Nerve

2.33
    Nerve
    2016

    Synopsis

    Industrious high school senior Vee Delmonico has had it with living life on the sidelines. When pressured by friends to join the popular online game Nerve, Vee decides to sign up for just one dare in what seems like harmless fun. But as she finds herself caught up in the thrill of the adrenaline-fueled competition partnered with a mysterious stranger, the game begins to take a sinister turn with increasingly dangerous acts, leading her into a high stakes finale that will determine her entire future.

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    Cast

    • Emma RobertsVee Delmonico
    • Dave FrancoIan
    • Emily MeadeSydney Sloane
    • Miles HeizerTommy Mancuso
    • Juliette LewisNancy Delmonico
    • Kimiko GlennLiv Kurosawa
    • Machine Gun KellyTy
    • Marc John JefferiesWes
    • Samira WileyAzhar
    • Brian MarcJ.P.

    Recommendations

    • 83

      IndieWire

      Blisteringly cool one moment and ridiculously silly the next (much like its high school heroine), this punchy and propulsive late summer surprise is able to capture the way we live now because it displays such a vivid understanding of the reasons why we live that way.
    • 70

      Variety

      Nerve is a comic-book vision of how the Internet has become a gladiatorial arena of voyeurism. But the movie, like the game it’s about, is hard to stop watching, even when you know it’s playing you.
    • 60

      The Guardian

      It’s rare when you can pinpoint the exact moment a movie goes off the rails, but when Nerve downshifts from far-fetched parable into idiotic action, the film at least has the decency to speed itself along to get to the ending.
    • 60

      Time Out

      With its engaging story, energetic soundtrack and slick production values, Nerve is an easy watch for restless young minds.
    • 55

      TheWrap

      While the film’s vertiginous set pieces are appropriately heart-clenching, it’s not nearly as successful at little details like plot and character.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Fortunately Schulman and Joost keep the film visually engaging.... All that busyness onscreen distracts somewhat from the impression that Roberts and Franco don't look much like teenagers, although they form a fairly good team as long as they’re pursuing specific challenges rather than sharing their nascent emotions for one another or attempting to unravel the intricacies of the game.
    • 50

      Screen Daily

      For all that it bounces off a lot of contentious issues about children and the internet, where Carrie-style bullying has moved into the unsupervised zone of cyberspace, Nerve frustratingly stops short before eventually falling in on itself in the third act.
    • 50

      Consequence

      Nerve is refreshing and frustrating in equal measures, mining a genuinely inventive concept for some memorable, Mean Girls-esque pathos about the ways in which the Internet is changing and magnifying social structures for young people today.

    Loved by

    • isadora
    • 2000
    • Anaiis Bonnard