SummaryReeling from a terrifying assault over the summer, 19-year-old Brad Land (Ben Schnetzer) starts college determined to get his life back to normal. His brother, Brett (Nick Jonas), is already established on campus and with a fraternity that allures Brad with its promise of protection, popularity, and life-long friendships. Brad is desperate to bel... Read More
Directed By:Andrew Neel
Written By:David Gordon Green, Brad Land, Andrew Neel, Mike Roberts
Goat
Metascore
Generally Favorable
64
User score
Generally Favorable
7.0
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
72% Positive
18 Reviews
18 Reviews
20% Mixed
5 Reviews
5 Reviews
8% Negative
2 Reviews
2 Reviews
Jan 29, 2016
83
Goat deals with masculinity, fraternities, and PTSD in equal doses, covering all of them with brutal precision and most importantly, success.
Jan 27, 2016
80
The film is a pointed, astute and unflinching look at unbridled machismo and its consequences.
User score
Generally Favorable
71% Positive
17 Ratings
17 Ratings
21% Mixed
5 Ratings
5 Ratings
8% Negative
2 Ratings
2 Ratings
Feb 16, 2026
10
If you thought comedy was down for the count, think again. Sony Pictures delivers a knockout with GOAT, the year’s most outrageously funny, crowd-pleasing smash! A hilarious, heart-pounding, fur-flying sports comedy that had me laughing from the opening bleat to the final buzzer.From the studio that brought us those mind-bending Spider-Verse masterpieces, GOAT delivers non-stop fun. Caleb McLaughlin delivers a voice performance for the ages as Will Harris. He doesn’t just play a goat who wants to play roarball, he is the goat! The chemistry is nothing short of pure cinematic magic.Stephen Curry lending his voice and producer magic? Genius move. Gabrielle Union as the tough-as-nails teammate? Electric. The whole cast, from Nick Kroll's snarky one-liners to David Harbour's gruff bear energy, is firing on all cylinders. It's the ultimate underdog story: proof that size doesn't matter when you've got heart, hops, and a whole lot of attitude. "Smalls can ball!" indeed—this one's a slam dunk!This is the kind of comedy that doesn’t just tickle your funny bone—it headbutts it. The jokes come fast, the gags land big, and the audience barely has time to catch its breath between laugh eruptions.Every punchline hits like a grand slam, every heartfelt moment lands with surprising sweetness, and the supporting cast keeps the energy sky-high from start to finish. Whether they are soaring through the lush heights of Vineland or hitting a game-winning shot, you’ll be gasping for air between the non-stop laughs. I haven’t cheered this loud in a theater since A Knight’s Tale!GOAT isn't just the best animal sports movie of the year; it’s the best animal sports movie of all time! It’s a hilarious, high-octane thrill ride that the whole family will want to see again and again.GOAT is an absolute triumph! A triumph of the human (and caprine) spirit! Bigger laughs. Bigger heart. Bigger fun. Two hooves way up! Another winner from Sony!See it with a crowd—and prepare to be dazzled!
Oct 20, 2018
8
"Goat" não é uma ode ao machismo. É um filme vislumbrante e profundamente perturbador sobre rituais e troças. Schnetzer e Jonas maravilhosos!
8/10
Sep 22, 2016
75
Goat doesn’t shy from showing us monstrous behavior, which might be more than some viewers can bear. This isn’t an easy film to watch. But it’s even harder to forget.
Sep 22, 2016
70
It might have set out to convey the disturbingly sadistic nature of institutional brotherhood, but it’s the familial variety with which “Goat” explores something ultimately more compelling.
Sep 23, 2016
63
The film's hazing scenes evoke the boot camp sequences in "Full Metal Jacket" but without the merciless coldness, because the film's hero, Brad (newcomer Ben Schnetzer, in a career-making star turn) desperately wants to belong to the organization.
Jan 27, 2016
58
Goat is a compelling watch, but in the end, its themes are a bit muddled, and certainly not unique.
Sep 22, 2016
0
Perhaps it helps to think of Goat as a horror movie. There is a genre of horror film known as torture porn — films that revel in graphic depictions of torture, violence and sadism, mostly to defenseless victims. Think of Goat as hazing porn.
Sep 23, 2018
8
Finalmente, um filme sobre as fraternidades que não é uma ode ao machismo. "Goat" é filme vislumbrante e profundamente perturbador sobre rituais e troças. Mesmo que o filme possa ser um grande problema para pessoas sensíveis, eu gostei. Aplausos para Ben Schnetzer e Nick Jonas.
Feb 23, 2017
8
Finally a film about collage fraternities that isn't a sophemoric ode to machoism, Goat is an unflinching and deeply disturbing glimpse at hazing rituals that deals with masculinity and PTSD in ways that are as as bleak as they are accurate.
