Movie · 2021 · Comedy, Adventure, Science Fiction · 1h 55m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 2.3/10 (1.6M ratings)
Life's too short to be a background character.
Overview
A bank teller discovers he is actually a background player in an open-world video game, and decides to become the hero of his own story. Now, in a world where there are no limits, he is determined to be the guy who saves his world his way before it's too late.
Ratings
Curator score: 2.3/10
IMDb: 7.1/10
Letterboxd: 3.01/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 80%
Metacritic: 62
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
Shawn Levy
Production
Berlanti Productions, 21 Laps Entertainment, Maximum Effort, Lit Entertainment Group, 20th Century Studios
Cast
Ryan Reynolds, Jodie Comer, Lil Rel Howery, Joe Keery, Utkarsh Ambudkar, Taika Waititi, Channing Tatum, Aaron W Reed, Britne Oldford, Camille Kostek, Mark Lainer, Mike Devine, Sophie Levy, Vernon Scott, Naheem Garcia, Anabel Graetz, Ric Plamenco, Kenneth Israel, Michael Malvesti, Colin Allen
Where to watch
Disney Plus, fuboTV
Curator Review
Verdict
A breezy, high-concept crowd-pleaser with a strong hook, likable leads, and enough action-comedy energy to keep it moving. It works best as a feel-good riff on video-game logic and self-determination, though the corporate satire and pop-culture winks can feel broad and overstuffed.
Best for
Viewers who want a light, fast-paced studio adventure
Fans of Ryan Reynolds-style self-aware comedy
People who enjoy video-game worlds and NPC premise stories
Audiences looking for an easy family-friendly blockbuster
Skip if
You’re tired of meta jokes and brand-name references
You want sharp satire instead of glossy studio irony
You dislike movies that explain their own concept repeatedly
You prefer game adaptations with deeper world-building or riskier tone
Overview
Free Guy is built on a simple, very marketable idea: what if the background character finally realized he was living inside a game? That premise gives the movie an easy engine, and Shawn Levy keeps it moving with bright colors, clean action, and a steady stream of jokes that mostly land because the cast is game for the bit.
Worth noting
Ryan Reynolds does what he does best here, turning a generic everyman into a likable comic lead, while Jodie Comer gives the movie a sharper emotional center than it might otherwise have. The film’s biggest strength is its sincerity; beneath the references and spectacle, it wants to be a story about agency, kindness, and choosing to be the hero.
Bottom line
Still, the movie can feel like it’s chasing the same pop-culture dopamine as the games it’s parodying. Some of the satire is blunt, and the third act leans hard into familiar blockbuster escalation. Even so, it remains an easy watch if you’re in the mood for a polished, upbeat crowd-pleaser rather than something more subversive.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Framesofnick (2.5★) · 10396 likes
There will never be a movie that says video game terms in a way that doesn’t make me wanna shoot myself
🌻 lindsay 🌻 (2.5★) · 9578 likes
this movie: original IPs are dying 😩 big corporations are stealing ideas to turn them into mindless garbage or empty sequels
this movie 5 mins later: THE AVENGERS ARE HERE 😜👊🏻 YALL LIKE STAR WARS? CHECK OUT THESE FORTNITE DANCES 😂🕺🏻
William (1★) · 8898 likes
I don’t know how, but this movie actually got negative laughs from me. Like in the future I will laugh less because I watched Free Guy today
Jake (3★) · 5625 likes
I wish Ryan Reynolds and Channing Tatum kissed
Julien Debaker (3.5★) · 4967 likes
Now I feel bad for punching npc’s in gta for no fucking reason
Shares the inspirational, self-actualizing tone and the wish to step out of passive routine into adventure.
Topics
video game comedy, meta adventure, science fiction comedy, crowd-pleaser, lighthearted, corporate satire, digital world, action comedy, 2020s blockbuster, feel-good