Succession star Sarah Snook’s new thriller Run Rabbit Run is dominating Netflix despite receiving scathing reviews from fans and critics.
Australian actress Sarah Snook has another success on her hands.
Fresh from her starring role in Succession, the 35-year-old is dominating the Netflix streaming charts with her new psychological thriller, Run Rabbit Run.
According tv black boxthe movie garnered 14.2 million hours watched and 6 million views in just one week.
It peaked at number 2 on the Australian Netflix charts and went to number 3 globally.
In the film, Snook, known for her starring role as Shiv Roy on the HBO series Succession, takes on the role of a fertility doctor named Sarah, while Lily LaTorre plays her on-screen daughter Mia.
A synopsis for the film reads: “Fertility doctor Sarah begins her beloved daughter Mia’s seventh birthday expecting nothing bad. But when an ominous wind swirls, Sarah’s carefully controlled world begins to change.
Sarah Snook’s Rub Rabbit Run peaked at number 2 on the Australian Netflix charts and went to number 3 globally
Mia begins to behave strangely, and a rabbit appears outside her front door, a mysterious birthday present that delights Mia but seems to deeply puzzle Sarah.
“As the days go by, Mia stops being herself more and more and demands to see Sarah’s hospitalized mother, whom she hasn’t met for a long time (the grandmother she’s never seen before) and tests her nerves. of Sarah when the girl’s bizarre tantrums begin to point her towards Sarah’s own dark history,” Horror Reporting Heaven.
It concludes: “When a ghost from her past re-enters Sarah’s life, she struggles to hold on to her distant young daughter.”
Despite the success of the film, Run Rabbit Run has been savagely attacked by viewers and critics.

Fresh off her starring appearance on Succession, the 35-year-old is dominating the Netflix streaming charts with Run Rabbit Run.
The movie, directed by Daina Reid, has received a deluge of negative reviews and a low 38 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes since it premiered on the streaming service on June 28.
One wrote on Twitter: “I’m not even halfway through Run Rabbit Run on Netflix and I don’t know how much more of this movie I can take.”
Another viewer added: “I watched Run Rabbit Run and I don’t understand why it’s the #1 movie on Netflix, maybe I missed something?”
A third chimed in: “I just watched Run Rabbit Run on Netflix and it really is as bad as people say it is.” Very disappointing.’
“If you ever want to waste almost 2 hours of your life, watch ‘Run Rabbit Run’ on Netflix,” said another.

Despite the success of the film, Run Rabbit Run has been savagely attacked by viewers and critics.