Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
Jeff Shannon, Seattle Times: If Thr3e is any indication of what we can expect from the emerging trend of studio-funded faith-based movies, we may find ourselves wishing The Passion of the Christ had been a box-office bomb. Read more
J. R. Jones, Chicago Reader: The vile sadism of the Saw movies has been replaced by decorative references to Saint Augustine and Immanuel Kant, and there's a beautiful but brainy police profiler (Justine Waddell) on hand to dispense a thick layer of psychobabble. Read more
Annemarie Moody, Arizona Republic: Rent Se7en for an authentically scary thriller with religious undertones. Read more
Lisa Kennedy, Denver Post: Directed by Robby Henson, this theologically driven thriller from 20th Century Fox's Fox Faith division, steps gingerly around sex and watches its tongue. But it's far too comfy with the lingua franca of American cinema: violence. Read more
Jack Mathews, New York Daily News: It's a pretty run-of-the-mill B suspense movie. Read more
Lou Lumenick, New York Post: Suspenselessly directed by Robby Henson, Thr3e commits the eighth deadly sin -- boredom. Read more
Joe Leydon, Variety: There's precious little in the way of clammy tension or mounting apprehension as Thr3e plods toward a climax that is startlingly absurd, yet not entirely illogical. Read more
Jessica Grose, Village Voice: There are no dead bodies here, but perhaps filmgoers, tired of all those secular scares and heathen horrors, won't miss the aesthetic pleasure of a creative murder scene. Read more
Stephen Hunter, Washington Post: Thr3e needs help with more than spelling. Read more