Get Out
Get Out is a 2017 American horror film written, co-produced, and directed by Jordan Peele in his feature directorial debut.[1] It stars Daniel Kaluuya as Chris Washington, a young Black photographer who visits the family estate of his white girlfriend Rose Armitage, played by Allison Williams, only to encounter increasingly unsettling behavior that reveals a sinister conspiracy involving hypnosis and coerced surgical procedures.[2] Supporting roles include Catherine Keener as Rose's mother Missy, a hypnotist, and Bradley Whitford as her father Dean, both displaying an unusual fixation on Chris's physical attributes.[3] The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2017, and received a wide theatrical release in the United States on February 24, 2017, distributed by Universal Pictures.[4] Produced on a modest budget of $4.5 million, Get Out achieved extraordinary commercial success, grossing $176 million domestically and over $255 million worldwide, yielding one of the highest returns on investment for any film that year.[5][6] Critically, the film earned a 98% approval rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, praised for its innovative fusion of horror tropes with pointed social commentary on interracial relationships and racial exploitation.[7] At the 90th Academy Awards, it secured four nominations—Best Picture, Best Director for Peele, Best Actor for Kaluuya, and Best Original Screenplay—and won the latter, making Peele the first African American to receive the honor for original screenwriting.[8][9] This triumph underscored the film's role in elevating genre filmmaking to mainstream awards contention, though some observers noted its themes provoked debates on the portrayal of white liberal attitudes toward race, with interpretations varying from allegory to direct critique.[7]Narrative and Characters
Plot Summary
Chris Washington, a talented African-American photographer in an interracial relationship with Rose Armitage, reluctantly agrees to meet her white parents at their rural estate upstate.[10] En route on February 2017, their vehicle strikes a deer at night, leading a local police officer to demand Chris's identification despite Rose having been behind the wheel; Rose asserts that Chris has done nothing wrong, and the officer relents without issuing a citation.[10] [11] At the Armitage estate, Chris encounters Rose's father, Dean, a neurosurgeon, and her mother, Missy, a hypnotherapist, who express liberal-leaning sentiments but display awkward microaggressions toward Chris, such as Dean's mention of electing the country's first black president twice.[10] The black groundskeeper Walter and housekeeper Georgina behave strangely subservient and detached, prompting Chris's unease; he notices Georgina referring to herself in the third person and Walter jogging obsessively at night.[10] That evening, Missy insists on hypnotizing Chris to cure his smoking habit using a teacup and stirring spoon as triggers; under hypnosis, she submerges his consciousness into "the Sunken Place," a void where he remains paralyzed and voiceless while observing events.[10] The next day, Rose's brother Jeremy arrives and probes Chris about his physical build in a combative manner, hinting at an interest in martial arts.[10] A gathering of wealthy white guests ensues, who fixate on Chris's attributes with comments about black physical superiority and hypothetical transplants; one guest, Logan King, a black man accompanied by a white woman, becomes agitated and utters "Get out!" when Chris's friend Rod flashes a phone camera at the party.[10] Chris confides suspicions to Rod via phone, who warns of sexual exploitation based on prison stories; meanwhile, Chris searches Rose's room on her laptop, discovering photographs of her with multiple black ex-boyfriends, shattering his trust in her.[10] As the weekend intensifies, Chris attempts to flee but finds himself hypnotized again by Missy's trigger, leading to his preparation for the Coagula procedure—a surgical brain transplant where a white person's consciousness overrides a black host's, pioneered by the Armitages' family after their grandfather's defeat in a photography contest by Jesse Owens inspired eugenic envy.[10] Dean reveals the family's history of harvesting black bodies for auction to subscribers seeking youth and athleticism, with Logan revealed as Andre Hayworth, abducted months earlier, Georgina as Rose's grandmother Marianne, and Walter as patriarch Roman.[10] A blind bidder wins Chris's body for $10,000 more than the reserve.[10] During the procedure's commencement, Chris resists by stuffing cottons balls from the chair into his ears, blocking the hypnosis trigger and regaining control; he stabs Missy, bludgeons Jeremy with a deer's antler, and incinerates Dean in the operating room.[10] He then shoots Roman (Walter) after a chase, causing Walter's consciousness to revert and die, before confronting Rose, who feigns victimhood while actually complicit in luring black men; Chris crushes her skull with the same antler.[10] Rod, Chris's TSA colleague who had reported suspicions to police, arrives in a patrol vehicle and rescues the traumatized Chris, driving away as the estate burns.[10]Cast and Roles
