I honestly loved this movie way more than I expected. Ryan Reynolds as a schizophrenic killer sounded like a weird casting choice, but he killed it (no pun intended). Creepy, funny, and sad all at once.
The real highlight though? The cat and the dog. The dog was like his angel, always trying to push him to do the right thing, while the cat was pure evil, constantly convincing him to keep killing. Their back-and-forth with Jerry was hilarious—no filter, straight-up R-rated chaos.
What I really liked too was the way the movie shows Jerry’s world versus reality. From his perspective, his house is spotless, the pets are happy, and even the severed heads in his fridge are just chatting away with him. But when we see it through Lisa or the therapist’s eyes, it’s a total blood-soaked nightmare. That contrast was disturbing but also brilliant.
Overall, The Voices is dark, twisted, and hilarious—and honestly one of Ryan Reynolds’ most underrated roles.
I honestly loved this movie way more than I expected. Ryan Reynolds as a schizophrenic killer sounded like a weird casting choice, but he killed it (no pun intended). Creepy, funny, and sad all at once.
The real highlight though? The cat and the dog. The dog was like his angel, always trying to push him to do the right thing, while the cat was pure evil, constantly convincing him to keep killing. Their back-and-forth with Jerry was hilarious—no filter, straight-up R-rated chaos.
What I really liked too was the way the movie shows Jerry’s world versus reality. From his perspective, his house is spotless, the pets are happy, and even the severed heads in his fridge are just chatting away with him. But when we see it through Lisa or the therapist’s eyes, it’s a total blood-soaked nightmare. That contrast was disturbing but also brilliant.
Overall, The Voices is dark, twisted, and hilarious—and honestly one of Ryan Reynolds’ most underrated roles.