Cronenberg handles his usual fondness for gore in muted style.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
It's almost too rich in ideas for its own good: The sense of concentration and proportion isn't there. But it remains an astonishing, magnetic, devastating piece of work. [23 Sept 1988]
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Is this misogyny, as some insist, or a critique of misogyny, as others say? Many moviegoers, grossed out by the film's gothic approach to medical matters, won't watch long enough to find out which is the answer. [30 Sept 1988]
Washington Post by Desson Thomson
For those who enjoy cinematic visits to other, darker worlds, this blood's for you. Watching Ringers is not unlike watching a critical operation -- unnerving but also enthralling. [23 Sept 1988]
The New York Times by Elvis Mitchell
What makes the performance(s) even better is that Mr. Irons invests these bizarre, potentially freakish characters with so much intelligence and so much real feeling. [23 Sept 1988, p.C10]
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Jay Scott
David Cronenberg's gelid masterpiece.
Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum
An astonishing tour de force--especially for Irons, whose sense of nuance is so refined that one can tell in a matter of seconds which twin he is playing in a particular scene.
An instant classic, an Oscar-worthy showcase for Jeremy Irons, and a tightrope ballet over dicey screen material A subtle movie - and thus a disturbing one. Like Vertigo, The Night of the Hunter, Repulsion and a few others, it finds beauty in morbidity - then nags you to come back for a second dose. [23 Sept 1988]
Los Angeles Times by Sheila Benson
To think of a film this assured, this unified and this dizzyingly potent, you have to go back to "Blue Velvet." [22 Sept 1988]