 The principal cast of Get Out (2017) includes Daniel Kaluuya as Chris Washington, the protagonist, a Black photographer who travels with his white girlfriend to meet her family, uncovering sinister undertones.[3] Allison Williams portrays Rose Armitage, Chris's girlfriend whose seemingly supportive demeanor masks deeper intentions.[3] Catherine Keener plays Missy Armitage, Rose's mother and a hypnotist whose "therapy" sessions play a pivotal role in the plot.[3] Bradley Whitford depicts Dean Armitage, Rose's father, a neurosurgeon exhibiting liberal politeness that belies the family's agenda.[3]| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Caleb Landry Jones | Jeremy Armitage |
| Lil Rel Howery | Rod Williams |
| LaKeith Stanfield | Andre Hayworth / Walter |
| Stephen Root | Jim Hudson |
| Betty Gabriel | Georgina / Grandma |
Production
Development and Writing
Jordan Peele conceived the premise for Get Out during the period following his work on the sketch comedy series Key & Peele, drawing initial inspiration from Eddie Murphy's 1983 stand-up special Delirious, in which Murphy humorously described the unease of a Black man visiting his white girlfriend's family home.[13] Peele expanded this into a horror narrative exploring racial tensions, envisioning a scenario where a Black protagonist encounters sinister intentions from a seemingly liberal white family, influenced by post-Obama-era assumptions that overt racism had diminished, only to reveal subtler, insidious forms.[14] Peele spent years developing the story concept before committing it to script form, treating it as an exploratory exercise rather than a guaranteed production, and emphasizing a balance in racial satire that critiqued hypocrisy without broadly demonizing white characters.[15][16] In the writing process, he incorporated elements from classic horror films like The Stepford Wives and Rosemary's Baby to structure the psychological thriller aspects, focusing on social allegory through genre conventions.[17][18] The screenplay, completed as a speculative script, underwent revisions that streamlined the narrative for tension, including adjustments to the opening sequence to heighten immediate apprehension for the audience.[19] Peele has described the development as a deliberate shift from comedy to horror, leveraging his background to infuse the script with pointed [social commentary](/page/social commentary) on interracial dynamics and perceived progressive benevolence masking ulterior motives.[20]Casting Process
Jordan Peele selected Daniel Kaluuya for the lead role of Chris Washington after being impressed by Kaluuya's monologue in the Black Mirror episode "Fifteen Million Merits," which aligned with the character's required emotional depth and authenticity.[21] Peele described Kaluuya as "exactly how I pictured Chris," emphasizing the actor's ability to convey subtle vulnerability and resilience central to the film's narrative.[22] During Kaluuya's audition, Peele specifically requested a performance of the hypnosis scene, which Kaluuya executed convincingly, securing the role despite the actor's prior period of professional disillusionment and unemployment lasting over a year and a half.[23][24] Allison Williams was cast as Rose Armitage after Peele observed her portrayal of Wendy in the 2014 NBC live musical adaptation of Peter Pan, where her depiction of innocence provided the ironic contrast needed for the character's duplicitous nature.[25] Williams was among the earliest actors attached to the project, with Peele seeking performers capable of subverting audience expectations through familiar, non-threatening personas that masked underlying menace.[22] Supporting roles were filled with actors chosen for their ability to embody the film's satirical elements, including Catherine Keener as the hypnotherapist Missy Armitage, whose calm demeanor enhanced the psychological horror, and Bradley Whitford and Betty Gabriel as the Armitage estate's staff, leveraging their established screen presences to heighten the uncanny valley effect.[22] Peele's casting strategy prioritized performers who could deliver nuanced performances revealing the script's themes of concealed prejudice without overt exaggeration, ensuring the horror emerged organically from character interactions.[22]Filming and Locations
Principal photography for Get Out began in February 2016 in Fairhope, Alabama, primarily at the house located at 6892 Heathcroft Lane, which served as the Armitage family estate standing in for upstate New York.[26][27] The production selected Alabama locations due to their scenic affordability and tax incentives, allowing the modest $4.5 million budget to cover a month-long shoot.[28][29] Filming in Fairhope lasted about three weeks, capturing most exterior and key interior scenes of the family home amid the town's oak-lined streets and bay views.[28] Additional sequences were shot in nearby Mobile, Alabama, including the opening nighttime abduction at De Tonti Square near Ryan Avenue, chosen for its isolated, dimly lit urban feel.[30][26] Interior basement scenes, central to the film's climactic revelations, were filmed at Barton Academy, a Greek Revival structure built in 1836 and noted as one of America's oldest surviving public school buildings.[26] This historic site in Mobile provided the aged, institutional atmosphere required for the underground surgical and coercive elements depicted.[28] Director Jordan Peele, in his feature debut, employed cinematographer Toby Oliver to execute tight, tension-building shots, such as probing close-ups during confrontations, often using minimal lighting to heighten psychological unease within these confined spaces.[31] The efficient schedule wrapped principal photography by March 2016, enabling rapid post-production ahead of the film's January 2017 Sundance premiere.[32]Post-Production and Music
