The Oath

    The Oath
    2018

    Synopsis

    In a politically-divided United States, a man struggles to make it through the Thanksgiving holiday without destroying his family.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Ike BarinholtzChris
    • Tiffany HaddishKai
    • Billy MagnussenMason
    • John ChoPeter
    • Carrie BrownsteinAlice
    • Jon BarinholtzPat
    • Meredith HagnerAbbie
    • Chris EllisHank
    • Nora DunnEleanor
    • Priah FergusonHardy

    Recommendations

    • 91

      The Playlist

      Raw, improvised and indicative of Trump’s America, The Oath reminds viewers of the need for laughter despite the downtrodden insanity around us. Thankfully, Barinholtz resists the urge to lapse into cynicism, because at the end of the day people are more important than politics.
    • 70

      TheWrap

      The Oath is a film of its time, and that immediacy is both its strength and its downfall.
    • 67

      IndieWire

      Despite tackling our crazy times, The Oath somehow winds up not quite crazy enough to assess them.
    • 67

      The A.V. Club

      In The Oath, his first feature as a writer-director, comic actor Ike Barinholtz zeroes in on an approach somewhere between caustic stage comedy and "The Purge." The movie isn’t always up to the delicacy of that ambitious balancing act, but even the attempt is engaging.
    • 67

      Entertainment Weekly

      The film wrongfully substitutes abrupt violence for anything truly provocative, squandering the promise of its early scenes with a disjointed third act and pat ending that renders its satire toothless.
    • 67

      Consequence

      The Thanksgiving table is a perfect battleground for these heavily entrenched political lines, with Barinholtz’s smart, nuanced script pulling no punches. While the satire definitely loses some of its bite in its wild, unpredictable closer, the film still takes Barinholtz and Haddish to fascinating places as performers – neither of them have been as intense or vulnerable onscreen to date.
    • 63

      Washington Post

      A blistering political satire that may rip the bandage and the scab, as well as a lot of the skin, off a political wound that has barely had time to heal.
    • 60

      Variety

      Here’s a project that had the nerve to address these tensions in a megaplex environment, only to squander them on a standoff it pretends could be so glibly resolved.