
At the strike of midnight on their wedding night, Alex’s parents, siblings and extended family join the newlyweds for a family custom – a board game, selected a random by the bride. Determined to win favour with her new family, Grace plays along – not knowing that by choosing hide and seek, she is now the prey in a deadly chase through the ornate halls of the Le Domas mansion. Failing to kill Grace by dawn will lead to their undoing, or so the sinister family believes.
Once you buy into the absurd premise – which centres around a cursed Civil War relic – Ready or Not reveals itself to be one of most surprisingly entertaining films of the year. At just a smidge of 90 minutes and speeding along at a fair pace, this horror-comedy plays fast and loose with the plot and never takes itself too seriously.

A bonafide scream queen by now (let’s not forget her star turn in Netflix’s The Babysitter), it’s Weaver’s commanding and comedic performance that makes the thin characterisation go a long way and takes Ready or Not from good to great.
When they’re not staging smart action sequences, directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett take aim at the rich, with Grace’s wide-eyed disbelief acting as an effective counterpoint to the Le Domas’ delusional beliefs. Between this, Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite and Jordan Peele’s one-two punch of Get Out and Us, class and wealth are increasingly under the microscope in mainstream cinema – a curious trend of late.
The Verdict: 7.5/10
The jokes are hit and miss, but Ready or Not more or less succeeds in having its cake and eating it too, mixing blood splatter and satanic worship with smarts and satire.
Ready or Not is in cinemas across Australia now.
Ready or Not is in cinemas across Australia now.
I loved this movie, it was fun and the ending was amazing. I'm so happy I saw it in theaters. Glad you enjoyed it for the most part too!
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