Post-production for Get Out was overseen by editor Gregory Plotkin, who collaborated closely with director Jordan Peele to refine the film's pacing and suspense, particularly in sequences like the "Sunken Place," where editing techniques amplified psychological terror through rapid cuts and visual metaphors of entrapment.[33] [34] Plotkin emphasized editing's role in horror, noting how it builds tension by withholding information and manipulating viewer expectations, as seen in the film's party scene where visual cues foreshadow narrative twists.[33] Visual effects were managed by Ingenuity Studios, a Los Angeles- and New York-based facility, contributing to key horror elements such as the hypnotic "Sunken Place" visuals and other subtle enhancements that integrated seamlessly with practical footage shot on ARRI Alexa Mini cameras.[35] Specific VFX artists included Kieley Culbertson, David Lebensfeld, Grant Miller, and Pratik Pradeep, who handled effects like distortions and atmospheric manipulations to underscore the film's themes without overpowering its grounded realism.[36] The score was composed by Michael Abels in his feature film debut, blending orchestral horror conventions with African-inspired elements, including Swahili chants and distorted gospel motifs to evoke cultural unease and "gospel horror."[37] [38] Abels, a mixed-race composer with prior experience in operas and gospel arrangements, incorporated choral richness and unfamiliar tonal languages to avoid stereotypes while heightening the narrative's racial satire, as directed by Peele to sound "tribal" yet innovative.[39] [40] Sound design complemented the score, using whispers and dissonant strings in pivotal scenes to reinforce psychological dread, with the full soundtrack released commercially featuring Abels' cues alongside licensed tracks like Childish Gambino's "Redbone."[41]Thematic Analysis
Racial Satire and Liberal Hypocrisy
"Get Out" employs racial satire to expose the concealed prejudices underlying ostensibly progressive attitudes among white liberals. The Armitage family, who openly express admiration for Barack Obama and decry overt racism, nonetheless subject the protagonist Chris Washington to microaggressions, such as the mother's hypnosis technique disguised as therapeutic intervention and the father's fixation on Black athletic superiority rooted in Jesse Owens' 1936 Olympic loss.[42] These elements critique how self-proclaimed allies commodify Black bodies, as evidenced by the film's climactic auction scene where white guests bid on Chris, with a blind bidder prioritizing his physical attributes over personality.[43] Director Jordan Peele has articulated that the film targets the "liberal elite," portraying racism not as isolated villainy but as insidious social dynamics in affluent, educated circles that deny its persistence in a "post-racial" era.[44] In interviews, Peele emphasized subtle cues like the family's discomfort with Chris's awareness, contrasting their verbal anti-racism with actions that trap him in the "sunken place"—a metaphor for marginalized voices silenced under performative inclusion.[45] This hypocrisy manifests in the servants, Walter and Georgina, whose bodies house white consciousnesses, satirizing appropriation where liberals exploit Black labor and vitality while discarding their agency.[46] The satire extends to broader cultural appropriation, as guests fetishize Chris's physique and talent, echoing real-world patterns of admiration for Black excellence without addressing systemic barriers.[47] Peele drew from personal experiences of navigating white liberal spaces, where racism hides behind politeness, challenging the narrative that progress obviates vigilance.[48] Critics note this as a deliberate inversion of horror tropes, forcing audiences to confront complicity in environments that prioritize optics over equality.[49] While mainstream analyses often frame it as universal racial tension, the film's specificity to liberal hypocrisy underscores causal links between virtue-signaling and underlying self-interest, unmasked through empirical observation of interpersonal dynamics rather than abstract ideology.[50]Horror Elements and Psychological Depth
