The Voyeurs is a 2021 American erotic thriller film written and directed by Michael Mohan. Shot and set in Montreal, it stars Sydney Sweeney and Justice Smith as a young couple who spy on and become obsessed by the love lives of their neighbors across the street (Natasha Liu Bordizzo and Ben Hardy). Greg Gilreath and Adam Hendricks serve as producers under their Divide/Conquer banner.

It was released on September 10, 2021, by Amazon Studios, on the Amazon Prime Video streaming service. Film critics afforded The Voyeurs a mixed reception, comparing it unfavorably to its forebears in voyeuristic thriller genre, such as Rear Window (1954) and Body Double (1984).

In September 2019, it was announced Michael Mohan would direct the film from a screenplay he wrote, with Greg Gilreath and Adam Hendricks serving as producers under their Divide/Conquer banner, and Amazon Studios distributing.In November 2019, Sydney Sweeney, Justice Smith, Natasha Liu Bordizzo and Ben Hardy joined the cast of the film.

Principal photography began in October 2019 in Montreal, Canada.

𝐓𝐎𝐓𝐑𝐄𝐍𝐓 𝐃𝐎𝐖𝐍𝐋𝐎𝐀𝐑𝐃

𝐃𝐈𝐑𝐄𝐂𝐓 𝐃𝐎𝐖𝐍𝐋𝐎𝐀𝐑𝐃

In September 2019, it was announced Michael Mohan would direct the film from a screenplay he wrote, with Greg Gilreath and Adam Hendricks serving as producers under their Divide/Conquer banner, and Amazon Studios distributing.In November 2019, Sydney Sweeney, Justice Smith, Natasha Liu Bordizzo and Ben Hardy joined the cast of the film.

Principal photography began in October 2019 in Montreal, Canada.

The Voyeurs was released on September 10, 2021, on the Amazon Prime Video streaming service

On Rotten Tomatoes, The Voyeurs holds a 38 percent approval rating based on 21 reviews, with an average rating of 5.7/10.

On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 54 out of 100, based on 9 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".

In a negative review for the Chicago Sun-Times, Richard Roeper described The Voyeurs as a "salacious and wildly implausible story that holds our interest for a while before flying off the cliff and into an abyss of creepy, ludicrous and ultimately ridiculous twists and turns".Nick Schager of Variety was also critical of the film, which he found "plays like rehashed leftovers cooked up for young viewers who ve never seen any of its superior inspirations", such as Hitchcock s Rear Window (1954).In the San Francisco Chronicle, G. Allen Johnson felt Michael Mohan s script was "pedestrian" and unfavorably compared his direction to that of David Lynch and Brian De Palma. "One suspects they would have a bit more fun and taken us further down the moral rabbit hole," Johnson explained, "And the sex would have been better too."

On the other hand, Charles Bramesco was more appreciative of The Voyeurs. In a four-out-of-five star review for The Guardian, he found the film to be "the real deal, an ideal cocktail of funny, diabolical and perverted," and a timely update of Rear Window, "At last, a homage that dares to ask," Bramesco quipped, "what if Grace Kelly had been able to give the wheelchair-bound Jimmy Stewart a hand job the first time they both looked in on his neighbors across the way?"