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Leave your thoughts about Missing.
| The Associated PressMark KennedyMissing, building off the related film “Searching” from 2018, manages to make a film about small screens feel electric on a big one. |
| Film ThreatBenjamin FranzA tight, taut mystery with incredible acting, this terrific film explores how our children use social networks. It has definitely opened my eyes to the possibilities of online sleuthing, and I highly recommend this film to anyone. |
| Arizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzI was only able to figure out the answer to about a third of the mysteries. But the rest left a thrilling impression that made “Missing” a genuinely fun ride. |
| The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Sarah HagiMissing packs in enough mystery and intrigue that the film never feels boring. It ends up working as good, light and thrilling entertainment. |
| The Hollywood ReporterLovia GyarkyeMissing succeeds at maintaining a propulsive, nail-biting atmosphere and overcoming the boredom of its conventional narrative beats by treating each tool — Gmail accounts, iPhone photos and company websites — as a deeply layered puzzle, one that gathers and offers more information than most people realize. |
| RogerEbert.comChristy LemireIf the delightfully nutty “M3GAN” was a cautionary tale about the perils of relying too heavily on technology, “Missing” ends up being a celebration of its possibilities. |
| ColliderRoss BonaimeStructurally, Missing can often feel a bit too much like Searching at times, but by the end, it finds its own path in this intriguing way to tell a mystery. |
| TheWrapRobert AbeleIt’s all great fun, even if there’s no central performance as riveting as Cho’s in “Searching.” Then again, acting in movies like this is an admittedly uphill battle, one that Reid is better at when not having to rely on the occasionally tinny dialogue. Long, Leung and de Almeida, meanwhile, fill the tapestry of intrigue efficiently and appealingly. |
| The A.V. ClubLeigh MonsonScreenlife may never be one of the primary ways we tell cinematic stories, but Missing is a prime example of what the format is capable of, tapping into our increasingly digital humanity to excellent effect. |
| The AtlanticShirley LiThe result is a film that is slickly made but buggy in execution, like a premature software update. |