 Get Out utilizes psychological horror techniques to generate tension through subtle unease rather than explicit violence, emphasizing suspense and atmospheric dread over traditional gore. The film incorporates elements such as hypnosis-induced paralysis, where protagonist Chris Washington is triggered by a teacup spoon to enter a trance state, rendering him immobile while conscious.[51] This sequence draws on body horror tropes, evoking vulnerability and loss of agency as Chris's mind is transported to the "Sunken Place," a void symbolizing entrapment and voicelessness.[52] Director Jordan Peele has described the Sunken Place as a metaphor for the systemic suppression of Black individuals, where one's perspective is marginalized while the body is co-opted by external forces.[52] This concept amplifies horror by blending personal psychological terror with broader social commentary, manifesting in Chris's growing paranoia amid microaggressions and gaslighting from the white Armitage family and their guests.[53] The film's single prominent jump scare early on transitions into sustained suspense, particularly during the basement revelation and escape sequences, heightening the viewer's anticipation of inevitable violation.[54] Psychologically, Get Out delves into themes of racial distrust and mental subjugation, portraying Chris's experiences as reflective of real-world skepticism toward predominantly white institutions like medicine and psychotherapy.[55] The narrative critiques the intersection of race and mental health by illustrating how seemingly benign interactions devolve into manipulative control, fostering a sense of isolation and helplessness akin to clinical dissociation.[56] Peele's use of mood shifts—from comedic awkwardness to nightmarish revelation—mirrors cognitive dissonance, underscoring the film's depth in exploring identity erosion under veiled supremacy.[57] The horror extends to commodification via the silent auction, where Chris is bid upon like property, invoking historical echoes of slavery through modern pseudoscientific lenses, thus layering visceral revulsion with intellectual horror.[58] By subverting tropes such as the "black guy dies first" cliché—allowing Chris temporary agency via the "tear him apart" flash—Peele inverts expectations to empower the victim, enhancing psychological resilience against dehumanization.[59] This approach not only terrifies through invasion of self but prompts reflection on enduring cultural traumas, distinguishing Get Out's horror as intellectually invasive.[60]Critiques of Portrayed Worldview
Critics have argued that Get Out's worldview oversimplifies racial tensions by depicting white liberals as uniformly duplicitous and predatory, reducing nuanced societal interactions to a conspiratorial revenge fantasy that exploits discomfort without fostering deeper understanding.[61] This portrayal, centered on a metaphorical "body-snatching" scheme symbolizing cultural appropriation and hidden racism, has been faulted for lacking credible, multidimensional characters, instead presenting them as caricatured "attitudes" driven by post-racial ironies from the Obama administration era.[61] Film critic Armond White, writing in National Review, described the film as a "trite get-whitey movie" tailored to gratify liberal audiences through self-congratulatory humor that irresponsibly plays "racial grief and racist relief off against each other."[61] He contended that it manipulates real-world events, such as the Trayvon Martin case, into attenuated comedy sketches that debase serious racial discourse, ultimately pandering to the "liberal status quo" rather than challenging it substantively.[61] White's assessment highlights a perceived bias in the film's selective focus on white hypocrisy, ignoring broader empirical patterns in interracial violence or intra-community challenges within African American society, which data from sources like the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports indicate disproportionately involve black perpetrators and victims. Jeffrey Wells of Hollywood Elsewhere critiqued the narrative for implying that upscale white liberals—professing support for Obama—are secretly as threatening as overt conservatives, issuing a directive to "watch out for upscale whiteys…they ain’t on our team."[62] This framing, Wells argued, delivers specious commentary on black-white relations during the Obama years, exaggerating liberal racism while sidelining evidence of declining overt discrimination, such as interracial marriage rates rising from 3% in 1967 to 17% by 2015 per Pew Research Center data.[62] Some philosophical commentators have extended this to claim the film dehumanizes whites by portraying "whiteness" as inherently evil, with every white character complicit in cult-like murder except the comparatively benign "racist cop," potentially mirroring the very racial inferiority narratives it ostensibly opposes through a "fight fire with fire" approach.[63] Such critiques, often from conservative or contrarian voices amid widespread acclaim in left-leaning media and academia, underscore concerns that the film's alarmist lens on subtle bigotry fosters paranoia and division, overlooking causal factors like family disintegration—where 72% of black children are born out of wedlock per CDC statistics—over external conspiracies. This selective emphasis aligns with institutional biases favoring narratives of perpetual victimhood, as evidenced by the film's near-universal praise despite these portrayals.[61]Release and Commercial Performance
