The site's critical consensus reads: "Sharp, funny, and delightfully dark, Time Share (Tiempo Compartido) offers genre fans a complex thriller that sinks its hooks in fast and doesn't let go until the closing credits.
"[4] Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, Franck Scheck praises the cinematography and the eerie soundtrack, as well as the "disturbing prologue", although he feels that the film "never achieves dramatic urgency.
The characters feel more like plot devices than three-dimensional figures, the storylines don't converge in sufficiently resonant fashion and the pacing is sluggish to the point of tedium.
Nevertheless, he praises the cast and the cinematography, adding that "The movie peddles in paranoia, but is too tedious to make a lasting effect; even the resort itself seems too poorly operated to be worried about.
[6] Guy Lodge, for Variety, defines Time Share as "[a] nasty, nettling little puzzle piece that cleverly probes patriarchal insecurity and corporate invasiveness through the course of one botched family vacation".
[8] Allan Hunter, for Screen Daily, observes that the movie is ″Bunuelian in its brash satire of corporate ambition, [and] can be as blackly comic as a Coen brothers screenplay".