
In the award-winning director's new sci-fi horror there are too many meanings to be absorbed in just one viewing.
Reuniting with Jordan Peele after his Oscar-nominated turn in Get Out, Kaluuya is gripping as a Hollywood horse-trainer who spots a UFO
Easily Jordan Peele's most well-crafted film yet, "Nope," doesn't land its ideas nearly as well as his previous films.
The ‘Get Out’ director channels ’50s sci-fi into another stylish, unsettling and hugely entertaining horror
Jordan Peele’s Nope is a bleak, hilarious sci-fi-horror romp, and one of the most entertaining summer movies in years.
Jordan Peele, the fertile mind behind 'Get Out' and 'Us' explores unfriendly skies — and more earthbound threats — in 'Nope,' his far-out latest.
Jordan Peele's pass-the-popcorn “Nope,” out July 22 and starring Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer, is entertaining, smart, artful summer fare with its heart planted firmly in the 1980s heyday of blockbuster films
The best, eeriest parts of director Jordan’s Peele’s third feature, “Nope,” are as good as anything in “Get Out” or “Us,” and they’re very different from either of those earlier triumphs of imagination. This one is a three-fifths triumph, which means whatever you want that to mean. To me, it means go.It’s a UFO movie […]
The spaceship in Jordan Peele’s film absorbs material and then spews it out, an apt metaphor for the director’s follow-up to “Get Out” and “Us,” Anthony Lane writes.
The consistently brilliant filmmaker has traded the claustrophobic, labyrinthine quality of ‘Get Out’ and ‘Us’ for open skies and pure spectacle
The film’s fantastical meta-commentaries don’t completely cohere but have a winning go-for-it audaciousness.