Premiere, Marketing, and Distribution
Get Out premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2017, in Park City, Utah, as a midnight secret screening announced as Jordan Peele's directorial debut.[64] [65] The screening generated significant buzz, with the film receiving an extended standing ovation from the audience.[66] Universal Pictures handled domestic and international distribution, releasing the film theatrically in the United States on February 24, 2017, across 2,773 theaters.[5] The wide release followed a limited marketing push prior to Sundance, with Universal securing the project through its partnership with Blumhouse Productions before the festival.[67] International rollouts varied, with openings in markets like Canada and India on the same date, the United Kingdom on March 17, and China later contributing substantially to global earnings.[65] The marketing campaign, estimated at $30 million, focused on the film's horror-thriller elements intertwined with racial satire, leveraging trailers that built suspense without revealing key plot twists.[68] Jordan Peele actively promoted the movie by framing it as a commentary on contemporary racial dynamics, which resonated amid cultural discussions on race in America.[66] Universal employed digital and social media strategies, including viral teasers and partnerships, to target diverse audiences, contributing to the film's word-of-mouth success despite its modest $4.5 million production budget.[69] This approach proved effective, as pre-release tracking underestimated its opening weekend performance.[70]Box Office Results
Get Out premiered in limited release on February 24, 2017, before expanding wide that weekend, earning $33,377,060 domestically from 2,773 theaters and securing the number-one position at the North American box office.[6] The film's strong word-of-mouth, driven by positive audience reception and critical acclaim, contributed to its sustained performance, with domestic earnings multiplying the opening weekend gross by over five times.[71] Over its full domestic run, Get Out grossed $176,196,665 in the United States and Canada, representing approximately 68.9% of its worldwide total.[71] International markets added $79,396,565, with notable performances in South Korea ($15,595,226 over three releases) and Australia ($8,891,174).[71] The cumulative worldwide gross reached $255,593,230, achieved on a production budget of $4,500,000, yielding a return on investment exceeding 56 times the initial outlay before marketing and distribution costs.[6][1]| Metric | Amount |
|---|---|
| Production Budget | $4,500,000 |
| Opening Weekend (Domestic) | $33,377,060 |
| Domestic Gross | $176,196,665 |
| International Gross | $79,396,565 |
| Worldwide Gross | $255,593,230 |
Reception
Critical Evaluations
Get Out received widespread critical acclaim upon its release on February 24, 2017, earning a 98% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 403 reviews, with critics lauding its blend of horror, satire, and social commentary on racism.[7] On Metacritic, it scored 85 out of 100 from 48 critics, indicating "universal acclaim" for its innovative genre fusion and timely critique of subtle racial dynamics in affluent white liberal circles. Reviewers frequently highlighted director Jordan Peele's skillful direction in his feature debut, praising the film's ability to provoke discomfort through everyday microaggressions and escalating tension, as exemplified by A.O. Scott of The New York Times, who described it as a "jolt of righteous outrage" that exposes the "horror of smug liberals" and their performative allyship.[73] The film's satirical edge targeting liberal hypocrisy garnered particular praise, with critics like those at The Guardian noting its portrayal of white progressives who intellectualize racism while harboring exploitative motives, framing it as a "paranoia movie" resonant in the post-2016 political climate.[74] Richard Brody in The New Yorker commended Peele's "radical cinematic vision" for viewing societal threats through a Black lens, emphasizing causal links between historical enslavement and modern body commodification via the auction scene.[75] However, such acclaim from mainstream outlets, often aligned with left-leaning perspectives, may reflect selective endorsement of narratives critiquing white liberalism while overlooking broader interracial realities, as the film's premise relies on exaggerated premises of widespread surgical body-snatching conspiracies unsubstantiated by empirical data on interracial violence rates, which FBI statistics show disproportionately affect Black victims from Black perpetrators. Dissenting voices included critic Armond White, whose negative review dropped the initial 100% Rotten Tomatoes score, arguing that Peele amplified existential paranoia into a politically immature response to historical enslavement, reducing complex racial issues to simplistic genre tropes without deeper causal analysis.