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The Assessment Poster

The Assessment

Would you pass?
2025 | 114m | English

(16755 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

In a climate change-ravaged world, a utopian society optimizes life, including parenthood assessments. A successful couple faces scrutiny by an evaluator over seven days to determine their fitness for childbearing.
Release Date: Mar 21, 2025
Director: Fleur Fortuné
Writer: John Donnelly, Nell Garfath-Cox, Dave Thomas
Genres: Science Fiction, Drama, Thriller
Keywords dystopia, dyslexic, tense, ghoulish
Production Companies Number 9 Films, Augenschein Filmproduktion, Shivhans Pictures, Project Infinity, Woolley/Karlsen Productions, Tiki Tāne Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $279,328
Budget: $8,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 07, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Jul 25, 2024
Trailers and Extras

No trailers or extras available.

Full Credits

Name Job
Urs Hirschbiegel Assistant Director
James Hyde ADR Mixer
Olivia Hulme Assistant Costume Designer
Alexander Biehn Assistant Accountant
Steffi Hiller Production Controller
Sarah Blenkinsop Costume Design
Marino Darés Assistant Director
Yorgos Lamprinos Editor
Magnus Nordenhof Jønck Director of Photography
Frank Kruse Sound
Erik Seifert Sound
Jan Houllevigue Production Design
Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch Original Music Composer
John Donnelly Writer
Alexander Wunsch Sound Re-Recording Assistant
Fleur Fortuné Director
Nell Garfath-Cox Writer
Dave Thomas Writer
Pia Röbke VFX Editor
Carolina Von Teutul VFX Production Coordinator
Rolf Muetze VFX Supervisor
Name Title
Grant S. Johnson Producer
Shivani Rawat Producer
Julie Goldstein Producer
Allen Gilmer Executive Producer
Jonathan Saubach Executive Producer
Madeleine K. Rudin Executive Producer
Thomas K. Richards Executive Producer
Rusta Mizani Executive Producer
Carlotta Löffelholz Executive Producer
Maximilian Leo Producer
Jonas Katzenstein Producer
Elizabeth Karlsen Producer
William Bruce Johnson Executive Producer
Tom Brady Executive Producer
William Shockley Executive Producer
Connor Flanagan Executive Producer
Stephen Woolley Producer
Riki Rushing Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 7 4 12 0
2024 8 4 7 1
2024 9 6 9 3
2024 10 5 11 2
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2024 12 4 5 3
2025 1 4 9 2
2025 2 4 8 1
2025 3 5 15 2
2025 4 20 49 3
2025 5 17 37 5
2025 6 8 11 5
2025 7 4 6 3
2025 8 5 8 3

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2025 8 49 436
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2025 7 133 584
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2025 6 33 456
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2025 5 3 206
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2025 4 7 313
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 55 709
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 272 432

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Reviews

Brent_Marchant
7.0

It often feels like we’re constantly being assessed, evaluated on everything from our creditworthiness to our work performance to our scholastic achievements. But imagine what it might be like if we were scrutinized on highly personal matters, with intrusive investigations into our most highly intim ... ate concerns. Such is life in director Fleur Fortune’s debut feature in a dystopian version of Earth of the future. With the planet devastated by environmental decline, human society has been drastically reorganized into the old world and the new world. The former is a pathetic wasteland where individuals struggle to live out short lives under horrific conditions. The latter, meanwhile, is a sanctuary for the fortunate, with clean air, clean water and a comfortable way of life, but there’s a trade-off: Residents must abide by litany of stringent laws, rules and regulations in which they’re under constant assessment, including in matters of their so-called private lives, where the risk of being reassigned to the old world looms for even the smallest of violations. This intensive surveillance involves essentially everything, including such basic considerations as the ability to have children, a strictly regulated undertaking for which would-be parents are rigorously evaluated by government-appointed assessors on their qualifications to assume this role. So it is for Mia (Elizabeth Olsen) and Aaryan (Himesh Patel), a couple looking to become one of the privileged, who are placed under the microscope by their evaluator, Virginia (Alicia Vikander). The assessor takes up residence with the couple for a week to scrutinize their suitability, engaging in rounds of intensive questioning, role playing exercises and other unannounced tests to see if they meet the requisite standards. But are they up to it? The process pushes the limits of the couple’s coping abilities, exposes long-hidden secrets and pushes the envelope of their tolerance levels for their circumstances, all in the name (supposedly) of determining whether they would make acceptable parents. And, as the evaluation unfolds, it raises questions about whether the assessment is truly everything it appears to be. This inventive social sci-fi offering raises an array of probing, thoughtful questions, both for the characters, as well as audience members, particularly where matters of personal privacy and societal judgmentalism are concerned. The narrative is purposely designed to keep viewers guessing, placing them squarely in the shoes of the protagonists and nudging them to ask themselves what would they do under conditions like these. It’s an approach that generally keeps us hooked as the story plays out, despite some occasional lapses in pacing and a few sequences in which the action feels a little over the top (especially in the role playing segments). But the payoff is ultimately worth it, one that makes us question whether the constant evaluations to which we’re subjected in today’s society are everything they’re allegedly cracked up to be. This German production with dialogue in English is an intriguing examination of what we allow ourselves to be put through to see if we measure up to expectations that ultimately aren’t necessarily our own, particularly in matters that fundamentally aren’t anyone else’s business. Think about that the next time you feel you’re being unduly judged, a consideration that’s taken on new weight in today’s day and age – and that this cautionary tale might be giving us a preview of what could possibly lie ahead.

Jun 03, 2025
Horseface
1.0

No idea if it could be a good film. Can't see what's going on. It's so incredibly dark. It's sunny, and a woman's swimming in the ocean, then walking on the beach. It's dark like if it were late evening, beginning of night. What the hell is going on with Hollywood? More and more films look like this ... . Completely unwatchable. Abandoning this garbage and switching to something else that can actually be watched.

May 10, 2025