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ThrillerHorrorCrime

Psicópata: El Asesino del Conejo Blanco

Directed by J. Xavier Velasco · 2026 ·

Answer Summary

Psicópata: El Asesino del Conejo Blanco (2026) earns a 48% Celluloid Score — Not Recommended. Not Recommended — reception was largely negative.Audiences (52%) responded more warmly than critics (34%).

Quick Verdict

Averaged from five public sources (critic, audience, Metascore, Letterboxd, IMDb). See how we calculate scores.

48%
Celluloid Score Not Recommended

Five-source breakdown

34% Critic Score
52% Audience
38 Metascore
★★☆☆☆ Letterboxd 2.4
6.6 IMDb /10
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Runtime
1h 39m
Cast
Adriana Llabrés , Hoze Meléndez , Andrés Almeida , Horacio García Rojas , Ruth Ramos , Nailea Norvind

Why this score?

  • Critics were divided or negative (34%).
  • Audience reception was lukewarm (52%).
  • Celluloid Score 48% averages all five public rating sources — our own composite, not a third-party trademark score.

Best for

  • Short runtime — easy weeknight watch
  • Crowd-pleaser seekers — audiences liked it more than critics

Not ideal for

  • Anyone needing a safe, highly rated pick
  • Horror fans expecting broad audience validation

Scores reflect data indexed at build time. Component sources are shown on this page; Celluloid Score is our composite, not a third-party trademark. Scoring policy

Is Psicópata: El Asesino del Conejo Blanco worth watching?

No — Psicópata: El Asesino del Conejo Blanco earns a 48% Celluloid Score. Not Recommended — reception was largely negative.

Critics Consensus

Local critics have been split on this serial-killer thriller, with several praising its ambition to trace violence back to childhood trauma while others panned an uneven script and an antagonist performance that clashes tonally with the rest of the cast.

Celluloid Critics Consensus

Audiences (52%) responded more warmly than critics (34%).

What is Psicópata: El Asesino del Conejo Blanco about?

A serial killer terrorizes a Mexican city, leaving white rabbit origami figures beside each victim as a taunting signature. Nora Sierra, a criminal psychologist living with dissociative identity disorder, partners with Eder Ballesteros, a veteran investigator facing a terminal diagnosis, to decode the killer's twisted logic before he strikes again.

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Critic Reviews

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