[76] Actor Samuel L. Jackson publicly critiqued the casting of British actor Daniel Kaluuya as an African American protagonist, questioning authenticity in portraying "the experiences of black Americans" and suggesting it catered to perceptions of Black British actors as less "threatening."[77] Some evaluations, including user-submitted critiques aggregated on platforms like Metacritic, faulted the film for predictability, repetitive dialogue, and underdeveloped characters, with one analysis deeming it "overpraised" for prioritizing concept over execution in acting and pacing.[78] These counterpoints underscore potential overreliance on shock value rather than rigorous evidence-based exploration of racial causality, though the film's commercial success—grossing over $255 million on a $4.5 million budget—suggests its provocative framing resonated despite such flaws.[71]Audience and Cultural Responses
The film received strong audience approval, earning an A- CinemaScore from opening weekend polls and an 86% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes based on over 50,000 verified ratings.[42] [7] Its box office performance, grossing $255 million worldwide on a $4.5 million budget, reflected broad appeal beyond niche demographics, with an opening weekend audience split of 39% African American, 36% white, and 17% Latino viewers, alongside balanced gender attendance.[79] [80] This success indicated the film's resonance with viewers seeking horror infused with social observation, rather than reliance on traditional genre formulas. Culturally, Get Out introduced the "sunken place" as a metaphor for marginalized voices being silenced or co-opted, which permeated public discourse on racial psychology and power imbalances following its February 24, 2017, release.[81] The film spurred analyses framing its narrative as a critique of affluent white liberalism's paternalism toward blacks, with outlets like The Guardian describing it as exposing "the horror of liberal racism" in a post-racial mythos fractured by events such as the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[42] This interpretation aligned with Peele's intent to highlight subtle, insidious biases over overt prejudice, influencing subsequent horror works and academic examinations of race in genre cinema.[82] Responses varied, however, with some commentators arguing the film's portrayal of upscale whites as predatory oversimplified interracial tensions and amplified distrust, potentially prioritizing thematic provocation over empirical nuance in depicting causal racial dynamics.[62] While mainstream coverage emphasized its role in elevating black-led horror and challenging viewer complacency, alternative critiques noted risks of reinforcing zero-sum racial narratives amid polarized cultural debates.[75] Overall, Get Out catalyzed reflections on liberalism's blind spots but drew scrutiny for selectively indicting one socioeconomic stratum's attitudes, reflecting broader divides in interpreting its social commentary.[83]Awards and Nominations
Get Out received numerous accolades following its release, with particular recognition for its screenplay, direction, and Daniel Kaluuya's performance. At the 90th Academy Awards held on March 4, 2018, the film secured four nominations, including Best Picture (producers Sean McKittrick, Jason Blum, Edward H. Hamm Jr., and Jordan Peele), Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for Jordan Peele, and Best Actor for Kaluuya; it won Best Original Screenplay, marking Peele as the first African American to receive the honor.[84][9] The film earned two nominations at the 75th Golden Globe Awards on January 7, 2018: Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy and Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for Kaluuya, though it did not win either.[85] At the 71st British Academy Film Awards on February 18, 2018, nominations included Outstanding British Film (as a qualifying co-production), Best Original Screenplay for Peele, and Best Leading Actor for Kaluuya.[86] Additional honors included wins at the 33rd Independent Spirit Awards on March 3, 2018, for Best Feature and Best Director for Peele.[9] At the 22nd Satellite Awards, Peele won Best Director, with the film nominated for Best Motion Picture.[9] Overall, Get Out amassed 39 major nominations across various ceremonies in 2018, resulting in 17 victories.[87]| Award Ceremony | Category | Recipient | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards (2018) | Best Original Screenplay | Jordan Peele | Won[84] |
| Academy Awards (2018) | Best Picture | Sean McKittrick et al. | Nominated |
| Academy Awards (2018) | Best Director | Jordan Peele | Nominated |
| Academy Awards (2018) | Best Actor | Daniel Kaluuya | Nominated |
| Golden Globe Awards (2018) | Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy | Get Out | Nominated[85] |
| Golden Globe Awards (2018) | Best Actor – Musical or Comedy | Daniel Kaluuya | Nominated[85] |
| BAFTA Awards (2018) | Best Original Screenplay | Jordan Peele | Nominated[86] |
| BAFTA Awards (2018) | Best Leading Actor | Daniel Kaluuya | Nominated[86] |
| Independent Spirit Awards (2018) | Best Feature | Get Out | Won[9] |
| Independent Spirit Awards (2018) | Best Director | Jordan Peele | Won[9] |