Oct 9, 2016
8
“Goat”: Homosocial Homoeroticism in Contextualized Homophobia By Warren J. Blumenfeld Since viewing Andrew Neel’s new film “Goat,” currently screening in theaters and Pay Per View, I have been haunted by images of the underbelly of toxic hypermasculinity, which our patriarchal cultural system imposes on all boys and men as it assigns us a sex at, or even before, our birth. The film exposes the paradox of promoting and maintaining the seemingly contradictory notions within all male environments of members operating in homosocial and homoerotic contexts mediated by deep and profound expressions of homophobia and misogyny. Throughout the opening credits, in extremely slow motion, seemingly all white shirtless young college-age men in very close proximity observe some sort of spectacle off screen while gulping beer and carrying broad grins of joy. This surreal scene of young men moving animal-like transforms in regular motion to a pre-pledge fraternity party on the campus of a Midwestern university. Revelers consume massive quantities of beer and hard liquor, young women expose their breasts, and two women engage in passionate kissing to the utter excitement of male gawkers. The film’s chief protagonist, 19-year-old Brad Land (Ben Schnetzer) enters college determined to get his life back to normal following the horrendous, brutal, humiliating beating at the hands of two off-campus men he offered to give a ride home. Brad, at this point in his life, feels desperate for acceptance and connection. His brother, Brett (Nick Jonas), a confident, charming, and popular student on campus and a fraternity leader, convinces Brad to pledge Phi Sigma Mu with assurances of security, protection, popularity, and life-long friendships. Mitch (James Franco), an older alum who returns for a fraternity party, promises Brad that the brothers will always protect him from the abuse he underwent. And Mitch demonstrates his strength and power. “Slap me in the face,” he yells at Brad. “Slap me in the face.” When Brad refuses, Mitch rips off his own shirt. “Okay, punch me in the stomach!” To force him to do so, Mitch slaps Brad in the face.” “Punch me in f’ing stomach.” Brad punches and Mitch slaps back. Eventually Mitch tightens his muscles, pounds his chest like a gorilla, lifts his arms tightly in the air, and shouts, rather paradoxically, within the entire circle: “We are the greatest group of gentlemen the civilized world has ever known!!” Throughout the pledge training (read “hazing”) process, established fraternity brothers pressure pledges on numerous occasions to strip down and perform dehumanizing and brutalizing trials. These include everything from violent mud wrestling; to bobbing for **** sausages, which they must pass mouth-to-mouth through the pledge line; to placing an assumed **** of a brother in their mouths while blindfolded; to slapping one another with rapid and intense blows to the face and spitting at one another; to being force-fed blazing tabasco sauce squirted down their throats; to having their hands and legs all bound together as a group for an entire night; to the group guzzling a full keg of beer within a certain timeframe, which, if not performed to the liking of the pledge leader, each pledge must sexually molest and **** the fraternity goat mascot from the rear. Throughout the film, young men torture other young men. Some do it for control and power, while some do it for a sense of connection. Chance (Gus Harper), the pledge leader, singled out Will (Danny Flaherty), Brad’s dormitory roommate, as an example of what happens to anyone who fails to sufficiently tolerate the “training.” Brothers lifted an animal cage into the training site, and scolded Will to place himself inside. Once they locked the enclosure, brothers grabbed their swelling **** from their pants and proceeded to rain down golden showers onto the squealing and nauseated pledge below. Throughout the hazing process, fraternity brothers shouted orders and debasing terms at pledges, most commonly **** **** and “goat” interchangeably. The choice of terms used as epithets is most informative of what exists in the taunters’ minds in which gay men equate to women, and both equate to subhuman creatures. Undergoing the hazing, images continually reoccurred in Brad’s mental library of the beating he endured at the hands of the street thugs just before coming to campus. While he could not label it at the time, both the beating by strangers and hazing by the fraternity brothers amounted to very similar forms of male-on-male violence. What the pledges and their brother masters, as well as most people in the larger society do not realize, however, is the actuality, the fact that this “perfect” celestial norm, this iconic form of masculinity stands unattainably well above and far beyond the grasp of all mortal men and boys. From our birth, our culture, through its socializing masters, place the goal and
Nov 30, 2016
4
A vulnerable lad gets beaten up then gets persuaded by a 'friend' to go through a fraternity initiation. A morality tale, and probably educational, but not entertaining.
Jan 15, 2017
3
Long, drawn out, slow and boring. 1 hour in and you'll be wondering is thier a point to this movie. The acting is mediocre at best other than the A lister Franco. How this movie got an R rating is beyond me. Save 2hrs of your life and watch something else.




























